albravo wrote:Larry,
Per our phone conversation, I'm pretty keen on adding an AoA system to my plane.
I went to the Alpha Systems website (
http://alphasystemsaoa.com) to try and better understand the product. What is going on with the HUD on the video on their front page of the plane landing in a crosswind? It goes from one bar to full bars and back to one. It turns on and off. I wouldn't want that type of visual distraction on short final. As marketing videos go, it is one of the worst I've seen.
When I watch your video the progression of lights is much more helpful and the ability to see out the windscreen helps picture when and how the tool is useful.
I think you could put together a much better video for them.
Allan
I haven't looked at the Alpha Systems videos lately, but just as a comment (since I have an Alpha Systems AOA indicator in my airplane), there will be a fluctuation caused by any kind of turbulence. In my system, which is pretty basic and uses an analog display, the needle bounces quite a bit in turbulence. I don't think that's avoidable. The reason for the bouncing is that the angle of attack is changing constantly in turbulence. If it were to be dampened in some fashion, I think it would diminish the usefulness of the AOA indicator.
As for HUD, however it's installed, having it on top of the panel where it is within the pilot's peripheral vision is imperative, IMHO. It isn't much good, buried down on the panel or melded into an MFD as just one of many thingies. It becomes the single most important instrument on short final with the airplane at its ideal angle of attack for that weight and airspeed.
After flying with mine for well over 500 hours now, I still find myself confirming what it is telling me by glancing at the airspeed indicator. Especially when I'm flying light, with less than half tanks and nobody else aboard, sometimes I'm actually surprised at how slow I'm flying, although the AOA needle is still within the middle of the yellow band. A week ago, for instance, I glanced down at the ASI and saw 55 mph--pretty poky. But I had minimal fuel aboard, no pax, not a lot of extra stuff, just me--and hey, I've lost weight, too! (not enough) And the airplane was solid as a rock.
At my age, I'll never own another airplane, but if I did, the first improvement would be an AOA indicator. My only complaints about mine are that it's hard to see at night (an indicator using lights instead of a needle would be better), and it doesn't adjust for flap deployment. But otherwise, it's a solid, welcome improvement that I think every airplane should have installed.
Cary