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		Lynn Matteson
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 9:11 am    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				I guess the best...or worst...case is the round gauges that show  
 digital readouts, then have a ring of leds around the outer face that  
 light up according to where on that round face an analog pointer  
 might be pointing. I think this is an electrical engineer trying to  
 impress the buying public.
 I recall that some race car drivers would use analog gauges, but  
 orient the gauge so that under normal conditions, the needle would be  
 straight up. This way a glance at the panel should reveal any needle  
 that was NOT straight up, and the driver could then concentrate on  
 that reading only.
 
 When I was learning to fly in my Kitfox, I felt the need to nail the  
 2000 rpm mag check....1990 needed a bit more...oops, that's  
 2010....finally my instructor said "are we gonna fly or are you gonna  
 spend all day getting that rpm just right?"
 
 In my case, I can see at a glance if all four of my (digital) EGT  
 readings are in the ballpark, but if I had analog, I'd be making a  
 larger scan of the four gauges. So for me, right now during my engine- 
 testing phase (when am I NOT testing something?), the digital  
 readings are more precise, and that's what I want. Later on, I might  
 be content to look at one analog gauge, and mark it with a green  
 band, just like certified planes.
 
 And yes, all planes flying in this area had better be watching out  
 for me, 'cause my eyes are inside a lot!....NOT a good thing, when it  
 was as hazy as it was flying earlier. I'd hate to think about some  
 other dumbbell out there doing the same thing as me....and we've  
 already had 2, if not 3, experimentals crash this last 10 days or so.
 
 As for the voltmeter, I just ordered a panel meter that measures less  
 than an 1" by 2", and mounts with a 7/32" hole through the panel. It  
 has 0.5" LCD display height. This is perfect for the job at hand, and  
 I can mount it where I can see it and the MAP pressure in one glance.
 
 Lynn Matteson
 Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
 Jabiru 2200, #2062
 Prince prop 64 x 30, P-tip
 Electroair direct-fire ignition system
 Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
 Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1141 hrs (since  
 3-27-2006)
 
 On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   You are RIGHT Lynn:
 
  We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we fixate on  
  digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that  
  has a DIGITAL TACH?
  Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a RPM.
  How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
  How Long there eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing  
  OUTSIDE.
  Oil Temps are the SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is  
  their oil Temp? And again watch their eyes... and Lissen to what  
  they report.
  186.7 F instead of IN THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
  WAIT till they have an emergency situation and they once again  
  become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
 
  It is like driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH  
  operations require the same side of the brain and they compete with  
  each other.
  Same is true of DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to  
  THINK and REMEMBER numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW   
  & RED.
  Ever since birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies  
  like Black & White and Round and Square.
  Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E. Principal.
 
  Barry
 
 
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  _________________ Lynn
 
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
 
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		aerobiz1(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 12:25 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				I think we need to differentiate between digital technology and digital display.  To me, a digital display is showing numbers.  Next to useless on a tacho.  However, a display of say, CHT's in a bar graph format makes a lot of sense. You can tell by the height of each bar what the temp might be, and readily compare them. 
 
 Horses for courses
 Martin
 
 On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 2:48 AM, Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net (lynnmatt(at)jps.net)> wrote:
  [quote]--> JabiruEngine-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net (lynnmatt(at)jps.net)>
   
  I guess the best...or worst...case is the round gauges that show digital readouts, then have a ring of leds around the outer face that light up according to where on that round face an analog pointer might be pointing. I think this is an electrical engineer trying to impress the buying public.
   I recall that some race car drivers would use analog gauges, but orient the gauge so that under normal conditions, the needle would be straight up. This way a glance at the panel should reveal any needle that was NOT straight up, and the driver could then concentrate on that reading only.
   
  When I was learning to fly in my Kitfox, I felt the need to nail the 2000 rpm mag check....1990 needed a bit more...oops, that's 2010....finally my instructor said "are we gonna fly or are you gonna spend all day getting that rpm just right?"
   
  In my case, I can see at a glance if all four of my (digital) EGT readings are in the ballpark, but if I had analog, I'd be making a larger scan of the four gauges. So for me, right now during my engine-testing phase (when am I NOT testing something?), the digital readings are more precise, and that's what I want. Later on, I might be content to look at one analog gauge, and mark it with a green band, just like certified planes.
   
  And yes, all planes flying in this area had better be watching out for me, 'cause my eyes are inside a lot!....NOT a good thing, when it was as hazy as it was flying earlier. I'd hate to think about some other dumbbell out there doing the same thing as me....and we've already had 2, if not 3, experimentals crash this last 10 days or so.
   
  As for the voltmeter, I just ordered a panel meter that measures less than an 1" by 2", and mounts with a 7/32" hole through the panel. It has 0.5" LCD display height. This is perfect for the job at hand, and I can mount it where I can see it and the MAP pressure in one glance.
   
