Stephen,
I have been flying with my 296 for over 200 hours. You can see all the places around the country where I have been on my web site at
www.n2prise.org. The most recent long cross-country trip was to Oshkosh 2006. We took along a 396 so my friend who owned it could play with it, checking weather, etc. My 296 was driving the autopilot, and I used it to train my friend on the common functions to all three models. The 496 adds the taxiways at many airports, but you can get those downloaded and printed as needed. The 496 also has all the streets in the USA in ROM for those times you want to use in on the ground. The older models let you plug in a RAM memory chip which can be programmed from your computer with street maps from areas of the country you choose.
On the way back from OSH, there was a line of storms from Saint Louis to a point East of Chicago. The 396 gave us the big situation on where the sigmets and precipitation were located. We flew parallel to the front on the north side of it to a fuel stop in north central Missouri (MO8), then turned for home going past STL on the far west side of town. We had a flight of four RV-s together only because of the 396 we had in my airplane watching the weather. I found myself directing traffic for two of our group around heavy rain storms when they were heading for Decatur and Huntsville, Alabama. The third member of the group got delayed in SE Missouri due to an oil leak and came by Chattanooga after the storms in our area passed by. As for me, I got home to the KCHA area about 20 minutes before the storms from Huntsville reached Chattanooga.
On that day, the 396 helped just fine. It is the only time I have had WX in the cockpit. I still fly my 296. I just finished wiring up the second serial port to my SL-30 NAV/COM and it gets the radio frequencies from the 296 just fine. I need to get the airplane out of the hangar to get real GPS signals to test the new HSI screen on my Dynon D10-A.
Jerry K. Thorne
East Ridge, TN
RV-9A N2PZ 209.4 Hobbs Hours
www.n2prise.org