Timbeck2
Final Approach
That's a digital instrument, I'm going with the FL202 not the FL202D.
Is that a Certified Flow Indicator?
Certificated actually
so that will come from an analog sender?That's a digital instrument, I'm going with the FL202 not the FL202D.
so that will come from an analog sender?
Shane please stick around because I'm sure to have more questions. I've decided to go with the Aerospace Logic gauge with the Cies senders, both analog. Just how much "less accurate" will they be vs digital?
Your accuracy "should" be the same however I would strongly recommend the digital over voltage. Signal loss is almost non-existant and there always seems to be some issue with the analog install/configuration as it is not the standard install. Don't take my comment wrong, all will work, it just may be a little more difficult to get it to work.
Your accuracy "should" be the same however I would strongly recommend the digital over voltage. Signal loss is almost non-existant and there always seems to be some issue with the analog install/configuration as it is not the standard install. Don't take my comment wrong, all will work, it just may be a little more difficult to get it to work.
There are three possible outputs from the CiES sender:What do you mean by "digital over voltage"? I was planning on the analog ASL FL202 gauge and the analog Cies senders. Are you saying it will be difficult to get it to work?
i have EDM 830 too and its pretty darn close. like .3 gal close. but this thread brings a very valid point... EDM/Fuel Flow measures how much fuel is going to through it, it will not tell you if you are loosing fuel from a hose somewhere and the stock fuel gauges are notoriously incorrect. i guess with Piper, at least if you run one tank dry, you *should* have enough to land on the other tankI have an EDM830 and after you go through the iterations of calibrating it, it is reasonably accurate. I've had fellow Navioneers extort the virtues of the new EI fuel gauges as well.
There are three possible outputs from the CiES sender:
1. Digital (actually a frequency modulated waveform). This is the default output and works with our FL20xD instrument,
2. Voltage - optional. Not sure on the exact range - check with CiES on this but people use either our FL21x or FL25x products with this,
3. Resistance - optional. Again, not sure on the exact range - check with CiES. Our FL20x "should" work with this but check with CiES
For option (1) our STC covers the installation of FL20xD and the CiES fuel sender/s, for (2) and (3) our STC covers installation of the instrument only. If you go (2) or (3) make sure the CiES STC covers your aircraft and that the (licensed) person doing the install (AI or A&P) will sign off that they are compatible with one another, in other words that after install everything works as it should.
Our only supported and STC'd combination is the FL20xD and the CiES senders with digital output.
The FL202 is only STC'd to work with true resistive senders (OEM).
End of the day check all CiES related information with them. Things change and what we know may not always be correct. As far as our products go, no questions there.