  Lynn Matteson
  Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
  Jabiru 2200, #2062
  Prince prop 64 x 30, P-tip
  Electroair direct-fire ignition system
  Rotec TBI-40 injection (sleeved to 36mm)
  Status: flying with "Ramcharger" intake manifold...1141 hrs (since 3-27-2006)
  
  
  
  On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
  
   	  | Quote: | 	 		   You are RIGHT Lynn:
  
  We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we fixate on digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that has a DIGITAL TACH?
  Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a RPM.
  How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
  How Long there eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing OUTSIDE.
  Oil Temps are the SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is their oil Temp? And again watch their eyes... and Lissen to what they report.
  186.7 F instead of IN THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
  WAIT till they have an emergency situation and they once again become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
  
  It is like driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH operations require the same side of the brain and they compete with each other.
  Same is true of DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to THINK and REMEMBER numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW  & RED.
  Ever since birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies like Black & White and Round and Square.
  Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E. Principal.
  
  Barry
  
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  ine-List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?JabiruEngine-List
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  k">http://forums.matronics.com
  ====================================
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            -Matt Dralle, List Admin.
  t="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
  ====================================
  
  
  
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		pete(at)usjabiru.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:21 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for example) that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If it were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800 rpm – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number.
  
 Same thing with engine instruments.  I get calls all the time about EGT’s and the customer tells me he’s “in the green”.  When I ask what temp his EGT’s really are he can’t be precise.  Some callers don’t even know where the green starts and stops.  To get a carb tuned correctly you need precise information to straddle that fine line between good economy and engine damage.  “In the green” just doesn’t cut it.  
  
 Most of the better engine digital displays can show a trend line.  At a glance I can tell if my CHT’s are rising or if they are falling.  Nice to know at a glance that when you level off for cruise that temps begin falling after the climb but CRITICAL to know if they continue to rise.  With an analog display you might discern the trend if you can remember the temp from when you looked last and can remember when that last look occurred.  You might even get distracted from flying the plane while intently staring at the analog temp display to see if the needle moves.
  
 In experimental aircraft where often cowl development may not be the highest priority and where R&D budgets do not exist a good monitor is essential to report what is going on in the engine compartment.  The cost is less than comparable analog instruments and the capabilities are significantly above.
  
  
 
 On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
 You are RIGHT Lynn:
 
 We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we fixate on digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that has a DIGITAL TACH?
 Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a RPM.
 How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
 How Long there eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing OUTSIDE.
 Oil Temps are the SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is their oil Temp? And again watch their eyes... and Lissen to what they report.
 186.7 F instead of IN THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
 WAIT till they have an emergency situation and they once again become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
 
 It is like driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH operations require the same side of the brain and they compete with each other.
 Same is true of DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to THINK and REMEMBER numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW  & RED.
 Ever since birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies like Black & White and Round and Square.
 Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E. Principal.
 
 Barry
 
 ====================================
 -
 ine-List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?JabiruEngine-List
 ====================================
 MS -
 k">http://forums.matronics.com
 ===========
 e -
          -Matt Dralle, List Admin.
 t="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
 ====================================
 
 
  
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  |   http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?JabiruEngine-List  | 	  01234567
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		aerobiz1(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:50 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Peter,
 
 I guess that it also depends on what you are most comfortable with.  Digital
 anything is supposed to be more reliable and accurate. For things that don't
 move a lot, a digital display is easy to read.  For me, digital tachs are a
 PITA - I like to see at a glance if the needles are pointing the right
 direction during critical phases of flight, without concentrating on what
 the gauges are saying precisely.  A number of digital instruments using bar
 graphs or a ring of lights replicating where a needle would be pointing are
 a good compromise.  These days, we certainly are spoilt for choice and
 information.
 
 Also, I just wonder if your last line applies to Jabiru.....   
 
 Cheers
 
 Marty
 
 On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com> wrote:
 
 [quote] I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a
  glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for
  example) that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If
  it were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800
  rpm – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to
  stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on
  that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number
 
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		pete(at)usjabiru.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 2:43 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Actually my last line applies to many  kit and airframe makers other than Jabiru.   Jabiru’s cowl design allows for excellent cooling in most all conditions.  Example – we completed a new J230 last week and first flights happened on a day when OAT was 100 F at our airport.  On the first climb to 3500 MSL from our 800 ft MSL runway top CHT temp was on cylinder 5 at 368 F.  Well within the 392 F limit.  Further flights produced only lower temps.  Our new demo J230 with 12 hours on it produced a top temp of 323 F on the same day.  In cruise at 3500 ft temps are all below 300 F when OAT at 3500 ft is 85 F.
  
 We pay attention to our carb tuning and cylinder to cylinder CHT tuning by adjusting deflectors we put in the cooling ducts.  We pay attention and make adjustments to cylinder to cylinder EGT’s  We’ve got it down now mostly so that we don’t need to do much adjusting any more.  Oil temps in cruise run 185 F on a hot day.  Maybe that’s why on the 250 aircraft we’ve built in the last few years we don’t seem to have all these head problems, through bolt breakage and other issues that we hear about from many other places.  Our digital instruments guide our customers in their engine operation so as to keep operation within parameters.
  
