Danos
Line Up and Wait
Does any one have any experience with Foreflight? I was wondering how it compares to Anywhere Map or Wing X. It looks to be a similiar application.
I have it on my iPod touch. It's awesome. PM or email me with any specific questions.
Does any one have any experience with Foreflight? I was wondering how it compares to Anywhere Map or Wing X. It looks to be a similiar application.
http://www.e6bpro.comNeed more info on Jessie's E6B Pro app. Thanks for the foreflight wingx compare.
http://www.e6bpro.com
It includes pretty much anything you could do on a traditional E6B along with some extra stuff. Several different units for volume, mass, velocity, and pressure are supported. You can input data in one unit while getting the answer in a different unit. Answers from one function are carried over into other functions. I'm also very willing to add additional features when they're requested. Currently on sale for $2.99
You also might want to check out my other app which is for weight and balance. It includes over 20 template aircraft plus the ability to easily configure your own custom aircraft. It's a very quick way to easily check weight and balance.
http://www.wnbpro.com
This video tutorial demonstrates the features and how to use it.
http://www.wnbpro.com/tutorial.php
Thank you. I'd appreciate a review on the App Store. It's a huge help for my sales and the app's success.Jesse,
I just went to your website for WnBPro. Wow! What a great app! I didn't know that it was out there. I also took the liberty of posting to a couple of other forums that I frequent. Thanks for bringing such a useful tool to the marketplace.
Someone mentioned envoking "airplane mode" to kill the Wifi and 3G with one key.
Hint... it kills GPS reception too.
Need to turn off Wifi and 3G independently to keep GPS reception. .
So I downloaded it to my phone and think it's awesome. Does anyone here use the bad elf or some other gps device for the moving map?
Load all the VFR /IFR Charts and and approach plates before you launch. It's all stored internal and still lots of room with the 64MB model.
I'm making a mount for the iPhone with a yoke clip, some Velcro and an iPhone case. Looking at doing a little test run this week under VFR unless I can get the Bluetooth then I'll make it IFR.
I'm making a mount for the iPhone with a yoke clip, some Velcro and an iPhone case. Looking at doing a little test run this week under VFR unless I can get the Bluetooth then I'll make it IFR.
FWIW, the full data set - Sectionals, low and high enroutes, airport data, plates, etc. for CONUS, Canada, Alaska, Hawaii, carribean, etc. is about 7.5 GB. Just remember that if you're downloading everything, every 4 weeks when it rolls over you'll end up with twice that being stored for a day or two unless you wait for the old stuff to expire before downloading the new stuff. However, most people probably don't download everything.
The AOPA video on the iPad mentioned using Bluetooth GPS receiver to improve operation (reception) in the cockpit. I've seen cheap GPS receivers that are exactly that.. cheap.. with not good position resolution.
What is the recommended BlueTooth receiver for the iPad.. if Foreflight is using iPad GPS.. how to slave it to BlueTooth GPS?
What is the recommended BlueTooth receiver for the iPad.. if Foreflight is using iPad GPS.. how to slave it to BlueTooth GPS?
I went to their site and it is, of course, Apple oriented. Anything for Android? Can I put this on a MS operating system lap top?
Thanks,
Dave
There are two supported receivers. Look here: http://blog.foreflight.com/2010/11/09/external-ipad-gps-receivers-for-foreflight-hd/
Dave, I know Ted uses anywhere map which ended up not bing as cost effective for me since I use all Mac gear. I was thinking of using it on the windows portion but the laptop would be too cumbersome. Not sure if you can run foreflight on the android but anywhere map is a nice program of you want to use a tablet or laptop.
Thanks; I will look into that. I'd probably have to upgrade the memory on my phone. I don't mind having back up charts on my laptop. I still get the primary charts, but hate purchasing all the approach charts for the route I'm flying over with no intention to stop. It would only be in case I had to divert somewhere unexpected.
Best,
Dave
I went looking for these today and couldnt find them. In fact, no one ever heard of them. I guess you have to order them online.
That has got to be my number one favorite feature of Jeppview.The feature I'd really like to see is the ability to have your airplane icon move on the airport diagram while taxiing!
I have it on my iPod touch. It's awesome. PM or email me with any specific questions.
- Integrated W&B calculations including landing weight and t/o and landing CG math and graphical
- Memories for W&B, speeds for climb, cruise, decent, and commonly used altitudes for individual aircraft. (Besides data for equipment on board for flight plans, etc. Which Foreflight has.)
- XM radar weather overlaid on any chart other than approach plates.
- Vector map without an FAA chart background, just SUA, waypoints, airports, navaids, etc. Configurable as to what to display at every zoom level.
