JustinPinnix
Pre-Flight
Does at least one of the planes you fly IFR regularly have a working autopilot? This might put the results of the previous poll into perspective.
The R182 I fly has an S-TEC 5500. The nav/heading modes are great. The altitude hold/alert bites. The KAP-140 in all the Skyhawks works beautifully. I'll take it any day over the S-TEC.one of our 172s has an STEC that holds altitude and heading pretty well. its NAV tracking sucks so I dont use it. The 421 I fly with my boss occasionally as a good autopilot, but i rarely use it. Our other 4 172s are autopilot-less but it doesnt stop me from flying IFR in them.
The R182 I fly has an S-TEC 5500. The nav/heading modes are great. The altitude hold/alert bites. The KAP-140 in all the Skyhawks works beautifully. I'll take it any day over the S-TEC.
I decided I would give the Autopilot a shot in the C172 I flew back to Albuquerque.
I can now say that I still despise Autopilots and will never use one. This POS didn't do altitude holds, which made flying the plane nearly impossible because everytime the plane turned, there was the normal loss of lift, but if I tried to pull back on the yoke, I was fighting the turn of the autopilot.
The autopilot did not coordinate any turns either. Nothing better than having an autopilot turn to intercept a course while you watch the ball go all the way to the other side of the SI.
The only positive thing I can say about the autopilot is that if I were already on course (and by that, I mean dead on course, not a foot to the left or right) and the plane was already trimmed for level flight and there were no turns coming up anytime soon, it would be good to keep the plane from the graveyard spriral while I turn around to pet my dog or something.
No thank you.
I can now say that I still despise Autopilots and will never use one. This POS didn't do altitude holds, which made flying the plane nearly impossible because everytime the plane turned, there was the normal loss of lift, but if I tried to pull back on the yoke, I was fighting the turn of the autopilot.
The autopilot did not coordinate any turns either. Nothing better than having an autopilot turn to intercept a course while you watch the ball go all the way to the other side of the SI.
The only positive thing I can say about the autopilot is that if I were already on course (and by that, I mean dead on course, not a foot to the left or right) and the plane was already trimmed for level flight and there were no turns coming up anytime soon, it would be good to keep the plane from the graveyard spriral while I turn around to pet my dog or something.
No thank you.
So you've had a few bad experiences with crappy autopilots.
Nah, I understand the limitations, Greg, but how are you supposed to keep the plane coordinated in IMC when it decides to turn? You'd practically have to fixate on the TC to make sure that the ball was centered the entire time.
The resistance was not in the pitch, it was that by pulling back on the yoke, the AP was unable to continue the bank, because my hand was on the yoke, pulling back.
I think that a wing leveler would be a much better choice than a 1 axis autopilot.
I am not saying that those of you that use Autopilots are insane or doing something wrong, I'm just saying that autopilots are not for me. I gave in, and decided to try one to see if I was missing something. I wasn't.
And I can certainly say that I would not count on a 1 axis autopilot in IMC.
Current autopilot -- Piper Autocontrol -- will get ripped out as soon as I figure out what to do with the panel. Not a great autopilot to begin with, this one has some problems with the coupler that has my autopilot guru friend stumped. The STec altitude hold module works great.
Maybe someone has an idea. Flies the heading bug fine. Couple it to a nav -- either GPS or VOR -- and it banks hard left. Turn the bank knob to the right to compensate and the course line on the HSI/CDI moves instead.
Sacrifice some live chickens, maybe?
No doubt, Greg. I can get a great deal on an STec. But I don't want to do that work until I figure out what to do about the KLN90B that now serves as the primary GPS, and then do it all at once.Get the S-Tec, Ken.
I have to price all this stuff someday.
I wish! The Bens aren't as much a problem as Father Time.All it takes is several stacks of Ben's.
I wish! The Bens aren't as much a problem as Father Time.
Nah, I understand the limitations, Greg, but how are you supposed to keep the plane coordinated in IMC when it decides to turn?
The resistance was not in the pitch, it was that by pulling back on the yoke, the AP was unable to continue the bank, because my hand was on the yoke, pulling back.
I'm just saying that autopilots are not for me. I gave in, and decided to try one to see if I was missing something. I wasn't.
The STEC 40 or any single axes AP will not intercept a VOR /ILS course, it will only hold and track the course once you are on it
You want to be careful with an autopilot on approach. We had a fatal at my airport last month, where it looked like the pilot allowed his autopilot to hold an altitude until the Bonanza stalled and crashed on the LOC. Really underscores the need to have a good scan even on AP.
Ahh, and Jesse's right, this AP was screwy anyways (we talked about it in chat, that's how he knew). It wouldn't hold course. Kept going back and forth across the course, essentially doing really wide s-turns.
I don't think this is quite correct. A single-axis autopilot can control the airplane in one axis - typically roll. Adding a second axis gives you pitch (and possibly electric trim to further enhance it), and a third axis gives you yaw damping.
Many single axis autopilots have the ability to follow a heading and then intercept and track a VOR or GPS course. Add roll steering/GPSS and you get a unit that can even fly a holding pattern!
If I recall correctly, the STEC 30 series will do LVL/HDG/NAV in a single axis package.
Does at least one of the planes you fly IFR regularly have a working autopilot? This might put the results of the previous poll into perspective.
I have the STEC 40 and it states in the owners manual that it will not intercept a course, you can go to STEC's website and read the manual there..
Dean, I agree about the STEC 40 - but what you said was "The STEC 40 or any single axes AP will not intercept a VOR /ILS course, it will only hold and track the course once you are on it".
You're right about the STEC 40, you're incorrect about any single axis autopilot.
Those Piper rigs are kind of notorious for going south in unpredictable ways, particularly in Nav mode. A good avionics shop may be able to resurrect it, but an STec or a new Century would be a better investment.Current autopilot -- Piper Autocontrol -- will get ripped out as soon as I figure out what to do with the panel. Not a great autopilot to begin with, this one has some problems with the coupler that has my autopilot guru friend stumped. The STec altitude hold module works great.
Maybe someone has an idea. Flies the heading bug fine. Couple it to a nav -- either GPS or VOR -- and it banks hard left. Turn the bank knob to the right to compensate and the course line on the HSI/CDI moves instead.
Sacrifice some live chickens, maybe?