Electronic charts for iPad

Is Foreflight NOS, though? I couldn't find a good picture on their web site. I've always used Jepps, and I hated NOS back in the day, but I'm not sure if Jeppesen licenses out their charts to any apps.

I like Jepps better than NOS charts too. However at 75 bucks for every chart in the country, I'll deal with it.

Right now, I have both apps on my iPad. The company supplied Jepp subscription skip a lot of airports that I fly into (including my home airport) and I just like having a sectional available.

Comparing the two apps, Foreflight is by far superior to the Jepp app with the sole downside of NOS plates.
 
Where's the downside? NOS are simpler, less information fusion.

I switched from Jepp to NOS once pilot shops stopped stocking them, never looked back
 
I far prefer the format and information presented on Jepp charts...but their prices are absurd and their app unrefined.

I hardly think ForeFlight is perfect but one of their higher ups is a contract pilot for us and I know they're very customer-oriented and open to suggestions.

I use a combination of ADDS, FltPlan.com, and ForeFlight for planning. I've used FltPlan Go infligh since it's free but ForeFlight seems much more refined...enough that I would easily pay 150/year for it.

That being said - they haven't sold me on a Stratus yet. Way too pricey.
 
I left flying for a living, not flying in general. I'm going flying later this month, so need to get some charts. And a headset, and a fuel strainer, and... Damn, this hobby is pricey. :)

Thanks for the info, guys. I think I'll give Foreflight a try.

If you're renting, the fuel strainer is usually kept with the plane.

-Fox
 
I still carry my own fuel strainer as a backup. I've seen too many rental planes with a leaky GATS jar fuel strainer or broken strainers (or no pins) that still get fuel all over my hands.
 
Thanks! You just saved me a few dollars. :) That's definitely new from when I flew GA before.
GA since 1972, the fuel straner has alway been with aircraft. You must have flown at one cheap ash place!

Now I keep one in the plane and a second one in the hangar. Beats pulling the straner out of the plane all the time.
 
Seriously? I rented from several places in Georgia and Florida back in the '90s and early '00s, and none of them kept strainers in the plane. Always had to bring my own.
 
I use Fltplan Go. I use Fltplan at work for planning purposes, Foreflight doesn't come close to the Fltplan website features wise. So I use fltplan on my Android tablet that cost me less than half an iPad. Since the purpose of the tablet is solely for the airplane and I have significant philosophical issues with closed source operating systems, I think it makes a lot more sense. Especially since it's free - with georeferenced plates.
 
We have Jeppview at work, it's a decent app, and covers every county in the world, so it gets the job done. But I personally like foreflight a hell of a lot better, and use it over Jeppview any day. I just wish they had international charts available besides Canada, and a little bit of Mexico/Caribbean. It would be sweet to have access to the rest of the globe, then I wouldn't use jeppview at all. Then again, I have no preference over one type of chart or the other, a charts a chart in my opinion, but I've worked at a lot of places that just had one or the other... So you get used to it.
 
We have Jeppview at work, it's a decent app, and covers every county in the world, so it gets the job done. But I personally like foreflight a hell of a lot better, and use it over Jeppview any day. I just wish they had international charts available besides Canada, and a little bit of Mexico/Caribbean. It would be sweet to have access to the rest of the globe, then I wouldn't use jeppview at all. Then again, I have no preference over one type of chart or the other, a charts a chart in my opinion, but I've worked at a lot of places that just had one or the other... So you get used to it.
We use the jeppview app as well because it's the only way you can get the non part 97 approaches. Also, the govt charts don't have the information you need for reduced vis takeoffs and such.
 
Me to. And I still do, at least for backup.Check the book (FAR 91.103) it doesn't specifically call for a map unless you're flying large airplanes.
AOPA:
"Some hangar lawyers will also quote FAR 91.503, which says that the pilot in command of an airplane must have "pertinent aeronautical charts" available for each flight. But read carefully and you'll see that FAR 91.503 is under subpart F, Large and Turbine-Powered Multiengine Airplanes and Fractional Ownership Program Aircraft. So, yes, if you're flying something that burns Jet A, or weighs more than 12,500 pounds, or is part of a fractional ownership operation, then you must have current charts aboard."

Would the VFR sectionals, IFR low and high en-route charts on Foreflight satisfy this requirement?
 
IMHO #1 is Foreflight with WingX a close second. Others I find are poor at best. If you always operate in the flight levels and land only at 121 airports I can see Jepps being okay but you're missing a lot of features.

