I recently work with the new Cessna 408. If you don’t know what it is, it is a new production, which means new certification aircraft.
The interesting thing is the aircraft is certified without a standby compass. It has the battery backup in the event of total electrical failure and therefore no whiskey compass.
Now, if you install all the fancy EFIS and have a standby system on an experimental, such as as a G5 or GRT mini, for example with a battery backup, would you need to have a compass?
The way I read the reg, if you have an electronic instrument with magnetometer and battery backup, the compass is not required.
The interesting thing is the aircraft is certified without a standby compass. It has the battery backup in the event of total electrical failure and therefore no whiskey compass.
Now, if you install all the fancy EFIS and have a standby system on an experimental, such as as a G5 or GRT mini, for example with a battery backup, would you need to have a compass?
The way I read the reg, if you have an electronic instrument with magnetometer and battery backup, the compass is not required.