- In-Flight updates of ETE and ETA at every waypoint still ahead on the plan including wind correction using either winds aloft downloaded prior to departure or real-time from XM and how they relate to the original plan, and whether the real winds are holding true to forecast.
- Type any FAA waypoint and easily add it to the plan... Rubber banding sucks for this in flight. Insert waypoint, type XXXXX is easier for "cleared direct Xxxxx then on course".
I may be a Foreflight fan, and vowed to never send any more money to FlightPrep, but their feature list was 2x to 3x Foreflight's current list.
- Track Up vs North Up with a way to flip it to read upside down things on the chart with a single button press.
You should check out Jesse's excellent WnB Pro app.
ForeFlight also does have a default altitude for each aircraft. If you don't enter a flight plan altitude, the aircraft's default altitude is used to determine heading & groundspeed for the nav log, and is also entered on the flight plan filing page.
For that, you'd have to get an XM hookup for the iPad. There's one for the iPhone for radio, but I'm not sure if it's capable of receiving the weather signal. It's also not yet compatible with the iPad, last I looked.
Again, I have no idea what the real plans are at ForeFlight, but if I were them I'd probably skip XM and go straight to ADS-B In. I'm guessing the data arrives in two completely different formats, and the ADS-B stuff will be free whereas the XM costs an additional $30-$100/month.
My one question on this is - Why? What advantages does it offer? And keep in mind that there are infinite "zoom levels" on the iPad when answering.
Does anything do this? I ask because anything I've used is generating ETE/ETA based on GPS data, not anybody's guess of what the winds are.
Hmmm. Two possible scenarios here:
1) The waypoint is already part of your plan. In that case, you can already tap on it in either the nav log or on the map. In the popup that appears, tap the direct-to button. No rubber-banding or typing.
2) The waypoint is not part of your flight plan. In this case, they're going to have to give you a re-route and you're probably going to need to type it anyway. You already can type it into the text field at the top of the screen, so I'm not sure what you're asking for, unless you mean having to hit another button to bring up a dialog to type a single waypoint in? In that case, how do you tell it where in the flight plan you want that waypoint to go?
BTW, have you tried rubber-banding in flight? I disagree with your "it sucks" assertion, I find it much easier than typing. Do you have the iPad mounted to something, or just loose? That might make a difference too.
I would reply in two ways: First of all, that ForeFlight is constantly under development and new features are always being added, BUT... On the other hand, it's not all about how many boxes you can check. Part of the beauty of both the iPad itself and ForeFlight is that when a feature is added, it's added in a way that makes a lot of sense and is easy to use. Many features tend to sound like a good idea and give someone a box to check in their brochure, but they end up being relatively useless in real life. I'm not saying that about your suggestions, I'm simply saying that "number of features" is not a metric that should matter - It's about what the program can actually do for you, and so the usability of a feature is just as important as the existence of that feature.
ForeFlight displays charts - Charts are North Up. If you display a chart Track Up, all of the text you need to read is at a funny angle. Do you really want to be switching it back and forth all the time? Does anything display an actual chart in Track Up?
Already on the phone. Don't want to switch Apps on the iPad in-flight if I can help it. One App to Rule Them All, so to speak.
Yeah, the key here was climb, enroute, and decent speeds. Three of them, at least. Preferably the ability to set a speed for each leg of the flight. Yes the Skylane averages to a specific speed, but if I can get nice and high for an Eastbound leg out here going your way, I can pick up a nice tailwind.
Yes, well... very close. I can keep the original flight plan in PDF and instantly display it with two taps of the finger/stylus to jump menu tabs to that tab, and double-tap the printed flight plan form.
But the target-shooting in the text string (which needs to be bigger), zooming/scrolling, and the rubber-banding all assume a stable iPad. So I'm going to have to go do the kneeboard or more likely, the RAM mount thing.
But my iPad lives in a case that's a "portfolio" style, with elastic to hold the cover open or closed from InCase, and I'm going to have to take it out of that for flying, then put it back in later. No biggie, but you did hit the main reason rubber-banding was annoying in-flight. Hard-mounts highly recommended.
For the first time ever, I had a chart lying in my lap, doing Track Up. Me. A dyed in the wool North Up guy. And it actually worked, and made sense of some very difficult terrain ahead. Some of which, if I went the wrong way or up the wrong drainage, I could not out-climb.
Thank goodness they announced today that the next version will put the rotation lock option back on the external switch, where it belongs.
(Another religious war.)
Fun stuff. Did I forget to type up the Emergency Nearest-Airport TO button/feature? Any good Aviation GPS should have that... that one's a must-have no-brainer.