Geopilot2Plus Inglese EU PDF
Geopilot2Plus Inglese EU PDF
USER MANUAL
Via Caboto, 9
54036 Marina di Carrara - MS - ITALIA
E-mail: [email protected]
WARRANTY
AvMap warrants their GPS receiver and accessories to be free of defects in material and work-
manship for a period of two years from the date of original purchase. This warranty applies only
to the original purchaser of this product. In the event of a defect, AvMap, at its option, will
repair or replace the product with no charge to the purchaser for parts or labor. The repaired
or replaced product will be warranted for ninety (90) days from the date of return shipment, or
for the balance of the original warranty, whichever is longer.
PURCHASERS REMEDY - Purchasers Exclusive Remedy under this written warranty or any
implied warranty shall be limited to the repair or replacement, at AvMaps option, of any
defective part of the receiver or accessories which are covered by this warranty. Repairs under
this warranty shall only be made by an authorized AvMap dealer.
PURCHASERS DUTIES - To obtain warranty service, the purchaser must return the receiver
or accessories post paid, with proof of the date of original purchase and purchasers return
address to AvMap, or an authorized AvMap representative. AvMap will not be responsible for
any losses or damage to the product incurred while the product is in transit or is being shipped
for repair. Insurance is recommended.
LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES - Except as set forth above, all other expressed or implied
warranties, including those of fitness for any particular purpose and merchantability, are hereby
disclaimed. Some states do not allow limitations on warranties, so the above limitation may
not apply to you.
EXCLUSIONS - This warranty does not cover the following: Installation, Finishes, Defects resulting
from installation. Any damage due to accident, resulting from inaccurate satellite transmissions.
Inaccurate transmissions can occur due to changes in the position, health, or geometry of a
satellite. Any damage due to shipping, misuse, negligence, tampering or improper use. Servicing
performed or attempted by anyone other than an authorized AvMap representative.
Warning! Exposure of display to UV rays may shorten life of the liquid crystals used in
your plotter. This limitation is due to the current technology of the LCD displays. Avoid overheating
which may cause loss of contrast and, in extreme cases, a darkening of the screen. Problems which
occur from overheating are reversible when temperature decreases.
Attention! Lexposition de votre cran LCD aux ultra-violets lors de soleil intense
rduira la dure de vie de lafficheur de votre lecteur. Cette contrainte est lie la technologie des
crans LCD. Une augmentation trop importante de temprature peut obscurer des zones de votre
cran et le rendre ainsi inutilisable (non couvert par la garantie).
Aviso! La exposicin de la pantalla a los rayos UV puede acortar la vida del cristal lquido
usado en su ploter. Esta limitacin se debe a la tecnologa actual de las pantallas LCD. Evitar que
la pantalla se caliente en exceso pues puede causar prdida de contraste y, en caso extremo, la
pantalla puede quedar totalmente negra. Este problema revierte al enfriarse la pantalla
Warning!!!
A measure of knowledge by the user is required for proper and safe use of the chart plotter.
Read the User Manual and the Warranty completely.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
1.1 FEATURES 12
1.1.1 Specifications 12
1.2 BASIC 14
1.3 FLYING START 15
1.3.1 The Moving Map 15
1.3.2 The Main Menu 15
1.3.3 Moving Map Functions 15
1.3.4 Moving Map Icons 16
1.3.5 Course Predictor 16
1.3.6 GoTo 17
1.3.7 Database 17
2 The Basics
2.1 THE KEYBOARD 18
2.2 TURNING THE Geopilot II Plus ON/OFF 19
2.2.1 Turning On 19
2.2.2 Turning Off 19
2.3 CHANGING BRIGHTNESS & CONTRAST 19
2.4 SELECTING THE LANGUAGE 19
2.5 EXTERNAL CONNECTIONS 20
2.5.1 Internal/external GPS Source 20
2.5.2 NMEA Outputs 20
2.5.3 Down Or Up-load Flight Plans & Tracks 21
2.5.3.1 Download/Upload Waypoints 21
2.5.3.2 Download/Upload Flight Plan 21
2.5.3.3 Download Track 21
2.6 SYSTEM SETUP OPTIONS 22
2.7 DATA ENTRY 22
3.5.5 Default Datafields 29
3.5.6 Map Orientation 29
3.5.7 Map Presentation Settings 30
3.5.8 Automatic Information 30
3.5.9 Rangerings 30
3.5.10 Vfr, Airspace, Land, Marine And Other Settings 30
3.5.10.1 VFR Settings 31
3.5.10.2 Airspace Settings 31
3.5.10.3 Land Settings 32
3.5.10.4 Marine Settings 32
3.5.10.5 Other Settings 33
3.5.11 Terrains 33
