I think the Black Friday deal was a link from 2016. I don't see any current deals.Trying the 30 day demo right now. That Black Friday lifetime deal looks sweet. However, I’m so used to ForeFlight I’m having a hard time enjoying the demo period.
BUT... for VFR pilots, I much prefer FlyQ (except for a very minor annoyance - I don't like they way FlyQ automatically creates a route when you pop two airports into the search box on the map page).
The only way I know is, In Settings | Flight Planning | Defaults you can set Default routing method to "None" and turn off all the routing options below it to off. It won't stop FlyQ from creating a plan, but it will only include the departure and destination airports.Is there a way to override that? It's very annoying to see a route with 9 waypoints for a simple VFR flight.
Biggest reason I like FlyQ better for VFR-only pilots the excellent georeferenced taxi diagrams. My "gripe" with FF is that you have to buy at least the Pro (IFR) package in order to get theirs. I think they are important enough to safety that they should be available at all subscription levels.
FF has some great features, but many of the recent ones were developed for the higher subscription plans.
I know that's not the way it is officially described. Just a personal viewpoint on what it ultimately is based on almost 8 years with the app. Looking at what I see as the essential features (there are bells and whistles I don't care about), I've always seen the Basic vs Pro differentiation as being mostly about approach chart georeferencing. Still do.While I agree with your gripe, the Pro package is not an "IFR" package. You can fly IFR on the Basic plan, and there are plenty of additional VFR features in the Pro plan.
pulls out his Ipad, fiddles around, it freezes
That is the key and should be the #1 thing anybody cares about, especially if you rely on the computer for charts. Ideally, when you ask the person next to you to pull up a chart, they can touch their screen a few times and show it to you. If it does that reliably, the name of the EFB doesn't really matter.Pretty cool that we're lucky enough to have efb's at all, much less such robust ones.
I haven't used it, but those screen shots of FlyQ's user interface are so offensively ugly that I'm not tempted to try, either.
nope...no need. I'll stick with what I know....WingX.
looking for feedback from anyone who has switched either way Foreflight/FlyQ.
Good, bad,regrets
I honestly don't know why these companies charge so much for subscription when the underlying data is free. May be because there are so many of us who are so willing to pay money for a brand name. I get all of VFR and IFR features for free through Avare, and I don't need to buy an ipad and have pay even more for cellular function to get the GPS to work.
I only consider apps that offer quality vector maps ( which at this point means Garmin Pilot and FF only)
Scanned , geo-references sectional charts are just **** poor use of computing power. The whole point of interactive maps is to allow interactivity - enabling and disabling features and map presence based on distance , preferences and just about any useful criteria you can think of.
Using scanned sectionals is similar to using scanned old paper road maps on a computer vs interactive google-like traffic maps - there is no comparison.
If somebody offered this scanned map approach and then try to compete against modern vector maps like google traffic maps for car GPS devices , they would get laughed out but most vendors mentioned in this post limit their products to just that - let me scan that old sectional for you and call it a day - approach.
Because there's a MASSIVE difference between a bunch of data (nav database, airport database, sectionals, charts, plates, etc) and a working EFB. ForeFlight does what it does thanks to dozens of developers working on it full-time.
So where do you get the additional information on sectional charts like inserts or other sorts of things?
The reason we have companies like Foreflight, Garmin, iFly etc.. is because the underlying data is free, courtesy of our government. Otherwise you will only have companies like Jeppesen and Boeing. For that reason, I prefer to support open source efforts. If you love Foreflight and Apple, by all means you should give them your money. I give my money to Avare (which is voluntary), in the hope that it will inspire the next generation of innovations.