 We have several flight school aircraft whos’ engines are coming up on the 1000 hour top overhaul before year’s end.  We only hear from those owners when they need distributor caps and rotors or some other minor consumable parts.  Compare that to a fight school in Australia that have had to replace engines four times in their fleet over the same accumulation of hours.  Is it design or is it operation?
  
 We do have engine problems with some kit and LSA  aircraft where cowl design could use improvement.  Probably 75% of all our engine problems come from two makes of aircraft.  Cowl design needs improvement and the operating instructions could use more development as well. 
  
 Having sold nearly a third of all Jabiru engines over the last 12 years I think we’ve had some solid exposure to how they operate and gained solid knowledge on how to keep them healthy.  Digital display instruments are critical to that endeavor.
  
 Pete 
  
 From: owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Martin Hone
 Sent: Monday, July 18, 2011 4:47 PM
 To: jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: Re: Voltmeter advice needed
 
  
 Peter,
  
 
 I guess that it also depends on what you are most comfortable with.  Digital anything is supposed to be more reliable and accurate. For things that don't move a lot, a digital display is easy to read.  For me, digital tachs are a PITA - I like to see at a glance if the needles are pointing the right direction during critical phases of flight, without concentrating on what the gauges are saying precisely.  A number of digital instruments using bar graphs or a ring of lights replicating where a needle would be pointing are a good compromise.  These days, we certainly are spoilt for choice and information.
 
  
 
 Also, I just wonder if your last line applies to Jabiru.....   
 
  
 
 Cheers
 
  
 
 Marty
 On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com (pete(at)usjabiru.com)> wrote:
 I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for example) that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If it were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800 rpm – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number.
  
 Same thing with engine instruments.  I get calls all the time about EGT’s and the customer tells me he’s “in the green”.  When I ask what temp his EGT’s really are he can’t be precise.  Some callers don’t even know where the green starts and stops.  To get a carb tuned correctly you need precise information to straddle that fine line between good economy and engine damage.  “In the green” just doesn’t cut it.  
  
 Most of the better engine digital displays can show a trend line.  At a glance I can tell if my CHT’s are rising or if they are falling.  Nice to know at a glance that when you level off for cruise that temps begin falling after the climb but CRITICAL to know if they continue to rise.  With an analog display you might discern the trend if you can remember the temp from when you looked last and can remember when that last look occurred.  You might even get distracted from flying the plane while intently staring at the analog temp display to see if the needle moves.
  
 In experimental aircraft where often cowl development may not be the highest priority and where R&D budgets do not exist a good monitor is essential to report what is going on in the engine compartment.  The cost is less than comparable analog instruments and the capabilities are significantly above.
  
  
 
 On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
 You are RIGHT Lynn:
 
 We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we fixate on digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that has a DIGITAL TACH?
 Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a RPM.
 How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
 How Long there eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing OUTSIDE.
 Oil Temps are the SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is their oil Temp? And again watch their eyes... and Lissen to what they report.
 186.7 F instead of IN THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
 WAIT till they have an emergency situation and they once again become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
 
 It is like driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH operations require the same side of the brain and they compete with each other.
 Same is true of DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to THINK and REMEMBER numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW  & RED.
 Ever since birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies like Black & White and Round and Square.
 Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E. Principal.
 
 Barry
 
 ===========
 -
 ine-List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?JabiruEngine-List
 ===========
 MS -
 k">http://forums.matronics.com
 ===========
 e -
          -Matt Dralle, List Admin.
 t="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
 ===========
 
  
 01
  
 234567890123456789
    [quote][b]
 
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		aerobiz1(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 2:59 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Thanks for those informed comments Peter. It is good to know that a proper
 installation will have every chance of success, though in my experience even
 a factory Jab installation will not guarantee it..  Maybe the factory should
 add your procedures and operating instructions to the information file given
 to new owners/builders.
 
 Cheers
 
 Martin
 
 On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 8:40 AM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com> wrote:
 
 [quote] Actually my last line applies to many  kit and airframe makers other than
  Jabiru.   Jabiru’s cowl design allows for excellent cooling in most all
  conditions.  Example – we completed a new J230 last week and first flights
  happened on a day when OAT was 100 F at our airport.  On the first climb to
  3500 MSL from our 800 ft MSL runway top CHT temp was on cylinder 5 at 368
  F.  Well within the 392 F limit.  Further flights produced only lower
  temps.  Our new demo J230 with 12 hours on it produced a top temp of 323 F
  on the same day.  In cruise at 3500 ft temps are all below 300 F when OAT at
  3500 ft is 85 F.****
 
  ** **
 
  We pay attention to our carb tuning and cylinder to cylinder CHT tuning by
  adjusting deflectors we put in the cooling ducts.  We pay attention and make
  adjustments to cylinder to cylinder EGT’s  We’ve got it down now mostly so
  that we don’t need to do much adjusting any more.  Oil temps in cruise run
  185 F on a hot day.  Maybe that’s why on the 250 aircraft we’ve built in the
  last few years we don’t seem to have all these head problems, through bolt
  breakage and other issues that we hear about from many other places.  Our
  digital instruments guide our customers in their engine operation so as to
  keep operation within parameters.****
 
