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#11
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Cecil,
I have the two Lightspeed Thirty 3G's and they are fantastic! I love the personal music and cell phone input. I bought a portable CD/MP3 player, installed a Y adaptor and burned several MP3's for medium to long xc's. Passengers love it. You might want to sell the LS 20L on ebay for another Twenty 3G. This way you AND your passenger can enjoy great music while cruising on a beautiful VFR flight. It's especially pleasant at night. The cell phone input is great for getting IFR clearances, but the only problem is the wires are inconvenient to pull out and hook up. I'm trying to come up with a way to make it easier but no joy yet. Kobra "Cecil E. Chapman" wrote in message om... Oops... forgot to mention. I'm planning on using the 20L headset for passengers. I figure the exceptional noise reduction might be especially good for new or first-time passengers - can't help thinking the engine drone contributes to at least, some of their stress. -- -- Good Flights! Cecil E. Chapman, Jr. PP-ASEL "We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis- Check out my personal flying adventures: www.bayareapilot.com |
#12
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"Cecil E. Chapman" wrote:
If there are any 'fence sitters" on getting the ANR headset I have to tell ya to get one! Several people have reported in these newsgroups that they find ANR very annoying. Most mysterious. The part that surprised me most was how fatiguing that engine drone could be over a couple hours of instrument flying and how refreshed I felt without that noise in the background during my instrument lessons. The way I felt was like night and day. Ditto. ANR is wonderful, IMO. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#13
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In article , Jeff wrote:
Another thing, alot of people wont fly with an instructor after getting their rating, personally, if I see some good wicked weather, I will call my instructor and see if he wants to fly. My goal is to get experience in all kinds of different weather, do all the flying my self, just have him with me incase things get out of hand. One of the things you should learn from obtaining your instrument rating is determining how to interpret what you see on the computer screen or what the briefer tells you. Flying off into the grey without at least seeing a picture is a good way to terminate a flight prematurely. Are you willing to fly into an area forecast to have thunderstorms and towering cumulus without any weather detection equipment on board? If the airspace is busy, don't expect ATC to hold your hand and guide you through the rough patches. There comes a time when you have to know when to put it on the ground and get better information. How dark does it have to get in the middle of the day before you realize you are in over your head? the key to good instrument training is to have a good instructor who is experienced in hard IFR and knows what you can fly into safely. Correct. |
#14
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Wendy wrote:
I upgraded from my ridiculously cheap and poorly performing Flightline headset to a DC H20-10 in preparation for my IFR training. I haven't flown with the DC's yet, but I will Saturday afternoon. My rationale here is two-fold in that if I am in need of communicating, it would be a good thing to not only have some equipment I can reliably communicate with, but to initiate my IFR training at an airport that is controlled (KDWH) rather than the admittedly fine uncontrolled airport I initially trained at (KCXO); the choice of which will obviously requires a level of conversation surpassing simply shooting the breeze. Is this an Active Noise Reduction ANR headset. I recently purchased a DC Non-ANR for my helicopter training and found that I like my old $100.00 Aviation Communications AC-200 better for most of my short trip flying. The problem I have with the DC's is that the are convertible from a helicopter cable (single jack) to a fixed wing cable (double jack). While that is a great idea the connection sticks out longer and hits my shoulder when I turn my head. I dont notice any more clarity over the cheaper pair but I do notice that the DC's jell filled ear covers wont bother me as much on long cross country flights. I also like the individual ear volume adjustments. The FBO where I bought the headset- Mercury Flight Systems- seems to have a solid, while expensive, approach to the IFR experience. Rather than making loads of short XC's, they seem to stress longer ones; Houston-Memphis-Houston being one example. Obviously, there will be a lot of shorter excursions in the curriculum, but I have to say that the idea of flying under an instrument flight plan on major excursions is a challenging surely and valuable experience. These people seem honestly concerned with making me a proficient IFR pilot rather than simply preparing me for the checkride, which is the general impression I got from the operation where I obtained my initial certification. Any comments on this would be greatly appreciated; being trained to pass the PTS is one thing, and thoroughly understanding it is another, IMHO. KHOU to KMEM, Thats 420 NM each way. Considering re-routing you will probably be doing over 1000 NM of travel that day. Thats further than I've ever flown and