RE: TruTrak ADI
>
"It's a perfectly reasonable instrument, but it isn't an attitude indicator"
Sure could have fooled me. It and I have been through a lot of bad weather together.
Since that VAF discussion was written before I bought my unit in 2008 I'm sure I read whatever's there. As usual on these forums, Van's in particular, there's always one or two self-styled experts in love with their interpretation of what they think they know. Whatever is there is really irrelevant in comparison with my experiences in the ensuing years in using the ADI through thick and thin.
It doesn't pay, in the case of the ADI, to get too caught up in discussing how the ADI arrives at the information it displays. There's a lot of room for confusion when going there. "How" it works is really irrelevant. Does it perform at all times and in all ways like an attitude indicator is supposed to perform? In my experience the answer is unequivocally yes.
My ADI uses cockpit static pressure - the instrument is vented to my cockpit.
The pitot connection, if I recall correctly, does not affect the instrument's ability to display my aircraft in relation to the horizon correctly. What it affects, when connected, is the rate at which it does so. Its response time. Honestly, it's been so long since I hooked it up I can't remember just why it works better when hooked up to pitot pressure. It worked fine without it as I recall but when talking to TruTrak about the behavior of the instrument I was advised to connect the pitot connection for better results.
If the issue here is the instrument being "dependent", I think we can safely say that the ADI with performance slightly degraded with loss of pitot pressure against the D2 being totally dead with loss of GPS, the dependency issue favors the ADI I think you'd agree, especially if you were in the clouds.
>
"Hold one in your hand and it will show level after a few seconds no matter what angle it's at."
I've never held it in my hand and done that so can't say yay or nay as to whether it does what you say or not. I can say that I have done many approaches to landings in a nose high configuration, sometimes in instrument conditions, and it has never acted abnormally. I have done a lot of slow flight, especially in the pattern just above stall, hanging on the prop and very nose high, and never had my ADI "return to level." My aircraft is a taildragger so it spends a lot of its life nose high

. As I mentioned earlier, if it had ever done anything in the slightest to cause me to distrust it . . . if it had acted in any way other than the way an artificial horizon is supposed to act, I would have gotten rid of it. I do a lot of weather flying in my plane - I enjoy bad weather odd as that may sound - and the instantaneous response of the ADI compliments the very touchy control response of my plane very nicely. They are a perfect match. I especially like the way it presents attitude and heading - just those two things - in such a clear and uncomplicated (and instantaneous) fashion. If I ever come across a used 3-inch ADI in like-new condition I will buy it against the day that mine ever fails. TruTrak charges $400 basic shop charge to repair an ADI (if it's long out of warranty) and I'm pretty sure a used but like-new ADI wouldn't cost much more than $400 these days. TruTrak has gone on to produce newer and fancier versions of this instrument - none of which make me want to replace what I've got. I think they still make the 2-inch model but I like the bigger one.
With the ADI, the way the background moves against the horizon bar is more comfortable, to me, than having background and horizon bar electronically generated - especially with the very poor resolution graphics used on the D2. It reminds me of the old CGA graphic standard we had before VGA and the higher resolutions came along. I'm sure it's something I'll have no trouble using on the ferry flight coming up. I'm sure the D2 will work just fine for what I bought it for. I'm just sayin' . . . the jerky graphics this thing has is, well, jerky. You can almost count the pixels.
There are some really expensive little electric attitude indicators out there I'm sure I'd like just as well as I like my TruTrak, but until I win the lottery I can't imagine anything better than the horizon instrument I've got. The rest of the information displayed on the D2 (other than G meter) I have either on my GPS or on other dedicated instruments. As I think I said in my first post, paraphrasing here . . . "for what it is, it's a nice little instrument." I still think it is (even though I've not used it yet). What I was complaining about is the emphasis in your advertising, in several different places and in several different ways, stating how the D2 is a "true" attitude indicator. It's not until you get into the fine print of things that one realizes that it only works as long as it has a GPS signal. I think Dynon's advertising department, in emphasizing the distinction between having a dedicated AI as opposed to a smartphone app or GPS "panel mode", (I could quote numerous examples as I went through and collected them) conveniently leaves out the information that the D2 doesn't work any better than the "pseudo panel" displays if the GPS signal is lost. If the GPS signal
isn't lost, I've no doubt the D2 is a heck of a lot more responsive than the "panel mode" that certain GPS makers offer.
I'm sure it's a great little instrument. I just think the advertising department got a little carried away. They may not have crossed it but they certainly got close to the line that defines mis-representation of a product. I certainly could have done a better job of doing my research as well - although even if I'd known it was GPS dependent I would have bought it anyway since when I bought it I thought I had an immediate situation that didn't allow time for used ADI shopping. Since then there have been some delays so I wasn't as pressed for time as I thought I was when I bought it. But no matter . . . . I'm not unhappy. It's a great "extra" for the flight bag and Marv Golden gave me a great price. I may or may not sell it once the plane is delivered.
*****************
I'm wondering, since we're on the subject, does the D2 or other Dynon products take advantage of the European Galileo GPS satellites? How about the Russian GLONASS system?
If it did, that would go a long way towards decreasing the possibility of losing function of the AI. Just curious.
Mike