drgwentzel
Pre-takeoff checklist
Flyers,
I have an iPad2 3G, ForeFlight HD and I just purchased the Bad Elf GPS module. I also bought Sporty's thigh strap for the iPad which works great BTW.
My reason for buying the Bad Elf GPS was that I heard it is more accurate then the 3G's GPS and I thought it was WAAS enabled. I also was under the impression that if I put the iPad on standby the Bad Elf would continue the monitor my position.
Here are my issues with this GPS, the iPad, kneeboard strap and ForeFlight:
1) The Bad Elf module is at the bottom of the iPad and I feel that I am going to break it when I lift the iPad to see the display better.
2) The Bad Elf also just has to touch anything and it pops right off and usually hits the floor and leaves me scrambling with a flashlight to find it. Therefore, the Bad Elf and iPad has become more of a distraction than a help. I wrote to Bad Elf and John wrote me back and said they make it this way because Apple demands it to be an Apple Approved Device. They don't want a 3rd party accessory breaking the iPad jack...they want it to pop off easily. I don't get that...the charging jacks make a very satisfying CLICK and gets a good bite. What's the difference?
3) I can not rotate the iPad because I also use ForeFlight's Checklist Pro. This is NOT designed for the iPad. How stupid is that!? It is designed for the iPhone and it is not engineered to rotate and THAT is more short-sighted engineering. Therefore, if I rotate the iPad my checklists will be upside-down! Personally, Checklist Pro once purchased should be incorporated inside ForeFlight HD as touchable link just like the Map or Airport screens. But that's just me I guess.
4) The Bad Elf people wrote me about these issues and suggested that I purchase a 4 foot 30 pin extension cord (which has a powerful jack connection) This would upset me! Understand we pilots have many portable devices in the cockpit now. These include headsets (up to 4), GPS with traffic, weather, XM music and electronic flightbags. The problem with this is that each one of these requires wires, wires and more wires. One for the GPS power, on for the GPS antenna, one for the GPS XM/weather, sometimes one for traffic and at least two wires *for each* headset! I am literally sitting in a web of wires!! Now the iPad (if fully charged) at least requires no wires! So adding yet another wire is *not* desirable and that wire would have to go forward toward the dash so the Bad Elf can see the sky. This is why I bought the Bad Elf over others that required wires or at least it did not require charging like the Bluetooth options, which gives yet at least two more failure points (Bluetooth and charging).
Bottom lines are these:
1) The Bad Elf's jack is under-engineered. It does not make a solid connection with the iPad's jack and falls out VERY easily
2) ForeFlight needs to get off their butts and port Checklist Pro to the iPad and make it rotatable. At LEAST they need to provide an update to the iPhone app that allows it to rotate.
Anyone else find these frustrations?
Gene
I have an iPad2 3G, ForeFlight HD and I just purchased the Bad Elf GPS module. I also bought Sporty's thigh strap for the iPad which works great BTW.
My reason for buying the Bad Elf GPS was that I heard it is more accurate then the 3G's GPS and I thought it was WAAS enabled. I also was under the impression that if I put the iPad on standby the Bad Elf would continue the monitor my position.
Here are my issues with this GPS, the iPad, kneeboard strap and ForeFlight:
1) The Bad Elf module is at the bottom of the iPad and I feel that I am going to break it when I lift the iPad to see the display better.
2) The Bad Elf also just has to touch anything and it pops right off and usually hits the floor and leaves me scrambling with a flashlight to find it. Therefore, the Bad Elf and iPad has become more of a distraction than a help. I wrote to Bad Elf and John wrote me back and said they make it this way because Apple demands it to be an Apple Approved Device. They don't want a 3rd party accessory breaking the iPad jack...they want it to pop off easily. I don't get that...the charging jacks make a very satisfying CLICK and gets a good bite. What's the difference?
3) I can not rotate the iPad because I also use ForeFlight's Checklist Pro. This is NOT designed for the iPad. How stupid is that!? It is designed for the iPhone and it is not engineered to rotate and THAT is more short-sighted engineering. Therefore, if I rotate the iPad my checklists will be upside-down! Personally, Checklist Pro once purchased should be incorporated inside ForeFlight HD as touchable link just like the Map or Airport screens. But that's just me I guess.
4) The Bad Elf people wrote me about these issues and suggested that I purchase a 4 foot 30 pin extension cord (which has a powerful jack connection) This would upset me! Understand we pilots have many portable devices in the cockpit now. These include headsets (up to 4), GPS with traffic, weather, XM music and electronic flightbags. The problem with this is that each one of these requires wires, wires and more wires. One for the GPS power, on for the GPS antenna, one for the GPS XM/weather, sometimes one for traffic and at least two wires *for each* headset! I am literally sitting in a web of wires!! Now the iPad (if fully charged) at least requires no wires! So adding yet another wire is *not* desirable and that wire would have to go forward toward the dash so the Bad Elf can see the sky. This is why I bought the Bad Elf over others that required wires or at least it did not require charging like the Bluetooth options, which gives yet at least two more failure points (Bluetooth and charging).
Bottom lines are these:
1) The Bad Elf's jack is under-engineered. It does not make a solid connection with the iPad's jack and falls out VERY easily
2) ForeFlight needs to get off their butts and port Checklist Pro to the iPad and make it rotatable. At LEAST they need to provide an update to the iPhone app that allows it to rotate.
Anyone else find these frustrations?
Gene