ADS-B and iPads Highlights of Annual AEA Avionics Show
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Priced at $999, the Aero 454 connects via energetically wire (RS-232) to GPS sources such as installed navigators and delivers accurate GPS signals to the mobile device, via Bluetooth. Aero 454 can pass on GPS data to up to three mobile devices, eliminating the need for pilots to carry a separate GPS receiver. The GH-3900 is not only less costly than its GH-3100 predecessor ($45,000 versus $60,000), but also offers almost unlimited configuration options that can be set by the avionics installer. Aero 454 isn’t upright for GPS data, but is also a carbon monoxide detector and thus can provide other data to mobile devices and alerts to pilots. Another promote of the GH-3900 is that its ADAHRS data can be used for other cockpit displays, as an emergency backup for ADAHRS data on firsthand displays, for example. Guardian will offer an app that displays carbon monoxide level, density altitude, compartment altitude and cabin altitude warnings at 10,000, 12,500 and 14,000 feet. The options include flight cues, colors, statistics presentation and aircraft performance parameters, according to L-3. The GH-3900 is standard equipment as a backup appliance on the Rockwell Collins Pro Line Fusion avionics suite but can be installed... The GH-3900 is shorter and lighter than the GH-3100. The TY91 outputs 6 Watts and operates on 14 or 28 volts, while the TY92 outputs 16 Watts and uses 28 volts. Custodian Avionics, maker of the CO Guardian carbon monoxide detector, has released the four-ounce TSO’d Aero 454 iPad (and iPhone/iPod) interface.
Source: Aviation International News