write-stuff
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One of my KX-155s is slowly dying away. I'm sick of the crappy LEDs in the 155 and am considering replacing it with something else. Any suggestions?
A while back I heard of a direct replacement (slide in) for the KX-155 by TMK or something similar but do not know any particulars on it.Any suggestions?
Here we go again. What certification is needed for a part 91 radio? Please show me the "certification" on those thousands of kx-170's installed in thousands of certified airplanes. It's not a major alteration, by the way, putting any radios in a radio rack is for the most part not a major alteration an does not Need a 337. Contrary to the belief of a lot of A&Ps. Weird Jim has the fsdo letter from the 70's on his web page somewhere. Weird Jim and bell 206 can explane the details better, but it's really up to the installing A&P to decide if the part is airworthy.From same site
The MX155X is on sale! This is the pre-certified version of the KX155 replacement. Please get in touch with our sales team for pricing and availability.
No help for @write-stuff
The SL-30 is out of production and those that own them are usually of the "...pry them from my cold dead hands" variety. You might get lucky, but I wouldn't hold my hopes up too high.Not a lot of dealers for the SL-30, but I'm looking.
Well, this is certainly confusing. Is it on sale or is it on preorder? Maybe "on sale" means discounted price for preordering?From same site
The MX155X is on sale! This is the pre-certified version of the KX155 replacement. Please get in touch with our sales team for pricing and availability.
No help for @write-stuff
One of my KX-155s is slowly dying away. I'm sick of the crappy LEDs in the 155 and am considering replacing it with something else. Any suggestions?
Apparently B-K uses LCD rather than LED for their gas discharge display replacement.I'd love to have a KX-155 corpse to see if I can adapt very efficient, very cheap LED display to. If you ever decide you want to sell that sucker for nickels and dimes to somebody who will be able to design and supply replacement displays for a reasonable price, you will be a hero to lots of your aviation buddies.
But as I recall, the 155 had vacuum fluorescent displays, not LEDS.
Hehe. Well, whatever they are, they're awful and don't have a long life expectancy. Neither do Garmin push-buttons, but that's another rant.Apparently B-K uses LCD rather than LED for their gas discharge display replacement.
https://www.avweb.com/ownership/bendixking-kx155-165-radio-obsolete-display-creates-refurb-program/
As I said, it's available now, just call them I've had one for over a year now.Well, this is certainly confusing. Is it on sale or is it on preorder? Maybe "on sale" means discounted price for preordering?
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Sorry ravoioli, got to disagree. The sl30 has been out of production for years. They still bring 2500-3000 on the used market. Foolish to spend that kind of money on a out of production unit when the 255 is only about 3900 new with warranty.SL-30 will do you solid.
@Bell206 - It's TKM... and they don't seem to have brought that thing to market after only 2 years.
It's actually quite easy, probably simple enough that a sufficiently motivated 7th grader could explain its operation. The display board schematic begins on the 254th page of this PDF (Figure 6-10):I'd love to have a KX-155 corpse to see if I can adapt very efficient, very cheap LED display to.
...
Or, it may just be a doorstop if I can't do it.
Sounds like it could be electrolytic capacitors nearing end-of-life needing to be replaced.The readout is losing numbers and it seems to be developing some staticy backround noise.
When did King come out with the 155's? I'm surprised they still have any value in all honesty.
When did King come out with the 155's? I'm surprised they still have any value in all honesty.
In my opinion the value is limited now, since they’re effectively two generations old. But there are still a lot of them installed and the cheapest way to deal with a failure of one is to replace it with the same thing.
It wasn’t that long ago that the KX170 was in the same position as the KX155 is now. I think we’ll see the number of installed KX155s shrink dramatically in the next 5 or so years. In the meantime, if you have a good one they’re still decent radios.