unless your 172 has long range tanks will most likely require a fuel stop. And unless you have long range tanks you will probably require a we-we stop. I recommend you get the IFR ticket as fast as possible then do trips like this, or shorter, with an instructor in actual IMC after you get your ticket. I just flew 4 hours last month to Williamsburg after work on a IFR flight plane in mostly VMC weather. I was bone tired when I got there. If I had to fly back the same day, I probably would have fallen asleep in the plane. And that was only a 313 nm straight line distance. The reason I say get the ticket as fast as possible is because in most flight school situations the longer these lessons drag out the more chances of instructor and aircraft changes you will be exposed to, which intern drag it out further. Putting extra requirements on the student like this will only prolong the process. No one will ever stop you from taking more lessons after you complete your training. I go up with instructors all the time especially when it is really gusty or hard IFR. But when I fly with my family I stay within my limits. Apparently the training will be conducted in a C-172 upgraded to 180hp with a CS prop; since I have some (short) time in a Super Decathlon this won't be totally new to me. Instrument flying will be new, other than than my brief exposure required by the Private program, and I am looking forward to it. This is a challenge I really want to master, and any suggestions you all might have as concerns beginning training would be greatly appreciated. The modified C-172 sounds like a more unnecessary costly option. It wont teach you anything about IFR and it will cost more to operate. I would seriously consider a more standard approach Wendy |
#15
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Barry wrote:
Here are some comments and suggestions (I'm sure others will disagree with parts): The school should use a written syllabus, and you should have a copy. The training should be broken down into phases, typically: 1. Basic airplane control 2. Basic navigation 3. Approaches and holding 4. Cross-country flights There might occasionally be good reasons to deviate from the syllabus, but in general you should be proficient in each phase before moving on to the next. Beware of an instructor who has you doing ILS approaches on the 2nd lesson. Doing an IFR cross-country early on can be useful to let you see how things work, but your role will be more as an observer than as an IFR pilot. Make sure you have a copy of the Instrument Rating Practical Test Standards (available at http://afs600.faa.gov/AFS630.htm). Refer to it frequently during your training, not just at the very end before the checkride. It's better to do cross-countries with three legs, instead of retracing your initial route. For example, instead of Houston-Memphis-Houston, do Houston-Memphis-Little Rock-Houston. You shouldn't need to do "loads" of short cross-countries. The syllabus I use has four cross-countries, including the "long" 250 nm one, and together they take about 10 hours. If you need a lot more, it's probably because you didn't spend enough time on the earlier phases. Go to a range of airports, both towered and non-towered. I think that there's little value in long cross-countries - you don't learn much droning along at cruise for three hours. The main value is in the flight planning and dealing with different conditions. If you do decide to do a long flight, try to get a day when the weather's not uniform along the route, and pick a route with varied geography. I guess you have to go pretty far from Houston (and not towards Memphis) to see some mountains. Barry This is excellent. I disagree with one thing though. Instead of looking for a day when the weather is non uniform, get the cross country requirements done ASAP VMC or IMC. Then when you get your ticket and you find any of those challenging IMC days call your instructor and go for it. Anything more than 100 nm legs is pretty much useless especially since ATC will most likely put you on top. A 25 nm trip into a class Bravo is much more entertaining. John Roncallo |
#16
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Sounds like you went with the H10-60, whose dome-connector scheme does
indeed involve a longer plug at that end.. With the DC H10-13XL (ANR headset), the cord swap from single-jack to double-jack is trivial, it involves only the cord going from the battery pack to the panel. If you're the type not bothered by the traditionally snug fit of DCs, the H10-13XL is the best headset out there. I've tried the Bose X since buying my DC, and if it'd been the other way around (trying the DC after buying the Bose), I'd have been ****ED at the extra money wasted on the Bose. Yeah, the Bose is more comfortable but I hate the mike boom and mike audio, and the ANR isn't any better than the DC's, IMHO. "John Roncallo" wrote in message ... Is this an Active Noise Reduction ANR headset. I recently purchased a DC Non-ANR for my helicopter training and found that I like my old $100.00 Aviation Communications AC-200 better for most of my short trip flying. The problem I have with the DC's is that the are convertible from a helicopter cable (single jack) to a fixed wing cable (double jack). While that is a great idea the connection sticks out longer and hits my shoulder when I turn my head. |
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