I have the same setup as you - gtx327 and 430w. I just elected to use the fyx because I didn't feel like digging into the wiring harness behind the 430w. I believe I have the tiny pins the 430w takes but it is a pain to access. Next time I have a 430 or 650 etc wiring harness made I think I will request pigtail leads made to/from all the serial and arinc ports.You were supposed to use a pencil! This is PoA and we have standards!
Nonetheless.. I'll be interested in your reviews of this box. It's the leading contender for my 6A. I'll be wiring direct to GTX327 and 430W, so I won't need the FYx.
Certification standard is the big difference. LSAs are certified to ASME standards by the builder, no third party required.I would love to get one of those myself. But Their website states that it's only for Light Sport, and Experimental. So it apparently isn't legal for my Cherokee. I tried to call them, to ask a few questions, but just got an answering machine.
The main question that I have is; What's the difference (other than weight, and seat restrictions) is there between an LSA, and any other factory built aircraft?
Ha, no. Its my sippy cup:That looks strangely like a Budweiser reflection in the upper right corner.
I ordered Nov 3 and it arrived last week.
Install was plug and play with the supplied harness for the Echouat and FYX.
Powered on and my Samsung Galaxy Note 3 immediately found the WIFI put out by the Echouat. I was able to connect to the unsecured Echouat WIFI without any issue in the phone settings under WIFI. Opened the Echo app and get a message: PLEASE CONNECT TO PING-XXXX WIFI NETWORK IN SETTINGS. I tried closing the app, reinstalling the app, installing the app on my tablet and trying to get it to work with the tablet, forgetting the network and reconnecting to the network, all to no avail.
At this point I am unable to configure the Echouat due to an issue with the Echo app. At least with the old navworx box I was able to connect and configure the device without any issue... Not and illustrious start.
No, I don't think so. This is the app:It sounds like the Ping Installer app may have been downloaded instead of the Echo installer app. Or, the apps may be mixed up on the Play Store.
It appears I may be the beta tester who uncovered some (more) unknown issues.
I was trying to avoid contributing to Garmin's borg like presence, but their competitors were so bad, I was ultimately assimilated.
You drink Budweiser out of a sippy cup??
I flew today approx 100 nm at up to 9000 msl. Previously I had requested an ads-b performance report by email to:
9-AWA-AFS-300-ADSB-AvionicsCheck@faa.gov
It appears the faa now has an automated webpage for this request:
https://adsbperformance.faa.gov/PAPRRequest.aspx
My report was all good (zero failures) except in 2 categories:
Baro Alt 100% failure
Mode 3A 100% failure
Assuming the altitude encoder not configured (or wired with the supplied harness?) correctly in the Echo app. Yes? I am using a GRT HX as altitude encoder.
It is set to "transponder monitor" in one of the user configured selections. The part of the echouat install manual dealing with ports and setup are not as clear as I appear to require.Re the Mode 3/A, I believe that error is generated when the UAT downlink received by the ground station does not contain the squawk code for your onboard transpoder. Is your echo configured to monitor the onboard transponder?
Also, if the echo isn't seeing the onboard transponder, the Baro Alt failure may be related as that data isn't in the downlink either.