Thanks, I thought it was there but missed in the manual.From page 5-9 of the SkyView Classic/Touch Pilot's User Guide - Rev AD:
"The Fuel Efficiency info item (displayed as NM/GAL) displays how efficiently the aircraft is using fuel with respect to the speed it is traveling over the ground (this also can be displayed as MI/GAL, KT/GAL, KM/LTR)."
It is. You just have to compute it.I would like for the value to be saved to the log file. It would help visualize engine performance for various mixture settings.
Actually, if you're trying to figure out engine performance, TAS/GPH is a far more useful determinant, as it's not affected by wind - it's JUST a function of the aircraft's performance.I would like for the value to be saved to the log file. It would help visualize engine performance for various mixture settings.
Computing is nice but graphing the result in Saavy analysis would be nicer. I had not thought of TAS/GPH so maybe I'll have to dust off Excel and plot a few. I typically see 20+ nm/gal flying my IO-360 CS RV-6 at 20" and 2000 rpm. TAS typically 100 kts with FF 4.2-5.0 gph.It is. You just have to compute it.
Showed that picture to a non-aviator friend and he almost expelled his coffee through his nose. We forget sometimes how complicated all this seems to non-aviation folks.As mentioned, this is a groundspeed referenced number, but still handy to have in flight. See my bottom right corner. The range you see there is not incorrect, I have long range tanks with 68 total gallons on my RV-9A.
I'll try adding a TAS/FF column and uploading to Savvy. I think this info would be especially useful when choosing the best power setting when tussling with a headwind.What I think you really want is for Savvy to add the ability to compute additional fields, rather than add things that can be computed on the ground to the Dynon output stream (we call these, appropriately enough,
And yet, when you use it everyday (or at least more days than not), it all seems perfectly comfortable.Showed that picture to a non-aviator friend and he almost expelled his coffee through his nose. We forget sometimes how complicated all this seems to non-aviation folks.
Yeah, I know. I'm off topic.