  ** **
 
  We have several flight school aircraft whos’ engines are coming up on the
  1000 hour top overhaul before year’s end.  We only hear from those owners
  when they need distributor caps and rotors or some other minor consumable
  parts.  Compare that to a fight school in Australia that have had to replace
  engines four times in their fleet over the same accumulation of hours.  Is
  it design or is it operation?****
 
  ** **
 
  We do have engine problems with some kit and LSA  aircraft where cowl
  design could use improvement.  Probably 75% of all our engine problems come
  from two makes of aircraft.  Cowl design needs improvement and the operating
  instructions could use more development as well. ****
 
  ** **
 
  Having sold nearly a third of all Jabiru engines over the last 12 years I
  think we’ve had some solid exposure to how they operate and gained solid
  knowledge on how to keep them healthy.  Digital display instruments are
  critical to that endeavor.****
 
  ** **
 
  Pete ****
 
  ** **
 
  *From:* owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:
  owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com] *On Behalf Of *Martin Hone
  *Sent:* Monday, July 18, 2011 4:47 PM
  *To:* jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
  *Subject:* Re: Voltmeter advice needed****
 
  ** **
 
  Peter,****
 
  ** **
 
  I guess that it also depends on what you are most comfortable with.
   Digital anything is supposed to be more reliable and accurate. For things
  that don't move a lot, a digital display is easy to read.  For me, digital
  tachs are a PITA - I like to see at a glance if the needles are pointing the
  right direction during critical phases of flight, without concentrating on
  what the gauges are saying precisely.  A number of digital instruments using
  bar graphs or a ring of lights replicating where a needle would be pointing
  are a good compromise.  These days, we certainly are spoilt for choice and
  information.****
 
  ** **
 
  Also, I just wonder if your last line applies to Jabiru.....   ****
 
  ** **
 
  Cheers****
 
  ** **
 
  Marty****
 
  On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com> wrote:***
  *
 
  I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a
  glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for
  example) that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If
  it were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800
  rpm – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to
  stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on
  that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number
 
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		BobsV35B(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2011 3:56 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Good Afternoon Pete,
   
  I had a bit over sixty years of watching aircraft engines using  only analog gauges and have only about five years using the new fangled  digital ones.
   
  I will take the digital over the analog any time! <G>
   
  Happy Skies,
   
  Old Bob
  AKA
  Bob Siegfried
  Stearman N3977A
   
   In a message dated 7/18/2011 5:43:34 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  pete(at)usjabiru.com writes:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		        
 Actually    my last line applies to many  kit and airframe makers other than    Jabiru.   Jabiru’s cowl design allows for excellent cooling in most    all conditions.  Example – we completed a new J230 last week and first    flights happened on a day when OAT was 100 F at our airport.  On the    first climb to 3500 MSL from our 800 ft MSL runway top CHT temp was on    cylinder 5 at 368 F.  Well within the 392 F limit.  Further flights    produced only lower temps.  Our new demo J230 with 12 hours on it    produced a top temp of 323 F on the same day.  In cruise at 3500 ft temps    are all below 300 F when OAT at 3500 ft is 85 F.   
     
 We    pay attention to our carb tuning and cylinder to cylinder CHT tuning by    adjusting deflectors we put in the cooling ducts.  We pay attention and    make adjustments to cylinder to cylinder EGT’s  We’ve got it down now    mostly so that we don’t need to do much adjusting any more. Oil temps in    cruise run 185 F on a hot day.  Maybe that’s why on the 250 aircraft    we’ve built in the last few years we don’t seem to have all these head    problems, through bolt breakage and other issues that we hear about from many    other places.  Our digital instruments guide our customers in their    engine operation so as to keep operation within    parameters.   
     
 We    have several flight school aircraft whos’ engines are coming up on the 1000    hour top overhaul before year’s end.  We only hear from those owners when    they need distributor caps and rotors or some other minor consumable    parts.  Compare that to a fight school in Australia that have had to    replace engines four times in their fleet over the same accumulation of    hours.  Is it design or is it operation?   
     
 We    do have engine problems with some kit and LSA  aircraft where cowl design    could use improvement.  Probably 75% of all our engine problems come from    two makes of aircraft.  Cowl design needs improvement and the operating    instructions could use more development as well.    
     
 Having    sold nearly a third of all Jabiru engines over the last 12 years I think we’ve    had some solid exposure to how they operate and gained solid knowledge on how    to keep them healthy.  Digital display instruments are critical to that    endeavor.   
     
 Pete       
        
 From:    owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com    [mailto:owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of    Martin Hone
 Sent: Monday, July 18, 2011 4:47 PM
 To:    jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: Re: JabiruEngine-List:    Voltmeter advice needed
    
     
 Peter,      
  
       
 I guess that it also depends on what you are most    comfortable with.  Digital anything is supposed to be more reliable and    accurate. For things that don't move a lot, a digital display is easy to read.     For me, digital tachs are a PITA - I like to see at a glance if the    needles are pointing the right direction during critical phases of flight,    without concentrating on what the gauges are saying precisely.  A number    of digital instruments using bar graphs or a ring of lights replicating where    a needle would be pointing are a good compromise.  These days, we    certainly are spoilt for choice and information.
       