A friend of mine flies a Delta MadDog (no, not that one) he took his ipad on a flight with Foreflight and Stratus for weather. Came back telling us about all the features.
  • His plane appears on the approach plate.
  • Weather overlay on his charts.
  • Drag a drop a course.
  • Runway Proximity Advisor
All the GA pilots said; Yea, we know... Been doing that over a year.
 
We use the jeppview app as well because it's the only way you can get the non part 97 approaches. Also, the govt charts don't have the information you need for reduced vis takeoffs and such.
I'm pretty sure that @Capt. Chaos uses non part 97 approaches in foreflight. If you can get a PDF of it, you can drop it right into foreflight.
 
VX picked Astronautics Corp's Nexus EFBs.

http://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/business-aviation/2015-01-19/virgin-america-picks-nexis-efbs

The airplane appears on the airport chart 10-9 and on approach plates.





Although tablet-based electronic flight bags (EFBs) are replacing paper charts in many business aviation and airline cockpits, there is still a robust market for Class 3 certified EFBs, and these are especially important for displaying new features that are part of the NextGen transformation of the National Airspace System. Many cockpits still are equipped with older avionics that cannot display NextGen features such as ADS-B in Cockpit Display of Traffic Information (CDTI) and other applications, and certified EFBs remain a viable solution for these aircraft.

Milwaukee, Wis.-based Astronautics Corp of America has been manufacturing Class 3 certified EFBs since its first-generation system flew on Boeing’s 777 in 2003 for launch customer KLM. That EFB’s LCD was lit by cold-cathode fluorescent bulbs, but Astronautics soon fielded its generation-2 EFB with modern LED backlighting. These systems are installed on Boeing 737s, 777s, 747-8s and the 787.

More than 1,000 aircraft fly with Astronautics EFBs, according to Jason Shuler, product line manager for airborne servers and computing. The latest system is the Astronautics Nexis Flight Intelligence System, which features a touchscreen and solid-state data storage instead of a rotating hard drive. Virgin America’s Airbus A320 fleet is the launch customer for Nexis. The first installation took place last August, and the entire 50-plus A320 fleet will be fully equipped with Nexis systems in March next year.

“Our EFBs not only have intuitive user interfaces using the latest technology such as touchscreens [and] high-contrast LCDs but also have the benefit to fully integrate into the aircraft’s avionics,” said Astronautics president Chad Cundiff.

Shuler pointed out another benefit of dedicated certified EFBs such as the Nexis unit: the Nexis display is driven by a permanently installed server, which is hard-wired to the display so there are no security issues with data traveling wirelessly.

NextGen Applications
The key NextGen features that play on the Nexis EFB are SafeRoute applications, which Astronautics developed in partnership with Aviation Communication & Surveillance Systems (ACSS), a joint venture of L-3 Communications and Thales. SafeRoute software supports NextGen features enabled by ADS-B in capability, such as the CDTI display of aircraft broadcasting their positions via ADS-B out. Other NextGen features include In-trail Procedures, which allow properly equipped aircraft to fly with closer spacing over areas without radar coverage; Merging & Spacing, which adjusts speed instructions to aircraft to maintain optimum spacing and prevent conflicts when flight paths merge near fixes or when approaching airports; and Surface Area Movement Management, which displays own-ship position and positions of other aircraft on airport diagrams.

“[Nexis] is bringing CDTI to the cockpit,” Shuler explained,” with own-ship position on en route charts and maps, and support for NextGen and [Europe’s] Sesar. It allows operators to move in those directions without large-scale changes to the aircraft.”

Astronautics is taking advantage of the processor power available in the Nexis system by developing experimental features that could be a great benefit for pilots. Shuler demonstrated a wind-shear display that depicts the location and likely effects of wind shear. He also demonstrated an experimental wake vortex display, which warns the pilot about danger zones in relation to nearby vortex-generating aircraft. Another experimental feature is integration with maintenance logbook systems. “Nothing is stopping us from moving in that direction,” Shuler said.

Adding the Nexis EFB to an aircraft with airborne Internet connectivity could allow pilots to access certain external websites. The operator can limit access, for example, to weather or flight-tracking or internal company websites.

After the flight, a Datacom button on Nexis allows pilots to send pertinent flight information to operational headquarters. This could be set up to send critical data sooner, if appropriate connectivity is available.

The Astronautics EFB system is an open-architecture design, which means that developers can create their own applications to run on Nexis. “We provide the full software development kit for third parties and operators to develop their own apps,” Shuler said. “We don’t know everything people are going to want to do five years from now, and we have the capability to be flexible.”
 
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