I am FINALLY getting around to doing the airspeed and altimeter calibration in my airplane.
Does anyone have a procedure and an associated spreadsheet that I can use to do this test?
I have seen procedures where you (I) fly one leg on a given TRACK (and some use a HEADING) lets say use 000 (Due North at level altitude and do not make changes in power and let the IAS stabilize (at about the 30 second point should do it) and then I record the GPS Speed and the TRACK (or HEADING) degrees in some place on the spreadsheet…then make a turn to lets say left heading (or track?!?!?) 120 degrees and fly that track for 30 seconds then record GPS speed and track …then fly a track of 240 degrees…
Got it....this compares GPS speed to ground speed and the three legs cancel out for the effects of the wind...some people say to do four legs so I presume that would be mo-betta...
So now is the part(S) I don’t get…
What I want to do is to ensure that my Calibrated Air Speed is close to my Indicated Air Speed and that my Indicated altitude is close to True Altitude (MSL) not just at the one speed and altitude I just did these three/ four legs but I want to ensure that the CAS and True Altitude (MSL) is accurate for speeds from VS+5 all the way up to whatever my engine can get the airplane speed and I want to do this from 1000 MSL up to about 17500 MSL so I should do this same test at the various speeds (VS+5, 80, 100, 120, 140, 180, 200) at 2000 MSL and then go up to higher altitudes (5000, 10000, 15000) and then do the same steps again…
Then I need to plug and chug this data into a spreadsheet and then that spreadsheet will squirt out the data so I can compare my Dynon altimeter and IAS and then make whatever adjustments I need to make the Dynon match what it really should be.
Different air speeds may really affect the static source pressure and that might screw around with both IAS and True Altitude. Example: I do these three legs at 70 KIAS and the GPS altitude shows 2000 feet and then when I do the 180 KIAS legs the GPS altitude might be showing 2800 feet due to poor static source location
The only way to ensure that the indicated altitude when set to the local altimeter setting is close to True Altitude MSL is to actually compare the Indicated altitude to the GPS altitude at the various airspeeds.
So I cant imagine that I am the first person to want to check this data so someone out there in Cyberspace has most likely come up with a spreadsheet that has lots of data blocks to record data such as the local altimeter setting for the location I am doing my triangles over, the OAT for where I am triangulating…and the spreadsheet that will do this fancy Greek math for me and work the E6B backwards to come up with all of this stuff...
Then I presume the Dynon will have places to make these calibration changes and I will study the manual for that however the first step is to determine what procedure to use, what data to collect, and then what spreadsheet to use...
Anyone out there that can help...Please???
THANKS!!!
Does anyone have a procedure and an associated spreadsheet that I can use to do this test?
I have seen procedures where you (I) fly one leg on a given TRACK (and some use a HEADING) lets say use 000 (Due North at level altitude and do not make changes in power and let the IAS stabilize (at about the 30 second point should do it) and then I record the GPS Speed and the TRACK (or HEADING) degrees in some place on the spreadsheet…then make a turn to lets say left heading (or track?!?!?) 120 degrees and fly that track for 30 seconds then record GPS speed and track …then fly a track of 240 degrees…
Got it....this compares GPS speed to ground speed and the three legs cancel out for the effects of the wind...some people say to do four legs so I presume that would be mo-betta...
So now is the part(S) I don’t get…
What I want to do is to ensure that my Calibrated Air Speed is close to my Indicated Air Speed and that my Indicated altitude is close to True Altitude (MSL) not just at the one speed and altitude I just did these three/ four legs but I want to ensure that the CAS and True Altitude (MSL) is accurate for speeds from VS+5 all the way up to whatever my engine can get the airplane speed and I want to do this from 1000 MSL up to about 17500 MSL so I should do this same test at the various speeds (VS+5, 80, 100, 120, 140, 180, 200) at 2000 MSL and then go up to higher altitudes (5000, 10000, 15000) and then do the same steps again…
Then I need to plug and chug this data into a spreadsheet and then that spreadsheet will squirt out the data so I can compare my Dynon altimeter and IAS and then make whatever adjustments I need to make the Dynon match what it really should be.
Different air speeds may really affect the static source pressure and that might screw around with both IAS and True Altitude. Example: I do these three legs at 70 KIAS and the GPS altitude shows 2000 feet and then when I do the 180 KIAS legs the GPS altitude might be showing 2800 feet due to poor static source location
The only way to ensure that the indicated altitude when set to the local altimeter setting is close to True Altitude MSL is to actually compare the Indicated altitude to the GPS altitude at the various airspeeds.
So I cant imagine that I am the first person to want to check this data so someone out there in Cyberspace has most likely come up with a spreadsheet that has lots of data blocks to record data such as the local altimeter setting for the location I am doing my triangles over, the OAT for where I am triangulating…and the spreadsheet that will do this fancy Greek math for me and work the E6B backwards to come up with all of this stuff...
Then I presume the Dynon will have places to make these calibration changes and I will study the manual for that however the first step is to determine what procedure to use, what data to collect, and then what spreadsheet to use...
Anyone out there that can help...Please???
THANKS!!!
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