  
       
 Also, I just wonder if your last line applies to    Jabiru.....   
       
  
       
 Cheers
       
  
       
 Marty      
 On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com (pete(at)usjabiru.com)>  wrote:         
 I disagree    strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a glance and    return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for example)    that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230. If it    were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800 rpm    – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time    to stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on    that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise    number.   
    
 Same thing with    engine instruments.  I get calls all the time about EGT’s and the    customer tells me he’s “in the green”.  When I ask what temp his EGT’s    really are he can’t be precise.  Some callers don’t even know where the    green starts and stops.  To get a carb tuned correctly you need precise    information to straddle that fine line between good economy and engine    damage.  “In the green” just doesn’t cut it.     
    
 Most of the    better engine digital displays can show a trend line.  At a glance I can    tell if my CHT’s are rising or if they are falling.  Nice to know at a    glance that when you level off for cruise that temps begin falling after the    climb but CRITICAL to know if they continue to rise.  With an analog    display you might discern the trend if you can remember the temp from when you    looked last and can remember when that last look occurred.  You might    even get distracted from flying the plane while intently staring at the analog    temp display to see if the needle moves.   
    
 In experimental    aircraft where often cowl development may not be the highest priority and    where R&D budgets do not exist a good monitor is essential to report what    is going on in the engine compartment.  The cost is less than comparable    analog instruments and the capabilities are significantly    above.   
    
          
 
 On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE  wrote:   
 You    are RIGHT Lynn:
 
 We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we    fixate on digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that    has a DIGITAL TACH?
 Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a    RPM.
 How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
 How Long there    eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing OUTSIDE.
 Oil Temps are the    SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is their oil Temp? And again    watch their eyes... and Lissen to what they report.
 186.7 F instead of IN    THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
 WAIT till they have an emergency    situation and they once again become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
 
 It is like    driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH operations require the    same side of the brain and they compete with each other.
 Same is true of    DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to THINK and REMEMBER    numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW  & RED.
 Ever since    birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies like Black & White    and Round and Square.
 Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E.    Principal.
 
 Barry   
 
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		BARRY CHECK 6
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jul 20, 2011 3:47 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Peter:
 
 What do you disagree strongly with?  The gauges or human nature?
 Gauges - Yes that digital readout is a more accurate number.  No
 disagreement there.
 But you prove the point.  Who cares if the RPM is 2830 or 2800.  If YOU are
 reading 2830 you are spending too much time LQQKing at the gauge.  That is
 human nature.  You do NOT stare at an Analog gauge and attempt to figure out
 if it is 2800 or 2830. Just as you indicated what your action would be.
  That is why many instruments are color coded.  To take away human error.
 As Lynn stated and his instructor pick up on .... Close is good enough.
 NOW... To support you and Digital Gauges... YES if you want to track and
 collect some data because you have a question or a problem DIGITAL GAUGES
 are GREAT!  And since 95% of my flying is with a passenger / co-pilot... I
 use them to watch or record the exact numbers.  I glance at the gauges to
 make sure they are IN THE GREEN.  I do not concern myself with 'what shade
 of green'.  There was even a post about digital gauges with a LED ring
 around the outside of the digital readout.  Why?  To reduce the human
 factor.  To reduce the normal human action of spending too much time LQQKing
 at flickering numbers.
 
 Barry
 
 On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 5:17 PM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com> wrote:
 
 [quote] I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a
  glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for
  example) that Im getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If
  it were an analog display Id see at a glance that I have a little over 2800
  rpm  maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to
  stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on
  that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jul 20, 2011 5:19 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Analog gauges, in the green ?? What do we need them for?  Why the early flyers only had a ribbon tied of a nail to judge speed and rpm was determined whether they could count the rotation of the bicycle chain sprocket as the props turned. Why do we need that analog stuff? Real Pilots just hears and feels the plane and the air. In the Green? what does that prove? Who set that standard?  Why should we ever try to have something more sophisticated? What a waste of time and effort! Same argument, different direction. Truth is I have a big glass screen from MGL in my new RV-8a and I will need a long while to pickup on all the data it provides and apply it to my flying efforts and goals. Seems we forgot that flying a modern plane safely and correctly requires a bunch of skills and a load of situational awareness of the plane in relation to the good earth and the operating condition of the machine. I say if your always flying outside the cockpit, sooner or later your going to run out of fuel. Happens every day to somebody. Got to have the right blend to be safe. Right? Best of luck, Bill & Blue Bird, N288WP, RV-8a, 9 hrs into Phase l
  
 
  
  
 
  
 
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		BARRY CHECK 6
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jul 20, 2011 6:16 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				LOL...Very Good Bill.
 We don't need no stinking digital!
 I don't watch no stinking meter to tell me my fuel level... It is right outside the windscreen bobbing up & down on a cork & wire.
  
