The 262 is not a paperweight after 2020- there is over 95% of the USA where it can still be used....
I'm not sure I understand the response, Dynon. Your website states, "NOTE ON U.S. COMPLIANCE: Currently the FAA ADS-B requirements specify the higher power Class 1 transponder for ADS-B compliance on and after 2020. Therefore, for U.S. customers, we recommend only the Class 1 SV-XPNDR-261."
Additionally, the product page on the 261 says, "130 Watt: <15,000 ft, <175 knots only; cannot be used for 2020 FAA ADS-B Out mandate" (bold emphasis is mine)
This is seemingly in conflict with the statement you just made:
The 262 is not a paperweight after 2020- there is over 95% of the USA where it can still be used....
Will you please elaborate? I purchased the 261 because of the website literature.
[/quote]I'm not sure I understand the response, Dynon. Your website states, "NOTE ON U.S. COMPLIANCE: Currently the FAA ADS-B requirements specify the higher power Class 1 transponder for ADS-B compliance on and after 2020. Therefore, for U.S. customers, we recommend only the Class 1 SV-XPNDR-261."
Dynon has stated the firmware is exactly the same between the two transponders... With a 2020 GPS, I wonder what the realistic results would be flying with the 262. ???
Now we've even got the Forum Admin confused!
The -261 is the higher power "Class 1" transponder, the -262 is the lower power "Class 2" transponder.
This - from the Skyview Transponder page - "The FAA ADS-B "final rule" only allows the higher power Class 1 transponder to be used as an ADS-B Out transmit device for ADS-B Out mandate compliance on or after 2020. Therefore, for U.S. customers, we recommend only the Class 1 SV-XPNDR-261."
The FAA's requirement after 2020 is that you must be equipped with a Class 1 transponder if you fly in ADS-B required areas. If you choose to continue to fly with a Class 2 (SV-XPNDR-262) transponder after 2020 in those areas, that's between you and the FAA.
The software won't stop you, and it will broadcast the same (albeit at lower power). You'd be non-compliant because you're not equipped per the regs though.
To be clear, you WILL pass your transponder check. The 262 is a perfectly legal transponder.
The issue will be that the wattage reported on that report, may be insufficient for the ADS-B regs. But a transponder check is not an ADS-B check. There is no recurring check required for ADS-B.