Anybody have comments on the plethora of mini Wx stations available on the market. I am looking for something simple like this:
K1K.jpg
Anybody have comments on the plethora of mini Wx stations available on the market. I am looking for something simple like this:
K1K.jpg
Don't buy one, I was happy flying on windy days till I got one of those for my birthday from my kids. Now it make me nervous if I use it before I fly so I don't look at it anymore.
Glenn
I have a similar one that I used when sailing to gather performance and tuning data and when runnning race committee, was pretty consistant really gives you a good sense of just how strong puffs are. Used to log the winds during races every 10 minutes... You need to really have good open terrain for on the ground. I have had one with a data logger and it was fun to check it on the ground then on top of a mast.
"Illegitimis non carborundum"
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
Last edited by 8GCBC; 08-03-2012 at 07:22 PM.
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
Marine electronics so advanced now. Garmin started with a handheld GPS in the marine business back in the '90s (back when Sitex had market).
100_0800.JPG
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
Sitex... that is back there...
I remember the first screen fruno color sounder on a boat I worked.
Remember Loran C charts? Where you had to mark you own place by the numbers?
Funny how I can hold a machine in my hand that used to take an entire room... and I am not nearly as old as one would think!
I don't know where you've been me lad, but I see you won first Prize!
I have a Kestrel. It's a toy. No way would I trust it with my go/no go decision making. I got it as a present and for that I appreciated it. I wouldn't have bought it for myself.
Aktango58:
Yes! Loran C TD (time differential) lines plotted by hand! No Latitude/Longitude read out! Don't forget the handbearing compass by Davis Instruments! Anyone used a universal plotting sheet lately? My first plastic sextant is still working...Accurate to within 5-10 NM! Good enough to see an Island at noon (we hope).
-8
Thank you Mr. Bravo. I had feeling it was just a "toy". I called the factory and asked what the MTBF (mean time before failure) on the rotor was and their answer was it can stop working at any time (so keep a $40 spare rotor handy?). A PT6 can go 3500 hours and burn 245,000 gallons of fuel and not fail. Kestrel (and others) need to rethink the design. Make it for real life use.
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
Yes, pretty much a toy but handy in the right situation. I was given one as a gift also but its use was for my 'shooting' habit. Never really thought about using it for flying.
I think it would be a handy shooting aid. Had mine out in 50+ mph winds but I don't use it to make a flying decision. I think I remember Jerry Burr taking one apart and mounting the turbine at a downward angle on the jury strut to match the AOA when doing high AOA research and running a lite wire to the panel where he had the LED monitor
My spotter carries a Kestrel. Since she started as a flagger, back when there still was such a thing, she also still carries a flag. I trust her flag (and find it more useful) than the Kestrel any day. I think the only real reason we have them is to show an extent of due diligence in the event of an investigation (drift, etc...) by the department of Ag.
Take care, Rob
I thought by now someone would have nominated the simple little Dwyer wind gauge. It's basically a ball that floats up and down in a tapered tube, with a wind velocity scale. Simple, inexpensive, easy to use, accurate enough for ground based observations. One of my sailplane pilot friends used to have one to calibrate himself with other indicators, such as windsocks (which are VERY variable), flags, smoke and stuff. We found that most people significantly overestimate wind velocity.
And then, I've had some scientific instruments on 10 metre to 30 metre towers. It just depends on what you want to accomplish.
See: http://www.dwyer-inst.com/Product/Ai...eHandheldMeter
Thanks. cubscout
A mechanical unit seems better for my mission. Thank you for the information. Looks like I could even make one too! Anybody have drawings?
I have a Kestrel 4500 with the vane mount which is pretty cool as you can put it on a tripod and it becomes a portable weather station. I got it to record wind speeds and direction (as well as temp and humidity) during the New Holstein short field contest, but after going to the trouble of recording all the info, I never did anything with the dataI most recently used it to measure output of the A/C vents in my house to see how much they varied, and what input and output temps I was getting.
kestrelvm-1b.jpg
SJ wrote "...I have a Kestrel 4500 with the vane mount which is pretty cool as you can put it on a tripod and it becomes a portable weather station...."
The wind vane option is interesting. I am trying to bring my bush flying into a more scientific realm. I have so many differient flying missions and trying to remember performance is impossible for me (and very little performance published on the 8GCBC, + STC's). If my engine performance, rigging, pilot skills start "go'n South" I need to kown a little more about the weather conditons to have a constrast of previous results.
I used to think I would never use an engine monitor on a 4 cylinder Lycoming with a GTW of 2150Lbs! But, now it would be irresposible NOT to have simple EGT, CHT etc. on a tube and fabric aircraft. My next step is to correlate more Wx data in the "Woods", deserts and lakes that have no Local Wx. The only way to get perfomance data on an airplane is the "do it myself way".
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
SJ wrote: "... I most recently used it to measure output of the A/C vents in my house to see how much they varied, and what input and output temps I was getting." DANGIT SJ, there ya' go scabbin' on my trade, although I mostly use a Shortridge flowhood, which simplicates the calculations, including BTU's, stuff like that.
8GCBC, good on ya' ("I am trying to bring my bush flying into a more scientific realm."). We could all benefit from more precision in the parameters which influence our day-to-day performance. And I too found it darn useful to have 4 points each of CHT and EGT on one of the Scouts I used to run: It really helped dial in long-term cylinder health on a hard-working tug.
And of course we expect a science project report next semester.
Thanks. cubscout
Being (more) scientifc is now afforadable! And fun too. Will post any useful results from my experiments. Thank you for the encouragment!
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
-- 8GCBC: 2100A, 31136.R, 8.566, C3000A
A&P, ATP, SES, CFII, MEI
Fly with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXI48e1heuo
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