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IFR panel - need versus nice to have

Bsquared

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Question for IFR pilots….I am a VFR pilot and I built a RV-14A with a well equipped VFR Dynon panel (Dual PFDs, dual GPS (one WAAS compliant) and Dynon autopilot). I also included a harness for pitot heat but did not install a heated unit. In light of the newly announced Dynon GPS Navigator it got me thinking about down the road when I sell this airplane it may increase the value to have a basic IFR panel. Will adding the new Dynon Navigator be enough for basis (and safe) IFR or do I need to also include an old fashion Nav unit and antenna, back-up ADAHR, heated pitot and whatever else I am forgetting.
 
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Question for IFR pilots….I am a VFR pilot and I built a RV-14A with a well equipped VFR Dynon panel (Dual PFDs, dual GPS (one WAAS compliant) and Dynon autopilot). I also included a harness for pitot heat but did not install a heated unit. In light of the newly announced Dynon GPS Navigator it got me thinking about down the road when I sell this airplane it may increase the value to have a basic IFR panel. Will adding the new Dynon Navigator be enough for basis (and safe) IFR or do I need to also include an old fashion Nav unit and antenna, back-up ADAHR, heated pitot and whatever else I am forgetting.
The Dynon will be enough but some will inevitably want more or a different brand.
 
You’ll need the heated pitot probe for legal
flight into known IMC. Personally I would like a secondary ground-based nav source, but I also wouldn’t consider that a deal breaker. I’m not convinced the secondary ADHARS provides as much redundancy as one might think (in my system its plumbed to the same P-S source as the primary, which is typical, but this reduces redundancy). I would want a standby attitude indicator (G5, GRT mini) as a backup in case the Dynon system goes down.
 
I’m currently looking to outfit my RV-6 for IFR. It’s actually IFR ready as far as the instrumentation is concerned however the backup to a failed attitude indicator is falling back to turn coordinator, altimeter and airspeed.

That’s how I learned to fly IFR back in the 80’s for partial panel but I can’t see any reason not to have a battery backed backup attitude indicator.

My 2 cents.
 
You’ll need the heated pitot probe for legal
flight into known IMC. Personally I would like a secondary ground-based nav source, but I also wouldn’t consider that a deal breaker. I’m not convinced the secondary ADHARS provides as much redundancy as one might think (in my system its plumbed to the same P-S source as the primary, which is typical, but this reduces redundancy). I would want a standby attitude indicator (G5, GRT mini) as a backup in case the Dynon system goes down.
Agree on all. Holding legality to one side (I love doing that), as a practical matter, a G5, GRT Mini, etc. *with a backup battery*, plus an iPad running ForeFlight etc. with a GPS source, is all you need to fly an LNAV approach safely even if the entire freaking panel urps and you’re sitting in loud darkness. So long as your air data isn’t iced out of existence. And even then you’d have groundspeed and GPS altitude and terrain warnings, so you’re still better than even money.

Think what Doolittle would have given for a G5, an iPad with ForeFlight, and a constellation of GPS satellites. 🤣

Take a handheld though. You still have to turn on the runway lights.
 
You’ll need the heated pitot probe for legal
flight into known IMC. Personally I would like a secondary ground-based nav source, but I also wouldn’t consider that a deal breaker. I’m not convinced the secondary ADHARS provides as much redundancy as one might think (in my system its plumbed to the same P-S source as the primary, which is typical, but this reduces redundancy). I would want a standby attitude indicator (G5, GRT mini) as a backup in case the Dynon system goes down.
91.205 does not require a heated pitot tube. the section that requies heated pitot is for larger planes, part 135, etc.
 
grt mini and gps without an Ifr navigator is not legal. not sure how you would file ifr and fly an approach without the semi-expensive navigator. please explain if i am here. cheers.
 
grt mini and gps without an Ifr navigator is not legal. not sure how you would file ifr and fly an approach without the semi-expensive navigator. please explain if i am here. cheers.
The FARs say ‘appropriate navigation’. I know it’s passé but it’s still legal to go ifr from A to B with no gps, e.g., a nav receiver, if the destination has an approach that can be shot with just a nav.

Heated pitot is also not required. Good idea, but not required by the FARs.

