What is the better IFR navigator to interface with Dynon HDX?

moetzmoet

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What is the better IFR navigator to interface with Dynon HDX? What are the pro’s and con’s Now and outlook going forward?
 

airguy

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Garmin is shuttering their 430/530 line. I replaced my 430W with Avidyne IFD440 a few years ago and absolutely love it - the user interface with Avidyne is so much better than Garmin.

Any of them will interface with the ARINC-429 device to feed nav data to the Dynon - but you really want to choose/use the navigator that you are most comfortable with, from a user interface perspective. That's going to be the main experience driver for you in the air.
 

jakej

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.... and you can monitor the Standby freq plus have FTLA + IFD100 (App) control & display on an iPad etc, etc - just google the IFD to GTN comparisons & see what's different.
 

djones

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Also, you can send frequencies from HDX to the IFD via a serial port connection. Not so on Garmin stuff.
 

CanardMulti

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Both the Garmin 650/750 or the Avidyne 440/540 (or 550 which adds an AHRS board if you want an SAI built in) will do the job nicely. As stated above, preference very well may be a function of your previous experience. The Garmin interface is largely touch screen only based and more often than not needs to be backed out of one menu to enter another. They are also prettier.

The Avidynes differ in that they are both button and touch capable such that there are multiple ways to achieve input for perhaps 95% of the functions. They used to advertise that usually 2 button pushes, and almost never more than 3, will get you to the page you want. That variability can make your previous experience more applicable. If you have ever used a high level FMC professionally, their input flow simply feels more pilot friendly. If you have ever had to enter a long full reroute clearance in turbulence, you will appreciate having buttons.

One looking forward aspect you might have not considered: Avidyne goes to great lengths to make their equipment fully interoperable with a wide range of other manufacturers' avionics. Garmin equipment, while somewhat adaptable for use with other mfg. avionics, seems to often reserve complete functionality for only other Garmin products. Translation: Which will be easier to sell years from now should something new and shiny catch your eye?

Last, a BIG consideration: Check out Avidyne's FREE IFD 100 app for your iPad. Garmin has nothing like it.

Ken
 

362PC

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Also, you can send frequencies from HDX to the IFD via a serial port connection. Not so on Garmin stuff.
Can you elaborate a bit more on this, and a way to test? I have an IFD540 and would like to know more about sending frequencies to it. Nav/Comm? I have the radio panel and send frequencies to that but have not ever seen an option to program the IFD radios from the HDX.
 

djones

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This requires a pair of RS232 from the screen be connected to the Avidyne.
The connection and setup is discussed in the Third Party install manual.
 

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custom555

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Does that RS232 connection allow the Avidyne IFD to control the transponder connected to the Dynon screen. Any thoughts on that control "flowing through" if the Dynon HDX screen failed/lost power...allowing the IFD to control the transponder.
 

John Lucas

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Does that RS232 connection allow the Avidyne IFD to control the transponder connected to the Dynon screen. Any thoughts on that control "flowing through" if the Dynon HDX screen failed/lost power...allowing the IFD to control the transponder.
Two different issues you asked about. If the Dynon screen loses power that means it either has no battery backup or that failed as well. In that case, I’m not sure the transponder or IFD would have power, so a non-issue for IFD control. If the screen merely failed the transponder should continue to function, but I do not think your IFD would be able to remotely control it. If already in flight, this just means you can’t change your squawk. Not really an issue compared to losing your PFD, especially if IFR.
 

custom555

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Thanks for the info, just running through redundancy options as I'm upgrading to an IFR platform.
 

John Lucas

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Thanks for the info, just running through redundancy options as I'm upgrading to an IFR platform.
A couple additional thoughts on redundancy, if you care to hear them. Buy at least 2 ADHRS units, even if you only have one HDX screen. That provides a redundant source of info to drive your PFD. I would also buy the backup battery for each HDX screen you install providing redundancy in electrics. Finally, I’d purchase a completely standalone standby attitude indicator that also provides airspeed and altitude with its own battery backup. Whether you choose to put your IFD on a bus where one of the backup batteries would keep it going is up to you. Ensure that the additional load wouldn’t compromise your PFD or backup attitude indicator. In any case train regularly how you would handle losing your PFD in the soup. Unfortunately, the days of being able to get no gyro vectors for a radar guided approach are going away. Fortunately, a properly configured avionics package, like HDX, should never leave you needing those no gyro vectors.
 

airguy

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John has good advice above - I've lost an ADAHRS unit before, in flight. It happens.

