Glidergeek wrote:"And GPS gives you track, not heading"
Agreed check compass while taxiing,(unless your skidding sideways) am using a Vertical card in the Skywagon mounted half way up the center strip with a brass screw and nut on the windshield works great never been lost yethad one in the glider wore it out thermaling, I use pilotage and GPS in a flight computer and paper chart.
RockHopper wrote:Glidergeek wrote:"And GPS gives you track, not heading"
Agreed check compass while taxiing,(unless your skidding sideways) am using a Vertical card in the Skywagon mounted half way up the center strip with a brass screw and nut on the windshield works great never been lost yethad one in the glider wore it out thermaling, I use pilotage and GPS in a flight computer and paper chart.
Just curious, do you have a seaplane brace in your windscreen or other steel fittings nearby?

dogpilot wrote:When I got my first 185, down in Honduras, I flew it back with nothing working in the panel but the wet compass. Well by the time I was over the jungle in the Yucatan, I noticed that the screws holding the compass face into the holder where steel not brass. When I got tot ht coast on the other side, I went to IFR (follow roads) it was way off in certain headings. When I finished off that aircraft, I put the Vertical Card Compass in. Worked just fine until Hurricane Andrew destroyed the airplane.
In my present 185 I put the Sirs compass, very much like the one that comes with the Twin Otter. Easy to read.
One commenter asked why the 777 has a wet compass, it is the law, required equipment. In Canada and Alaska above certain latitudes, the compass is rather worthless, it starts to dip severely to the ground, due to the orientation to the pole. We usually went to free gyro mode to do surveys, and set the gyro manually to true north then. So parts of the Aleutians will have a 40° compass swing in 60 miles from local rock formations distorting the field.

I think I'm going to order up a SIRS compass and try it out mounting it up high on my old wind shield. Drilling a few holes in the old one before I change it out won't hurt anything if it doesn't work out. ](/phpbb3/images/smilies/eusa_wall.gif)
RockHopper wrote:Sounds like the answer to mag compass issues in the Skywagon, is to degauss all the steel parts and install a SRS up high in the wind screen using brass hardware. I'd sure like to have an acurate compass that I can trust.I think I'm going to order up a SIRS compass and try it out mounting it up high on my old wind shield. Drilling a few holes in the old one before I change it out won't hurt anything if it doesn't work out.
mtv wrote:best Cub compass I've ever encountered, with the exception of a goniometer.
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