 
 When do I switch fuel tanks? When one wing drops and I'm too lazy to applyoppositeaerlon & rudder.
 Can I log glider time when I run out of fuel?
  Barry
 
 
 
 On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 9:16 PM,  <japhillipsga(at)aol.com (japhillipsga(at)aol.com)> wrote:
  [quote]Analog gauges, in the green ?? What do we need them for? Why the early flyers only had a ribbon tied of a nail to judge speed and rpm was determined whether they could count the rotation of the bicycle chain sprocket as the props turned. Why do we need that analog stuff? Real Pilots just hears and feels the plane and the air. In the Green? what does that prove? Who set that standard? Why should we ever try to have something more sophisticated? What a waste of time and effort! Same argument, different direction. Truth is I have a big glass screen from MGL in my new RV-8a and I will need a long while to pickup on all the data it provides and apply it to my flying efforts and goals. Seems we forgot that flying a modern plane safely and correctly requires a bunch of skills and a load of situational awareness of the plane in relation to the good earth and the operating condition of the machine. I say if your always flying outside the cockpit, sooner or later your going to run out of fuel. Happens every day to somebody. Got to have the right blend to be safe. Right? Best of luck, Bill & Blue Bird, N288WP, RV-8a, 9 hrs into Phase l  
   
      
   
     
      
   
      
   
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		pete(at)usjabiru.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 21, 2011 7:25 am    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Barry,
  
 If you really want to know what is going on with an engine you need precise info.  Believe me – you will stare at an analog tach to get the actual position of the needle against the little hash mark lines for a longer time than it takes to glance at a digital and get the aactual precise number instantly.  If you don’t take the time to interpret just where the needle really is on an analog tach or temp  you really can’t be precise.  When we must flight test LSA aircraft to make sure we don’t exceed Vh we must know the rpm exactly.  If we’re close the rpm may be just a bit high ans we can exceed Vh and then would have to call the aircraft non compliant.
  
 I just don’t see any reason to say close is good enough when you can do better!
  
 Pete
  
 From: owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-jabiruengine-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of FLYaDIVE
 Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2011 6:45 PM
 To: jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
 Subject: Re: Voltmeter advice needed
 
  
 Peter:
  
 
 What do you disagree strongly with?  The gauges or human nature?
 
 Gauges - Yes that digital readout is a more accurate number.  No disagreement there.
 
 But you prove the point.  Who cares if the RPM is 2830 or 2800.  If YOU are reading 2830 you are spending too much time LQQKing at the gauge.  That is human nature.  You do NOT stare at an Analog gauge and attempt to figure out if it is 2800 or 2830. Just as you indicated what your action would be.  That is why many instruments are color coded.  To take away human error.  
 
 As Lynn stated and his instructor pick up on .... Close is good enough.  
 
 NOW... To support you and Digital Gauges... YES if you want to track and collect some data because you have a question or a problem DIGITAL GAUGES are GREAT!  And since 95% of my flying is with a passenger / co-pilot... I use them to watch or record the exact numbers.  I glance at the gauges to make sure they are IN THE GREEN.  I do not concern myself with 'what shade of green'.  There was even a post about digital gauges with a LED ring around the outside of the digital readout.  Why?  To reduce the human factor.  To reduce the normal human action of spending too much time LQQKing at flickering numbers.
 
  
 
 Barry
 
  
 On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 5:17 PM, Pete Krotje <pete(at)usjabiru.com (pete(at)usjabiru.com)> wrote:
 I disagree strongly.  Digital display tachometers are easy to read at a glance and return very accurate information.  At a glance I can see (for example) that I’m getting 2830 rpm climbing out at 80 knots in our J230.  If it were an analog display I’d see at a glance that I have a little over 2800 rpm – maybe 2850.  Why not be precise at a glance?  It takes more time to stare at a analog display to determine which small line the needle rests on that to take a quick glance at a digital display and see a precise number.
  
 Same thing with engine instruments.  I get calls all the time about EGT’s and the customer tells me he’s “in the green”.  When I ask what temp his EGT’s really are he can’t be precise.  Some callers don’t even know where the green starts and stops.  To get a carb tuned correctly you need precise information to straddle that fine line between good economy and engine damage.  “In the green” just doesn’t cut it.  
  
 Most of the better engine digital displays can show a trend line.  At a glance I can tell if my CHT’s are rising or if they are falling.  Nice to know at a glance that when you level off for cruise that temps begin falling after the climb but CRITICAL to know if they continue to rise.  With an analog display you might discern the trend if you can remember the temp from when you looked last and can remember when that last look occurred.  You might even get distracted from flying the plane while intently staring at the analog temp display to see if the needle moves.
  
 In experimental aircraft where often cowl development may not be the highest priority and where R&D budgets do not exist a good monitor is essential to report what is going on in the engine compartment.  The cost is less than comparable analog instruments and the capabilities are significantly above.
  