As the owner of a kx155, I'll disagree, but only a little. The 155 is the first "modern" nav/com with digital tuning and flip/flop button. It truly made the 170 obsolete. As a #2 radio, there's really nothing a more modern radio offers that the 155 doesn't. The only useful feature it doesn't have is a display showing which radial you're on like the kx165.
I thought mine was going out (the nav side quit working), so I went through this exercise a couple months ago. Options were basically $8k installed for a Garmin 255, or $1000 for a used kx155 I could swap myself. My plan was/is to buy a working unit and send mine for repair. The real problem is the displays, which at this point are all in varying degrees of failure, with no real repair option.
Turned out that removing and reseating my radio seems to have resolved my issue; hopefully that buys me a few more years. If money were no object I'd stick another gtn in there, but there are numerous higher priorities.
That's why I only disagreed a littleMy statements of modernity have nothing to do with features. They have to do with the age and ability to repair them.They’re old, and as you admit yourself, some components are unrepairable.
I personally believe that we didn’t see more SL30s and SL40s installed because of the saturation of the market with KX170s and 155s. But now that those are getting flushed out of the system we’re seeing a rising wave of current radios being installed with avionics upgrades or even just as a replacement for a dead KX155.
As an aside, I think the narcos were better radios but you don’t see them around much anymore either due to their age and limited repair options.
I wound up going with Midcontinent Avionics. A bit spendy, but they did me a solid a few years back when they didn't have to, so I gave them the business. No complaints (yet).Thanks steingar, I am getting that impression as well. The readout is losing numbers and it seems to be developing some staticy backround noise. I may try the one rebuilder someone suggested in chat.
A bit of avionics trivia: There was actually a STC for that, known as the Doss KD155 DVOR Conversion.As a #2 radio, there's really nothing a more modern radio offers that the 155 doesn't. The only useful feature it doesn't have is a display showing which radial you're on like the kx165.
It feels like there's a tremendous market opportunity there for the likes of TKM to replace all these antiques.
But I feel like it's almost too late now.
They have been long in the tooth and difficult to repair for years. The difference now is that Garmin can't seem to deliver the GNC 255 in quantity, and avionics shops are super busy anyway. Once we're past this (6-12 months?), the price delta for installing something new will drop, and the value of a working KX155 will fall with it. That's why I think the window of opportunity for TKM is closing fast. More power to 'em if they can do it, though.
C.
They have been long in the tooth and difficult to repair for years. The difference now is that Garmin can't seem to deliver the GNC 255 in quantity, and avionics shops are super busy anyway. Once we're past this (6-12 months?), the price delta for installing something new will drop, and the value of a working KX155 will fall with it. That's why I think the window of opportunity for TKM is closing fast. More power to 'em if they can do it, though.
C.
There are other nav/com options besides Garmin, some of which are available right now (no waiting). But obviously Garmin is the main product and what they’re selling is nice.
As far as I know, TKM has always produced slide in replacement radios. They always seem to work but have one of the worst interfaces I’ve seen. For someone on a shoestring budget I could see there still being a market for a slide in KX155 replacement but with all the other radios on the market now I’d have to think a long time about a TKM rather than just starting over. Especially in an aircraft where everything else in the panel is equally as archaic as the KX155.
What, no love for the Trig TX56a?They have been long in the tooth and difficult to repair for years. The difference now is that Garmin can't seem to deliver the GNC 255 in quantity, and avionics shops are super busy anyway.
What, no love for the Trig TX56a?
My complaint about the GNC255 is that the display seems to have a mode that says "I-am-a-COM-radio" displaying only COM info and a mode that says "I-am-a-NAV-radio" displaying only NAV info but not a mode that says "I-am-a-NAV/COM". Say you're on a VOR approach when a COM transmission comes in. Did it come from the active COM frequency? Or did it come from the standby frequency because COM monitor mode was turned on? I don't know because the display is in NAV mode. The Trig is better because it displays both COM info and NAV info side by side.I'm guessing a lot of people don't know about them because Garmin overshadows pretty much everything else. Trig is becoming my go to brand.