But everyone missed the point. The OP is not instrument rated, and asked if installing an approved gps would increase his re-sell value, that’s all. And IMHO the answer is yes, the re-sale vale will go up - but probably less than the cost of the navigator. Let the next guy spend the money, get what he wants. Or did I mis-read the op?
 
grt mini and gps without an Ifr navigator is not legal. not sure how you would file ifr and fly an approach without the semi-expensive navigator. please explain if i am here. cheers.
We weren't suggesting the GRT Mini/G5 as a legal stand-alone IFR solution. It was strongly suggested as an inexpensive attitude backup to the OP's Dynon system.
 
You built a VFR 14A. Unless you want to get your IFR ticket, I would leave your plane as is. Avionics evolve over time. I don’t know how soon you plan on selling it, but adding expensive equipment that you won’t use is wasted time and money. Avionics don’t age well and the next buyer might want the latest and greatest navigator. The 14 is an expensive plane. Adding IFR will cost north of 20K and a lot of time. Let the new buyer add whatever he wants. Just my two cents worth.
 
You built a VFR 14A. Unless you want to get your IFR ticket, I would leave your plane as is. Avionics evolve over time. I don’t know how soon you plan on selling it, but adding expensive equipment that you won’t use is wasted time and money. Avionics don’t age well and the next buyer might want the latest and greatest navigator. The 14 is an expensive plane. Adding IFR will cost north of 20K and a lot of time. Let the new buyer add whatever he wants. Just my two cents worth.
The real question is what will the IFR navigation box from Dynon cost? I'm guessing $2995.00, plus a GPS antenna and install kit, so another $750, but that is just a guess. I'd offer to install it for a future buyer if you decide to sell.
 
You built a VFR 14A. Unless you want to get your IFR ticket, I would leave your plane as is. Avionics evolve over time. I don’t know how soon you plan on selling it, but adding expensive equipment that you won’t use is wasted time and money. Avionics don’t age well and the next buyer might want the latest and greatest navigator. The 14 is an expensive plane. Adding IFR will cost north of 20K and a lot of time. Let the new buyer add whatever he wants. Just my two cents worth.
+1 for waiting. I bought a project day VFR only RV7, 2.5 years ago.

I spent my time fixing various problems, stripping and repainting, adding lighting, and upgrading to an all Garmin IFR setup based around the G3X. Now Garmin is coming out with the AXIS with the IFR GPS, VHF NAV/COMM all built in.

I have already spent my money, for the equipment, the wiring harness, and installation. I’m not switching to have the latest greatest. The point is stuff like this evolves into better, lighter, more reliable.

IMG_8536.jpeg
 
+1 for waiting. I bought a project day VFR only RV7, 2.5 years ago.

I spent my time fixing various problems, stripping and repainting, adding lighting, and upgrading to an all Garmin IFR setup based around the G3X. Now Garmin is coming out with the AXIS with the IFR GPS, VHF NAV/COMM all built in.

I have already spent my money, for the equipment, the wiring harness, and installation. I’m not switching to have the latest greatest. The point is stuff like this evolves into better, lighter, more reliable.

View attachment 123105
That looks very similar to the panel I am building. I bought a VFR RV7A five years ago and am now going Axis, IFR. Same stuff as you I think: Single Screen PFD, GNX375, 507, 205X, G5, and room for my iPad/Foreflight on the right side. I am interested in thoughts about where to put the G5. I see most are to the far left, but that would work well for the copilot if needed. What are your thoughts about putting it in the center? Are you planing to use it for more than a backup? Such as a dedicated HSI?
 
That looks very similar to the panel I am building. I bought a VFR RV7A five years ago and am now going Axis, IFR. Same stuff as you I think: Single Screen PFD, GNX375, 507, 205X, G5, and room for my iPad/Foreflight on the right side. I am interested in thoughts about where to put the G5. I see most are to the far left, but that would work well for the copilot if needed. What are your thoughts about putting it in the center? Are you planing to use it for more than a backup? Such as a dedicated HSI?
I went for center of aircraft G5 for a couple reasons. First 90+% of my flying is solo, so why spend a couple thousand dollars to give an empty seat a full display?
2nd if I experience a full panel failure I have the same access to see my backup G5 as a passenger would.
3rd if I have a passenger or a CFI in the right seat they can see enough instruments to fly the aircraft without putting their head in my lap.
 
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