  
 
 On Jul 18, 2011, at 9:28 AM, FLYaDIVE wrote:
 You are RIGHT Lynn:
 
 We put a man on the moon with analog gauges and NOW we fixate on digital... For my $2.00 ... Have you ever flown with someone that has a DIGITAL TACH?
 Watch their EYES - How Long it takes them to set a RPM.
 How fixated they are on getting the RPM right ON!
 How Long there eyes are INSIDE the cockpit rather than LQQKing OUTSIDE.
 Oil Temps are the SAME ISSUE...  On climb-out ask them what is their oil Temp? And again watch their eyes... and Lissen to what they report.
 186.7 F instead of IN THE GREEN or between 180 & 190 F
 WAIT till they have an emergency situation and they once again become fixated on THE NUMBERS!
 
 It is like driving a car and talking on the cell phone.  BOTH operations require the same side of the brain and they compete with each other.
 Same is true of DIGITAL Vs ANALOG.  The DIGITAL requires you to THINK and REMEMBER numbers as apposed to GO/NO-GO... GREEN, YELLOW  & RED.
 Ever since birth we are ANALOG and today they are saying babies like Black & White and Round and Square.
 Back to the K.I.S.S.  M.E. Principal.
 
 Barry
 
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 ===========
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 k">http://forums.matronics.com
 ===========
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 t="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
 ===========
 
  
 
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  |   ist" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?JabiruEngine-Listtp://forums.matronics.com  | 	  01
 
  
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		gpabruce(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 21, 2011 7:10 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				As I recall,there is an old Chinese proverb about flying . . . "Pilot who fly's upside down will have crack up" . . . . I found that always to be true!   Also, old airmail pilots used to hang a gold necklace from the compass to tell if they are right side up in the fog . . . kinda simple instrumentation when all else fails . . . problem is I have no gold left. 
 
 In my field of work, everything's gone digital and programmable. Problem is the old timers who were masters at calibration and certification have gone and the new bucks don't realize that all instrumentation must be calibrated and verified to a NIST standard to be useful. Without that, a person might as well be using the old necklace as a guide. When the necklace is pointing towards the headliner . . . then "pilot is flying with his crack up". Soon he will hear that loud sound of silence and his heart beat just before the ground rises up to smite his butt.
  
 
 No matter what the precision and resolution, if it ain't calibrated it's just extra weight. It becomes just pretty GIGO . . garbage in, garbage out.
 Bruce
  
 
 On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 6:16 PM,  <japhillipsga(at)aol.com (japhillipsga(at)aol.com)> wrote:
 [quote] Analog gauges, in the green ?? What do we need them for? Why the early flyers only had a ribbon tied of a nail to judge speed and rpm was determined whether they could count the rotation of the bicycle chain sprocket as the props turned. Why do we need that analog stuff? Real Pilots just hears and feels the plane and the air. In the Green? what does that prove? Who set that standard? Why should we ever try to have something more sophisticated? What a waste of time and effort! Same argument, different direction. Truth is I have a big glass screen from MGL in my new RV-8a and I will need a long while to pickup on all the data it provides and apply it to my flying efforts and goals. Seems we forgot that flying a modern plane safely and correctly requires a bunch of skills and a load of situational awareness of the plane in relation to the good earth and the operating condition of the machine. I say if your always flying outside the cockpit, sooner or later your going to run out of fuel. Happens every day to somebody. Got to have the right blend to be safe. Right? Best of luck, Bill & Blue Bird, N288WP, RV-8a, 9 hrs into Phase l  
   
      
   
     
      
   
      
   
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		plus2s
 
 
  Joined: 30 Nov 2006 Posts: 65 Location: NEW ZEALAND
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 21, 2011 7:51 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				The only instrument that is handy is the oil pressure gauge !!  and that is only for a comparison - the reading doesn't matter . no need for calibration.
 Everything else is covered by the nomal senses.
 Unless you are blind deaf and can't smell - then you shouldn't be flying !!!
 I always remember an old pilot telling me you don't need an altimeter or ASI
 If the ground is below you , you have altitude
 If the ground is moving you have airspeed.
 No need for a rev counter
 If the engine is making a noise, its going
 
 Gives you more time to look outside the plane ??
 
 Happy Flying
 
 Keith
 
 --- On Fri, 22/7/11, b d <gpabruce(at)gmail.com> wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 From: b d <gpabruce(at)gmail.com>
 Subject: Re:  Voltmeter advice needed
 To: jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
 Date: Friday, 22, July, 2011, 3:06 PM
 
 As I recall, there is an old Chinese proverb about flying . . . "Pilot who fly's upside down will have crack up" . . . . I found that always to be true!    Also, old airmail pilots used to hang a gold necklace from the compass to tell if they are right side up in the fog . . . kinda simple instrumentation when all else fails . . .  problem is I have no gold left.  
 
 In my field of work, everything's gone digital and programmable. Problem is the old timers who were masters at calibration and certification have gone and the new bucks don't realize that all instrumentation must be calibrated and verified to a NIST standard to be useful. Without that, a person might as well be using the old necklace as a guide. When the necklace is pointing towards the headliner . . . then "pilot is flying with his crack up".  Soon he will hear that loud sound of silence and his heart beat just before the ground rises up to smite his butt. 
  
