the mechanical ones arent that hard to learn........what do you do if your batteries quit on you?
What do you do if the center rivot on the mecahnical one breaks and the whole thing falls apart?the mechanical ones arent that hard to learn........what do you do if your batteries quit on you?
There is an examiner in Concord California KCCR that has been known to inform of battery failures of electronic E6Bs. One student I trainined with borrowed 3 other electronic E6Bs and brought them all to the checkride, and still had a mecahnical one just in case. When his batteries "failed" he pulled out another one. The the batteries "failed" on that one and again he pulled out another one. The examiner gave up and let him use the 3rd one. He passedI was told by my PPL instructor that an electronic e6b on a checkride was asking for the examiner to inform me the batteries had died. (Simulated Battery Failure?) Anyone ever actually had this happen during a ride and responded with fresh batteries? What happened?
I don't know about you guys but I’ve never even needed an e6b during flight with the exception of training and the check ride.
I don't know about you guys but I’ve never even needed an e6b during flight with the exception of training and the check ride.
But...how do you calculate your fuel burn?
</sarcasm>