Top glass panel maker Dynon
just updated its SkyView panels to include air
traffic alert and graphic display, just like the TCAS
(Traffic Collision Avoidance System) the big boys have… although for many more
Grover Clevelands *** Traffic
targets will show up on SkyView’s moving maps and
synthetic vision displays as standard TCAS I symbols, identify the
location, severity of the threat, distance, vertical separation and heading of
any aircraft within the traffic system range.
Nothing like having your own radar-like warning system in
flight. *** “Within the United States, SkyView displays TIS traffic when connected to Dynon Mode-S transponders or a Garmin GTX 330 Mode-S transponder,” stated Dynon. TIS is a ground-based system available in all Class B and some Class C airspace where most traffic conflicts arise.
***
SkyView can also receive traffic information from a Zaon
XRX PCAS passive traffic receiver, a Navworx
ADS-B receiver, a Trig
ADS-B receiver, or any device that outputs the industry standard
GTX 330 TIS
traffic format.
Archives for October 2010
WIRED Gets Air-Wired
Following up on my post two days ago, I’m happy to report Wired magazine just ran a story online about the Yuneec E-Spyder that Tom Peghiny of Flight Designs has been developing for them. The story has several excellent photos and it’s a good write-up, so click on over there to see how the mainstream media is helping push public awareness of electric aviation. *** Here’s the Wired video of the E-Spyder that ought to whet your appetite for electric flight…I can’t wait to get back to the states and get over to Tom’s to do my own story on it.
Wired Gets Air-Wired
Following up on my post two days ago, I’m happy to report Wired magazine just ran a story online about the Yuneec E-Spyder that Tom Peghiny of Flight Designs has been developing for them. The story has several excellent photos and it’s a good write-up, so click on over there to see how the mainstream media is helping push public awareness of electric aviation. *** Here’s the Wired video of the E-Spyder that ought to whet your appetite for electric flight…I can’t wait to get back to the states and get over to Tom’s to do my own story on it.
Update 10/29/10 — After Jim Lawrence and I did our bits on the E-Spyder and electric airplanes, Wired blogger Jason Paur wrote another piece for Wired Autopia that represents more great reading you should check out. Jason’s newest article summarizes all the electric-powered light aircraft developments quite well.
E-Spyder Ready For Prime Time
*** Everyone interested in electric flight will want to know that the E-Spyder electric-powered ultralight is poised to enter the marketplace. *** A few days ago Tom Peghiny invited me out to Woodstock, CT, about three hours drive from my house, to fly the latest prototype (v. 3) of the venerable FlightStar ultralight. *** I had to pass since I was prepping for a family visit to Germany. *** Checking in from Hamburg, I found a post on his website from my pal and LSA colleague Dan Johnson, who scooped me on the following info: *** The E-Spyder will be marketed by Yuneec, which bought the rights to produce the design from Tom and continues development on several other projects: the graceful E430 S-LSA which has won several prizes already; E-PAC power backpack for paragliders; and electric motor systems for a variety of aviation applications.
Q: Aviation’s Big Challenge? A: Airplane Prices
David Kruger is what you might call a data-intensive fellow. A technical background gives him a keener than usual understanding of the value of research. Also an enthusiast of flying LSA, David has invested considerable study into the influence of airplane cost on the pilot population. His analysis suggests partner ownership of an airplane offers a means to confront the problem. At the Midwest LSA Expo I chatted at length with David and his wife/partner, Jaquidon. *** David’s work is revealed in his white papers on the subject. The reports are well considered and researched; AOPA and EAA have recognized the value of his work. If you share the concern about the decrease in pilots, you should read his report on the cost of airplanes and another on reaching the immense population of so-called powersports enthusiasts. Many believe that if aviation is to grow we must look outside our own tightly-knit club.
