It uses either removable Lithium or alkaline battery packs. Both included. The battery pack is chargeable only when separated from the control so no in use charging.
Are you sure about that? I thought they said it could be charged while in use, and the faq seems to be saying that, although it's not totally clear:It uses either removable Lithium or alkaline battery packs. Both included. The battery pack is chargeable only when separated from the control so no in use charging.
Interesting. I'm going to take a strong look at this. I do have some high pitch hearing loss in my left ear due to an injury, and I've been happy with my previous Lightspeed headsets.
Also, their support has been fantastic, and yes I have been able to get parts from them for a 12-year-old, long-discontinued headset.
@Kent Wien What happens if you don't launch the Lightspeed app prior to flight? Does it still let you go back and check CO levels later? I ask because, while I do have the iPad app that goes with my Zulu PFX, I've used it maybe twice. ForeFlight is the app I use while flying, and I'm not going to remember to open the app every time I fly.
Also, you mention a lithium battery and charging during flight - Does that mean it uses the LEMO power to charge a battery that you can use with a non-LEMO plug adapter in LEMOless planes? One of the advantages of Bose over my current Lightspeed is that I have no battery, it's strictly panel-powered, so if I buy an adapter it has to have its own batteries and provide power. It'd also make for a noisy emergency.
Thanks for the PIREP!
You had me nervous... I'm planning to buy one and charge it off the USB adapter in the plane. My headset rarely leaves my plane, so having to take it out to recharge would be very inconvenient.
That's what I do now, but it still leaves the hassle of remembering to bring fresh batteries to the hangar, and the expense of buying them. Both trivial of course, but why not have it powered off ship's power and eliminate it? I thought about putting lemo plugs in my plane, but of course that means buying new headsets and then being incompatible with 95% of everyone else.If that's the case, and given the shelf life of alkaline batteries vs rechargeable, and given how long the normal alkaline batteries last, why not just use regular batteries and carry spares? Even if the batteries die, the head set still works. You just loose the features until you put in fresh batteries in the controller - which should be doable in flight.
What do you do with the headset when it announces its "end of life" CO monitor warning?The portable unit that's mounted in my plane is displaying its "end of life" warning, and rather than buying a new one I'd like have it in the headset
I suppose send it back to lightspeed and have them replace that module. They say it's supposed to last 10 years. If I had a Zulu 2 from 2012, I would've sent it in to be upgraded into a 3 by now, so I don't see that as a major problem.What do you do with the headset when it announces its "end of life" CO monitor warning?
Yes, Lightspeed will replace the CO monitor at end of life. I don't recall the estimated cost but, IMO, it was trivial.
@Jim K " so I'm killing three birds with one $1100 stone. Or at least that's what I'm telling myself." We subscribe to the same philosophy..LOL.