AdamZ
Touchdown! Greaser!
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- Feb 24, 2005
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Adam Zucker
Who is going to buy a 530 when an Aera 560 has more features and a bigger map display at a much lower price.
José
The Aera is Garmin's handheld aviation GPS that replaced the 496 style.Since you ask, lots of people bought Apple products while better and cheaper ones were available. It's Garmin. One roughly knows what he's getting with it. With competitors you have to do this terribly difficult thing, called research. Most of them suck. Heck, I never heard of Aera. I thought it was a line of some handhelds or whatever.
Someone wanting an IFR certified GPS?
Some of us fat-fingered types are not touch-screen folks. Nor do we want to pay the extra money for same.
[snip] Nor do we want to pay the extra money for same.
I have fat fingers too but because the Aera 560 uses resistive touch screen I can use the tip of my nails to click on the screen very accurately. Just don't trim your nails all the way down. Using your nails also eliminates the smear when you use your fingers. The Aera 796 uses capacitive touch screen so the nail trick does not work with it and you have to use your finger.
José
Just got a gtn 650 installed in one of the warriors i regularly fly. Its great. Touchscreen works very well
Try that in hard IFR, in turbulance, with a primary panel-mount unit. I've occasionally punched the wrong button on the transponder in cloud turbulance....
And the more cynical among us would say "That's why they're doing away with the 530."
John
Just wait until they announce same for G1000.....it'll happen soon enough....
I don't think so.Just wait until they announce same for G1000.....it'll happen soon enough....
Doubt it... this aint the type of stuff you fix with a soldering iron any more.There are guys out there who repair and rebuild every thing from Radios, and OBS heads to engine guages for older model Pipers, Cessnas etc. AND they do it on a bench in their garage.
I wonder if such creatures will spring up who can fix the whosamawachit that went bad inside a 530 if Garmin ever stops supporting it.
Doubt it... this aint the type of stuff you fix with a soldering iron any more.
In the 'old' days (pre-electronic instrumentation), you simply had your instruments overhauled with basic gears and baffles. Now, if your instrumentation is electronic and the manufacturer decides not to support the software that it runs on, what happens when it crashes? You can't just find an equivalent sized gear or baffle and 'make' it work - you need that manufacturer's own software to run.
So what does this mean for G.A. which has almost priced itself out of existence? Good or bad? 1000hr TT airframes on the market with 'dead' $30,000 electronic instrumentation packages?
2 - you won't fix a busted display without a full replacement, and that's probably one of the limited quantity items. And remember you must fix it with exact parts. So there are somethings that can be done at an ordinary bench, but only if you have the exact proper part. This isn't replacing one resistor or cap with a new one any more.But what fails on a GNC-430W or 530W?
I think most failures are one of the following (in my guestimated order of likelyhood):
1- Buttons
2- Displays
3- Cable Connections
4- Power Supplies
5- Antennas
999- Digital logic (including the GPS reciever itself)
1 through 5 are supportable by anyone with a soldering iron and reasonably good troubleshooting skills.
Item 999 is not supportable w/o replacing the board most likely, and will probably become obsolete, but Garmin can have an end of life run on that part. But, I've not heard of any GNC failures that were actually caused by the digital logic failing.
Doubt it... this aint the type of stuff you fix with a soldering iron any more.
That was going to be my question for folks with experience with the touchscreens. Granted, the only touchscreens I have experience with is about an hour with an iPad and now my Droid3 phone. I can't imagine trying to tap in commands on a screen like on the 430 while in turbulence. I've been beaten around enough in clouds that it took all I had not to snap the knob off when dialing in a radio.
.. touch it once and set up a direct course to it, touch again and you squawk 7700 and tune 121.5 ....