Ok, the compass card is present
It literally crumbled and fell off handling the mount while I was removing the mount and compass.
If it ever fails, we will have to default to one of the six other independent navigation systems onboard, any one of which is a thousand times more accurate.
You know, I've often thought that the clear canopy would make star sightings simple.Somehow, as gadget oriented as you are, I suspect there is a sextant stashed in the rear seat area as independent navigation system #7.
Try find a compass rose at an airport that doesn't look like a 30 year post apocalyptic road marking.
Neither of us know how to work a sextant.
Try find a compass rose at an airport that doesn't look like a 30 year post apocalyptic road marking.
You can make a pretty good looking card (black background, white cutouts, black numbers) using a word processor and the "background" command. It takes a bit of doing and remembering that what you type comes out white instead of black, but it is eminently doable with a little fiddling.
Jim
I'm debating on replacing the compass (stamped July 1967) with a brand new one same p/n ($180). Reason is I couldn't get the compass out of the mount without cutting the wires off because the lamp holder (4) is stuck in compass. Not only that but the face (6) isn't notched (looks like botched manufacturing) so the wires would prevent me from easily removing it even if the lamp holder wasn't stuck.
I shouldn't have to remove the headliner then disconnect the wires to remove the compass. The lamp holder should unscrew easily and the wires slip out of the notch.
That is an incandescent bulb in there (#330 as I recall) and over the years the heat from the lamp builds up to where the stuff inside melts and seals the holder in place. Seems like a pretty trivial task to modify the bugger into the 20th century with an LED bulb.
Putting an 062 series tiny nylon Molex connecter pair on the new compass before you install it will let you take the whole shebang out of the airplane without any disassembly at all. Nylon will dye with RIT fabric dye any color you want, to match the interior. It will take day(s) at room temperature or a couple of hours at 150°F or so in a crockpot to thoroughly dye.
Jim
Does anyone, anywhere, maintain a compass card?
I've owned 4 airplanes, and rented many others. I've yet to be in one with a compass card that was filled out in any recent decade. Heck, my current ride doesn't even have a whisky compass.
So far, the magnetometer we installed in the tail seems to be working flawlessly. If it ever fails, we will have to default to one of the six other independent navigation systems onboard, any one of which is a thousand times more accurate.
I'm debating on replacing the compass (stamped July 1967) with a brand new one same p/n ($180). Reason is I couldn't get the compass out of the mount without cutting the wires off because the lamp holder (4) is stuck in compass. Not only that but the face (6) isn't notched (looks like botched manufacturing) so the wires would prevent me from easily removing it even if the lamp holder wasn't stuck.
I shouldn't have to remove the headliner then disconnect the wires to remove the compass. The lamp holder should unscrew easily and the wires slip out of the notch.
TOMATOFLAMES....
That is an incandescent bulb in there (#330 as I recall) and over the years the heat from the lamp builds up to where the stuff inside melts and seals the holder in place. Seems like a pretty trivial task to modify the bugger into the 20th century with an LED bulb.
Putting an 062 series tiny nylon Molex connecter pair on the new compass before you install it will let you take the whole shebang out of the airplane without any disassembly at all. Nylon will dye with RIT fabric dye any color you want, to match the interior. It will take day(s) at room temperature or a couple of hours at 150°F or so in a crockpot to thoroughly dye.
Jim
Woah... WOAH! LED bulbs? Dyded wire? You got a 337 for that bub? Your Friendly Aviation Adminstration is just looking out for you...
Does anyone, anywhere, maintain a compass card?
I've owned 4 airplanes, and rented many others. I've yet to be in one with a compass card that was filled out in any recent decade. Heck, my current ride doesn't even have a whisky compass.
So far, the magnetometer we installed in the tail seems to be working flawlessly. If it ever fails, we will have to default to one of the six other independent navigation systems onboard, any one of which is a thousand times more accurate.
Try find a compass rose at an airport that doesn't look like a 30 year post apocalyptic road marking.
Pretty much anywhere there is a real heavy part 145 repair station will have a compass rose. I believe every airplane at my work goes around it. If not all of them, a lot of them do.
In reality the compass should be check for accuracy anytime the panel is dinked with (avionics installations), but it seems to slip through the cracks when it comes to small private GA airplanes.
The picture above looks like the original one when the airplane was brand new, and yes it has been to several 145 "GA" avionics shops since then.
Don't the 99s come paint yours every few years?
Probably means something to somebody, but WAY too much of an inside joke for me to give a ****. I'm still burning up the innerwebs trying to figure out what the hell Tom Downey was referring to when he suggested that someone look up the amusing story to go along with the "Continental" engine name. (or did he mean the "A-##" designation?) Still
Ugh... TOMATOFLAMES in layman's terms is FAR 91.205, required equipment on the plane for part 91 operations.
So, my question was asking how you can remove a whiskey compass if it is required equipment?
I have a "magnetic direction indicator" on board, as per 91.205. It's called a magnetometer, and it's a thousand times more accurate than the spinning-in-the-bumps whisky compass it replaced.I was kinda wondering how Jay's plane got signed off without one.
Then explain how Joe and 'becca (their kids) came along?
Jim
I have a "magnetic direction indicator" on board, as per 91.205. It's called a magnetometer, and it's a thousand times more accurate than the spinning-in-the-bumps whisky compass it replaced.
Mounted in the tail, it is amazingly accurate and consistent. We have a real compass rose at our airport (freshly repainted, even) and I recently checked to see how it was holding up, after 2 years in the plane. No adjustment was needed.
If that were ever to fail, the TruTrack autopilot has a separate, independent digital heading indicator.
And if those both failed, I would revert to one of the six other independent GPS navigation systems we have on board at all times.
If ALL of those failed, well, it's the End Times, and I'm flying into oblivion anyway... lol
Yeah, but now you have to carry a flask to have your last shot of whisky with you. The whisky is why it is required equipment. Duh!
I got on an old schooner once and the compass was brown. I asked the owner about it, he said that's now 100 year old (some brand I'm not familiar with) Scotch. Apparently the guy who had it built had the compass filled with it at the commissioning. Now they all use oil so the crew won't drain and disable it.
I have to call BS on that one. We all know that sailors use rum. Or is that just pirates?
Mmmmm, rum.I have to call BS on that one. We all know that sailors use rum. Or is that just pirates?
Mmmmm, rum.
We just accidentally received a case of grapefruit juice (mixed in with our usual orange and apple juice) at the hotel. We are now facing the horrible fate of devising some rum concoctions with which to consume said grapefruit juice.
Methinks it will be a good day.
Ugh... TOMATOFLAMES in layman's terms is FAR 91.205, required equipment on the plane for part 91 operations.
So, my question was asking how you can remove a whiskey compass if it is required equipment?
Mmmmm, rum.
We just accidentally received a case of grapefruit juice (mixed in with our usual orange and apple juice) at the hotel. We are now facing the horrible fate of devising some rum concoctions with which to consume said grapefruit juice.
Methinks it will be a good day.
183 feet (but who is counting?) from the hotel is a bar called "Salty Dog". Not surprisingly, that is their specialty.Gin and grapefruit juice with salt around the rim (a-la margarita) is what the Navy calls a Salty Dog. Without the salt it is a Greyhound. Vodka may be subbed for the gin but the original is gin.
Jim