Almost exactly a year since it happened the last time, and in almost exactly the same geographic location, every last GPS in my airplane (and there are a lot) decided to stop talking to the satellites. The 430W enunciated that I was in dead reckoning mode, and the little airplane turned yellow.
I “solved” this problem last time by replacing my GA 35 antenna, which has a known failure mode in which it jams other GPSs. Didn’t have another issue until now.
I figure either (1) my new GA 35 now has the same fault, (2) a different GPS antenna is pulling the same stunt, or (3) the GA 35 wasn’t the original culprit, and the same gremlin just waited a year to return. If the latter, I will apologize for defaming my GA 35.
Am I scoping this correctly? Am I correct that I basically have to be dealing with a rogue powered GPS antenna?
Relevant GPS gear: I have a Sentry, a G5, a 430W connected to a GA35 on the fuselage behind the canopy, a GRT Horizon EX with a puck antenna on the glareshield, an iPhone with GPS, and an iPad without. I first noticed the Sentry die, but it’s possible the Horizon went first (its data source was the 430W at the time). The problem was intermittent, and the 430W (but not the Sentry or EX) was able to find satellites several times.
Didn’t have time to troubleshoot in the air, as I suddenly needed to navigate quite near the Philly Bravo the old school way. That was an interesting exercise. Key discoveries (a) airports remain great landmarks, just like when I was training for the private with no GPS back in the day, and (2) when all the GPSs urp, flip pages on the various gadgets so you’re not looking at any moving map out of habit. They are surprisingly distracting when they have no position info!
I “solved” this problem last time by replacing my GA 35 antenna, which has a known failure mode in which it jams other GPSs. Didn’t have another issue until now.
I figure either (1) my new GA 35 now has the same fault, (2) a different GPS antenna is pulling the same stunt, or (3) the GA 35 wasn’t the original culprit, and the same gremlin just waited a year to return. If the latter, I will apologize for defaming my GA 35.
Am I scoping this correctly? Am I correct that I basically have to be dealing with a rogue powered GPS antenna?
Relevant GPS gear: I have a Sentry, a G5, a 430W connected to a GA35 on the fuselage behind the canopy, a GRT Horizon EX with a puck antenna on the glareshield, an iPhone with GPS, and an iPad without. I first noticed the Sentry die, but it’s possible the Horizon went first (its data source was the 430W at the time). The problem was intermittent, and the 430W (but not the Sentry or EX) was able to find satellites several times.
Didn’t have time to troubleshoot in the air, as I suddenly needed to navigate quite near the Philly Bravo the old school way. That was an interesting exercise. Key discoveries (a) airports remain great landmarks, just like when I was training for the private with no GPS back in the day, and (2) when all the GPSs urp, flip pages on the various gadgets so you’re not looking at any moving map out of habit. They are surprisingly distracting when they have no position info!
