Jesse Saint
Line Up and Wait
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Jesse Saint
Dynon just announced that the 182E and newer 182's can now get the auto pilot installed with full approach capability.
Looks like this includes retract and turbo variants for both legacy and restart years, no?Dynon just announced that the 182E and newer 182's can now get the auto pilot installed with full approach capability.
Yes. It looks like that's the case. Just not the early 182-182D. Still waiting to see if it will work with the Robertson STOL mod.
Indeed, but I hope dynon doesn’t stop pushing as they are still significantly behind the GFC line in terms of capability.Competition is good.
To be fair it’s been awhile since I looked at it, but off the top of my head, I believe the gfc can fly approaches lower, dynon offers no support for yaw damping, there was some craziness in having to do things through the AP head, like setting baro for example that increases workload. There we’re other things that I can’t remember.How are they significantly behind the GFC500 in capability?
You might. I think the Dynon AP was only approved for normal certification aircraft this past year (I have flown with the LSA/Experimental one).To be fair it’s been awhile since I looked at it, but off the top of my head, I believe the gfc can fly approaches lower, dynon offers no support for yaw damping, there was some craziness in having to do things through the AP head, like setting Nato for example that increases workload. There we’re other things that I can’t remember.
Please correct any errors, It had been awhile since I’ve compared.
also, now that it’s not 3am I’m realizing I may be confusing it with the BK, which works with the dynon hdx.
Lol yes nato was supposed to be baro. Thanks for the clarifications.I think you are thinking if the Aerocruze 100. The Dynon does have a yaw damper option in the Bonanza models. Their minimum altitudes very between models, but are very close to the GFC500. You don’t even need the AP Panel at all, but I think maybe your Baro was autocorrected to Nato somehow. That is an Aerocruze feature. The Dynon is not much different in features at all compared to the GFC500. The biggest thing is that they don’t offer a trim servo, but will control an increasing number of existing trim servos.
I see the parts are ~$5600. Anyone have a guess on the number of hours for install?
I would say about 40 hours to install at the most. Running the wires is a big chunk of the battle. The servo in the tail will need someone small, probably, but beyond that it shouldn't be difficult.
That matches what I found when I researched different autopilots a few months ago. The lack of a trim servo was my biggest concern about the Dynon autopilot. And I find the GFC500 control panel vastly superior over the Dynon autopilot control panel. Dynon's AFM Supplements vary quite a bit from one aircraft type to the next, so this would be a good thing to look up for your specific aircraft type before one decides.The Dynon does have a yaw damper option in the Bonanza models. Their minimum altitudes very between models, but are very close to the GFC500. You don’t even need the AP Panel at all, but I think maybe your Baro was autocorrected to Nato somehow. That is an Aerocruze feature. The Dynon is not much different in features at all compared to the GFC500. The biggest thing is that they don’t offer a trim servo, but will control an increasing number of existing trim servos.
Thank you for the information. I really appreciate your follow up!There is no official estimate on recertification. It don’t expect it to be more than a couple of months. You can install roll now and prewire for pitch, then add Pitch when it’s fixed.