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- Mar 23, 2005
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- 13,226
If mmarien is right and the A210 won't accept tuning commands from a Garmin handheld GPS, then it won't work from Dynon either.
3 GPS devices connected to one SkyView!
You really should hook that G430 up via ARINC, which will allow you to use the NAV/LOC/ILS functions of it with SkyView, as well as allowing it to be used for GPS approaches. That will free up a serial port.
The 430/530 does not support external tuning so there's nothing we can do there.
3 GPS devices connected to one SkyView!
You really should hook that G430 up via ARINC, which will allow you to use the NAV/LOC/ILS functions of it with SkyView, as well as allowing it to be used for GPS approaches. That will free up a serial port.
I forgot to mention the G430 is also connected via ARINC. Maybe I should just use that connection and free up one port. Will Skyview V6 also push data to a G430/530 like it will to an SL30/40?
3 GPS devices connected to one SkyView!
You really should hook that G430 up via ARINC, which will allow you to use the NAV/LOC/ILS functions of it with SkyView, as well as allowing it to be used for GPS approaches. That will free up a serial port.
I forgot to mention the G430 is also connected via ARINC. Maybe I should just use that connection and free up one port. Will Skyview V6 also push data to a G430/530 like it will to an SL30/40?
Why do you have both ARINC *and* serial connections from the SV to the 430?
interesting...what data is the 430 sending via serial, and is SV even using it? I just have the ARINC box and have had no issues, but I have several available serial ports....
What failure scenarios do you envision where this would serve as a backup?
So basically, it's exactly like a handheld GPS. Given the airplane already has a handheld GPS and the Dynon GPS, that's a lot of backup.
I would disagree that there is no such thing as excessive redundancy. We don't all fly airplanes with two, three, or four engines, and we don't all require our planes to have two pilots on board. We also don't run two circuit breakers and wires to every electrical load to deal with failed breakers or broken wires. That's because we make logical trade-offs between redundancy and reality. So what you really mean is that you think free redundancy is never bad.
Even in your case, it wasn't free. You added weight from the extra wire, you added one more path for something to go wrong, and you added operational complexity. You have a GPS0, GPS1, GPS2, and GPS3 in your plane, and two of them are the same source, yet one has a lot less operational capability. This increases workload on the pilot, which inherently is a risk and is a downside. The Pilot could see waypoint KABC on the HSI and think it must be right since the G430W shows KABC, but they are using the highly wounded serial connection and don't realize it.
It also caused you to claim you were out of serial ports
While this is a minor case, it's just an example of why just adding redundancy all day is not always good. All redundancy inherently increases the complexity of a system, and at some point that makes the system unusable.
Just a point of view from a guy that thinks about redundancy in our systems every day...
--Ian Jordan
Dynon Avionics