Whirring into the Air on Electricity
You’re probably aware of the auto industry’s billion-dollar bet on electric cars. Skeptics are plentiful. Same for airplanes. Despite doubts, even Cessna and Bye Energy are teaming up on an electric 172. Other LSA electric projects are also underway and it’s all good in my mind. *** Most e-powered aircraft remain in the future. Yet here today is the E-Spyder. You can place an order that’ll set you back less than $30,000. Plus it’s a true Part 103 ultralight meaning you don’t need no stinkin’ government license to fly it. *** I wish I lived closer to Woodstock Connecticut where co-developer Tom Peghiny is flying Yuneec’s E-Spyder along with a few trusted friends. The one they’re flying has longer wings and a battery-hiding compartment (top photo, circled). Tom wrote, “We have been flying a lot since finishing the plane in mid September.” So far Tom and team have taken 15 flights on the upgraded version. This prototype (#3) has many changes over the original that was shown at Airventure in 2009.
Part 103 Enthusiasm Continues; Welcome E-Spyder!
Part 103 continues to step from the shadow of Light-Sport Aircraft. We’ve had aviation’s simplest rule (worldwide!) for 27 years and with few exceptions, most of those years saw Part 103 producers laboring in near-obscurity. *** Now, however, a new flurry of activity has developed at the beautiful intersection of genuinely lightweight aircraft with electric power. The very latest to roll into the spotlight is Flightstar‘s E-Spyder, which took its first flight today. E-power from Yuneec in China meets an all-American airframe. The accompanying photos show what a clean matchup these components achieve. *** Flightstar mounted the twin lithium polymer battery packs on either side of the design’s robust main fuselage tube. Electric motors are more user-friendly in nearly every way, but you have some new learning to do. For example, experts advise never allowing lithium polymer batters to drain completely. Fortunately, the Yuneec controlling hardware provides warning systems to help you manage this task.
Electric Cessna Skyhawk update
Keeping tabs on Cessna‘s electric C-172 project in collaboration with Bye Energy of Colorado, Bye just announced it will make a presentation at the annual NBAA (National Business Aviation Association) convention this that’s going on right now in Atlanta. *** Bye Energy as I’ve blogged in the past is working on electric and electric-hybrid propulsion systems for LSA and light GA airplanes under the banner of its The Green Flight Project announced earlier this year. *** The latest news is the electric Skyhawk will fly in the first quarter of 2011. *** George Bye, CEO, had this to say recently: “This is an ambitious effort, but we are continuing to uncover additional efficiencies with electric-powered flight,” he said. “We are grateful to Cessna for its continued collaboration and support.” *** Cessna’s head honcho Jack Pelton added: “Bye Energy’s progress toward first flight of the electric Cessna 172 demonstrator is encouraging news for the future of mainstream general aviation.” *** Backgrounder: More than 43,000 Skyhawks have com off the line since 1955.
So Long GPS MAP 496; Hello New Aera!
Garmin is a company that, like its contemporaries in the computer or smartphone industries, does not sit still for long. Innovations and upgrades happen swiftly. *** Over the years, Garmin has become a staple of Light-Sport Aircraft. Stick your head inside the cockpit of virtually any SLSA and you’ll probably see a Garmin 296, 396, 496, or 495. The handheld gizmos are ubiquitous, often nestled securely in their panel-mounted
“What Are You Doing, Maverick?!”
The Maverick flying car I’ve blogged about in the past has been all over the news lately for having trumped the competition by being the first to market with a viable land/sky vehicle (it’s ASTM certified SLSA #110), at a viable price ($84,000), and in a functional, and dare I say it, wildly fun way. *** Maverick climbs out with gustoTechnically, it’s classified in the powered parachute category (PPC), eminently logical since that’s what it is! *** Maverick is in essence a four-wheeled dune buggy with a big pusher prop, rugged off-road suspension, and an easily-deployed paraglider-like canopy that gives the car it’s airborne capabilities, but stows neatly on top of the car when more earthly thrills, or a visit to a third-world native village to do good works, (its design “mission”), are desired. *** Dan Johnson put up a broader post on it recently, but I didn’t want to miss the chance to share this fun video again of the Maverick in action (scroll down to the end of this article).