 
 No matter what the precision and resolution, if it ain't calibrated it's just extra weight. It becomes just pretty GIGO . . garbage in, garbage out. 
 Bruce
    
 
  
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jul 21, 2011 8:42 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				I love big global statements . . .wouldn't fuel quantity be somewhat important? Have you ever got caught in the soup before? I like a few little clues when that happens. Really an oil gauge doesn't help a lot since you can't do anything if you don't like the reading anyway unless a passenger farts at which time I'd rather not smell it . . . The old pilot has never been caught in the soup . . . maybe a hangar pilot? You know the ground is below you? You haven't been in the soup . . .better carry a gold necklace, it will point to the ground for you. 
 
 Gads you really haven't been caught in the soup yet. . . you've been luckyyyyyyyyy Try wearing a hood for a bit and then write that list. Better yet take an IFR course and drive into the soup.
  
 
 Not only soup but out West here we have places with no lights and with some overcast blocking out the stars and moon, you have no reference but you're still VFR . . . unless you have really super good smell . . . I'd say you will be crying and begging for relief real soon. Gads could I tell you real life stories . . . Go ahead and fly with just an oil pressure gauge and let me know how that works for ya. (I'm not talking about touch and go's in the pattern type flying . . .I mean real flying.  
  
 
 Bruce
  
 
 On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 8:48 PM, Keith Pickford <kpickford(at)xtra.co.nz (kpickford(at)xtra.co.nz)> wrote:
  [quote]The only instrument that is handy is the oil pressure gauge !! and that is only for a comparison - the reading doesn't matter . no need for calibration.
  Everything else is covered by the nomal senses.
 Unless you are blind deaf and can't smell - then you shouldn't be flying !!!
 I always remember an old pilot telling me you don't need an altimeter or ASI
  If the ground is below you , you have altitude
 If the ground is moving you have airspeed.
 No need for a rev counter
 If the engine is making a noise, its going
 
 Gives you more time to look outside the plane ??
  
 Happy Flying
 
 Keith
 
 --- On Fri, 22/7/11, b d <gpabruce(at)gmail.com (gpabruce(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
 From: b d <gpabruce(at)gmail.com (gpabruce(at)gmail.com)>
 Subject: Re:  Voltmeter advice needed
 
 To: jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com (jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com)
 
 Date: Friday, 22, July, 2011, 3:06 PM 
 
 As I recall,there is an old Chinese proverb about flying . . . "Pilot who fly's upside down will have crack up" . . . . I found that always to be true!   Also, old airmail pilots used to hang a gold necklace from the compass to tell if they are right side up in the fog . . . kinda simple instrumentation when all else fails . . . problem is I have no gold left.  
 
 In my field of work, everything's gone digital and programmable. Problem is the old timers who were masters at calibration and certification have gone and the new bucks don't realize that all instrumentation must be calibrated and verified to a NIST standard to be useful. Without that, a person might as well be using the old necklace as a guide. When the necklace is pointing towards the headliner . . . then "pilot is flying with his crack up". Soon he will hear that loud sound of silence and his heart beat just before the ground rises up to smite his butt.
   
 
 No matter what the precision and resolution, if it ain't calibrated it's just extra weight. It becomes just pretty GIGO . . garbage in, garbage out.
 Bruce
   
 
  
 
 
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		japhillipsga(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Jul 22, 2011 5:43 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Bruce, I don't think Keith really meant it literally with just an oil gauge. I'm sure Keith knows better and he's just messing with us. I was just kidding the other fellow about analog. We have to try to lighten up a bit on these lists. Flying and airplanes we all have in common. Pretty big things! Bess all you folks and I remain, Bill of Georgia N288WP, RV-8a, 9 hrs into Phase l; CH601 XL-B, N505WP, 160 hrs (for sale).   
   
      
   
     
      
   
      
   
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		plus2s
 
 
  Joined: 30 Nov 2006 Posts: 65 Location: NEW ZEALAND
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				 Posted: Fri Jul 22, 2011 10:07 pm    Post subject: Voltmeter advice needed | 
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				Yep - we eat soup out of a plate with a spoon - We don't fly in pea soupers. We are in the middle of winter and have nice clear days with snow on the hills - Great days to go flying
 
 Cheers
 
 Keith  - In New Zealand
 --- On Sat, 23/7/11, japhillipsga(at)aol.com <japhillipsga(at)aol.com> wrote:
 [quote]
 From: japhillipsga(at)aol.com <japhillipsga(at)aol.com>
 Subject: Re: Voltmeter advice needed
 To: jabiruengine-list(at)matronics.com
 Date: Saturday, 23, July, 2011, 1:41 PM
 
 Bruce, I don't think Keith really meant it literally with just an oil gauge. I'm sure Keith knows better  and he's just messing with us. I was just kidding the other fellow about analog. We have to try to lighten up a bit on these lists. Flying and airplanes we all have in common. Pretty big things! Bess all you folks and I remain, Bill of Georgia N288WP, RV-8a, 9 hrs into Phase l; CH601 XL-B, N505WP, 160 hrs (for sale).   
   
      
   
     
      
   
      
   
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