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Old August 15th 10, 08:44 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Mike Schumann
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Posts: 539
Default Build your own PowerFLARM!

On 8/15/2010 1:08 AM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Aug 14, 10:48 pm, wrote:
I've made a very simple paper cutout model
that anybody interested in a PowerFLARM can print,
cut out, fold and stick together. You can use this
PowerFLARM in your cockpit.


Darryl,

I downloaded the pdf and very carefully followed the assembly
instructions, then installed it in my ship, it looks great! It was
real quiet for a long flight I used it on, but that's to be expected
since there are no other units on other ships yet. Afterward I wanted
to download my flightlog to OLC but am having trouble extracting the
IGC file. Also got any tips on how to get it to work with an HP310
running SYM?

TIA,
-Paul


Sorry you are having trouble Paul. Since these units are assembled by
the customer they do not include a factory warranty and it is hard to
guess what might be the problem. If you return the unit to me I will
get my service team to look at it straight away. Please enclose $200
with your return unit for inspection costs. Quote RMA #3AT-M3.

BTW I am also working on a UAT transceiver model for glider cockpits.
It consists of several hundred little paper cutouts of people and some
paper model meeting tables. And you can arrange and rearrange all the
little paper people around the meeting tables to show how UAT device
development works. (Oh I'm in trouble for that).

Darryl


Why the insulting attitude towards UAT???? There are many people within
the FAA, MITRE, AOPA, and the avionics industry who have spent a decade
working on this technology. The technology is great. The deployment
strategy has been the problem, partly due to a lack of vision and focus
at the FAA and other foreign regulators, and a lot to do with the
logistical nightmare of converting from a 1940s technology to the 20th
century in a cost effective manner (just look at Digital TV for another
example of this kind of painful effort).

It doesn't help soaring the have glider pilots ****ing on people like
this. There are people within the SSA (Bernald Smith for one), who have
been heavily involved in these issue for years and are trying to
represent soaring's interests within the broader aviation community.
When people in the FAA, AOPA, etc... read these kind of comments, what
do you think happens to our sport's credibility?


--
Mike Schumann