Something interesting occurs as well with the Dynon if your pitot ices up - your pitch horizon goes nuts for a minute or two as the system is "anticipating" what your airplane is supposed to be doing based on the airspeed changes, and following that can get you into real trouble. Having a G5 or similar in the panel (which does NOT do that) can save your scrawny hide if you lose pitot sensing. Ignore the the Dynon pitch oscillations and fly the standby horizon until the Dynon equipment figures out the airspeed is gone and settles down, displaying "Check Pitot Heat". Then it's reliable again.
 

custom555

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Thanks Hohn and Airguy, good info from both. I have 2 HDX screens powered by two separate vpx circuits, both with batteries and two ADAHRS. I'm planning on an AV-30 as a stand alone backup to that. I'm wiring the IFD and AV-30 to the bus, not my vpx...in case the vpx becomes a problem. I'll have a PAR200B radio with a second radio on the IFD. Good enough redundancy and the PAR200B fails to com 1, last freq I believe. I was hoping the IFD could be a second option to control the transponder if I lost the Dynon screens/system, but not necessary.

I like having redundancy in displays and how they are powered...I've learned that through experience. If you have any more ideas I'd like to hear them.
 

Mark

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What are the best options to add to the HDX in order to fly an ILS? And do I need an additional radio? Or, without ILS, will the 175 provide sufficient/safe IFR cockpit?
 

John Lucas

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What are the best options to add to the HDX in order to fly an ILS? And do I need an additional radio? Or, without ILS, will the 175 provide sufficient/safe IFR cockpit?
To fly an ILS you will need a certified box that receives the ILS signal and talks to the HDX. There are lots of options, Garmin and Avidyne lead the pack, but most of those options also do GPS which adds cost. A Garmin 175 provides the ability to shoot GPS approaches and does meet the minimum requirements for IFR flight. Some might call it inadequate (I wouldn’t), but you are still legal with just a VOR receiver and flying navaid to navaid, so some of this is skill and risk tolerance. The minimum IFR flight requirements are just that MINIMAL.
 

JP JR

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I have a Garmin 355 slaved to my Dynon for IFR navigation.. love it … I’d love it more if it Garmin allowed Dynon to control the Radio and Navigation frequency like it does on my 255 but nonetheless it does a superb job of feeding the IFR GPS navigation course to the dynon display and even better to the Dynon AP
 

airguy

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Kinda depends on your mission. If you are "IFR Lite" and don't mind cancelling a trip once in a while for true low ceilings where you are going, then sure the G175 will serve the great majority of your needs. Many RNAV approaches will not go below 400' ceilings, and you'll need a true ILS to get down to 200 & 1/2. Exceptions, sure - but you can't count on them. To be fair, not all airports have an ILS either - but it's a solid standby when both the weather and the fuel are getting low.

The VHF nav also gives you enroute VOR-to-VOR navigation in areas where GPS jamming is happening, which certainly seems to be more frequent.

I depend on my airplane to take me anywhere in the contiguous 48 states on short notice, that means backups, and VHF+GPS for making an approach. I started with a Garmin 430W, and upgraded to the Avidyne 440 a few years back. Same functionality but much better user interface.
 

Marc_J._Zeitlin

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Kinda depends on your mission...
Everything you say is correct, but...

I have an HDX and GPS175. I went with the 175 rather than the 650 because I looked at every airport I'd ever flown into with an instrument approach as well as any airport I thought I'd WANT to fly into with an instrument approach and at least as of 5 years ago when I made the decision, NONE of them had a GPS approach that wasn't at least as good as the best non-GPS approach. IOW, if there was an ILS, then there was a GPS approach down to 200 ft. If there was a LOC approach, then there was a GPS approach down to 300 - 400 ft. And if there was only a VOR approach, then there was always a GPS approach with minimums that was way lower than the VOR minimums.

So while there may be airports out there that you can get into with an ILS or LOC that you can't with a GPS in a given weather situation, I wasn't able to find one, at least within a few hundred miles of my location in SoCal.

Now, the GPS jamming thing is real, but the question is really how likely it is to occur at exactly the time that you're shooting an approach. My position was that for ME, it wasn't a concern, but YMMV.
 
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