FlyDave Posted March 6, 2015 Report Posted March 6, 2015 I'm ordering an RC Allen 2600-3 attitude indicator but I need to know what the panel tilt is on my plane. I can't find that spec anywhere. Does anyone know what the panel tilt is on a 1989 Bravo? 1 Quote
MB65E Posted March 6, 2015 Report Posted March 6, 2015 I would think it would be 0°. Most panels after the 201 were flat, and to the best of my eye at 0°. Most gyros can handle a 2-3° tilt. Especially the new digital gyros. Nice choice by the way. I'm on my 2nd electric gyro. The -3 will be the replacement this time. -Matt Quote
AndyFromCB Posted March 6, 2015 Report Posted March 6, 2015 It's zero. That's what it was when I put my standby in. If I was you, I'd wait and get the Quattro from Sandia. No external battery box. Quote
Jerry 5TJ Posted March 6, 2015 Report Posted March 6, 2015 With two alternators and two batteries in a Bravo do you need that battery backup? If you get the backup make sure it is accessible as you are supposed to do a capacity test annually. Quote
FlyDave Posted March 6, 2015 Author Report Posted March 6, 2015 Andy - Thanks for the panel tilt. I called Mark at Top Gun earlier this morning and he said it was zero. Jerry - That was my thought as well and I placed the order from Chief Aircraft this morning. Chief doesn't stock them and it's 2-3 week delivery time - but no tax on the order since they're in Oregon - so I'll wait. Pushes my IPC out. Quote
motirs14 Posted March 7, 2015 Report Posted March 7, 2015 מעניין Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Quote
AndyFromCB Posted March 9, 2015 Report Posted March 9, 2015 With two alternators and two batteries in a Bravo do you need that battery backup? If you get the backup make sure it is accessible as you are supposed to do a capacity test annually. Jerry, There is only one time I can think when the battery would come in handy. Electrical smoke in IMC when you want to shut down the master and then your engine goes out, leaving you without a source of vacuum. I know, a lot of ifs…Probably an overkill, but Bravo is still a single bus system. Quote
Jerry 5TJ Posted March 9, 2015 Report Posted March 9, 2015 Jerry, There is only one time I can think when the battery would come in handy. Electrical smoke in IMC when you want to shut down the master and then your engine goes out, leaving you without a source of vacuum. I know, a lot of ifs…Probably an overkill, but Bravo is still a single bus system. All true. But if you have to shut down the whole electrical system, while in IMC, and then the engine quits, too, well, you sure are having a bad day overall. If you analyze the risk factors that face us as single-pilot operators flying piston singles you're probably better off to spend the money not on the backup battery for the #2 gyro but on training. 2 Quote
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