3.5.11.1 Terrain ON 33
3.5.11.2 Terrain OFF 33
3.6 MAP PRESENTATION MENU 34
3.6.1 Generic 34
3.6.2 TAWS 34
3.6.3 Selective Display Settings 35
3.6.4 POI Settings 36
6 Flight Plan
6.1 VIEWED FLIGHT PLAN 41
6.2 CREATING A FLIGHT PLAN FROM THE DATABASE 41
6.3 ACTIVATE & DEACTIVATE A FLIGHT PLAN 42
6.4 NAMING A FLIGHT PLAN 43
6.5 CLEAR A FLIGHT PLAN 43
6.6 REVERSE A FLIGHT PLAN 43
6.7 GoTo FLIGHT PLANS 43
6.7.1 GoTo - Database Mode 43
6.7.2 GoTo - Moving Map Mode 44
6.7.3 GoTo - Quick Info 44
6.8 NEAREST SEARCH FOR GOTO FLIGHT PLAN ACTIVATION 44
7.3.3 Differential GPS 47
7.3.4 Monitoring & Controlling The GPS 48
7.3.5 GPS Information Sources 48
10 Calculator
10.1 COUNTDOWN TIMER 55
10.2 ELAPSED TIMER 55
10.3 TRIP COMPUTER 56
10.4 VERTICAL NAVIGATION 56
10.5 WIND CALCULATION 58
10.6 FUEL CONSUMPTION 59
11 The Checklists
11.1 ENGINE START 61
11.2 GROUND CHECK 61
11.3 PRE TAKE-OFF 62
11.4 CRUISE IN FLIGHT 62
11.5 LANDING 62
12 Simulator
12.1 SIMULATING STRAIGHT MODE 63
12.2 SIMULATING ROUTE MODE 63
12.3 TURNING THE SIMULATOR OFF 64
13.4 VIDEO MODE 66
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15 Operating Requirements
15.1 BATTERY 76
15.1.1 Battery Functioning 76
15.2 DIMENSIONS 77
15.3 TROUBLESHOOTING 77
15.3.1 Power 77
15.3.2 GPS Fix 77
15.3.3 When Nothing Else Works 78
15.3.4 Customer Support 78
15.4 SYSTEM TEST 79
15.4.1 RAM Menu 79
15.4.2 C-CARD Menu 79
15.4.3 Serial Ports 79
Appendix A - Terms 81
Appendix B - MAP DATUM 84
Appendix C - ICAO codes 85
Appendix D - C-MAP Av. Cartridge Options 91
Appendix E - C-MAP DATA TRANSFER 92
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1 Introduction
If you have not used a GPS Charting System before and intend to use your Geopilot II Plus for
navigating, we suggest that you read this User Manual and make sure you are familiar with its
contents. Throughout this User Manual, the keys are shown in capital letters enclosed between
single inverted commas, for example MENU. Menu operations are in bold characters listed by
keys sequence with the menu names enclosed between quotes, for example MENU 1 sec. +
SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT means: press and hold down the MENU key
for 1 second, using the cursor key selects the System Setup menu, press ENT, using the cursor key
selects the Fix Setup menu and then press ENT.
1.1 FEATURES
This electronic charting system integrates the remarkable accuracy of a GPS receiver with a detailed
moving map into a single, easy-to-use, computerized electronic map system. The Geopilot II Plus
contains a built-in base map with coast/shorelines, names of states, major cities, highways, lakes
and rivers.
When the Geopilot II Plus is first opened, please check it for the following contents:
SD (2 GB) with Aeronautical+Jeppesen Maps (inserted in the slot on the left side of the unit)
SD (2 GB) with Tele Atlas Terrestrial Maps
Power cord
Audio Video cable
Remote control
Suction cup mount
Quick guide
Optional Accessories:
PC/Data cable
If any parts are missing contact the dealer where you purchased it immediately: additional C-MAP
NT+ Compact Flash (cartography and aeronautical data cards) and mounting hardware options are
available through your local dealer.
For additional information, visit our web site at: www.avmapnavigation.com
1.1.1 Specifications
Main Characteristics
Flight Plans
Flight Plans: 15
Max Waypoints per Flight Plan: 100
Tracking
Tracks: 1
Track Colors: 7
12
Points per Track: 5000
Step by Distance: Auto, 20, 100, 500 Mt, 1Km; 5, 30 Sec, 1 Min
Cartographic Functions
Worldwide Background
Built-in Continental Cartography
Coordinates System (DDD MM SS, DDD MM.mm, DDD MM.mmm, UTM, OSGB, MGRS)
North Reference
Auto Zoom
Map Presentation (Aero+Terrestrial, Aeronautical, Marine)
POI Settings
Selective and cycled Display
VFR (Airports, VOR, NDB, Intersections, Vertical Obstructions, Aero Objects Id, Enroute
Communications)
Airspace (Controlled Areas, Restricted Areas, FIR & UIR, MORA)
Land (Roads, Road Labels, Railroads, City Names, Rives and Lakes, Cultural Features, Natural
Features, Landmarks, POI Objects)
Marine (Lights, Chart Boundaries, Bathymetric & Soundings, Bathymetric & Soundings Range,
Depth Area Limit, Navigational Aids, Attention Areas, Tracks & Routes)
Other Settings (User Points, Objects Overlap, Lat/Lon Grid)
Fix Functions
DGPS
WAAS
Fix Symbol user selectable (Standard, Plane, Helicopter, Car)
Static Navigation
Course Predictor
Map Orientation (Track-up, Course-up, North-up)
Projected Radial
A-B measurement
Special Functions
Automatic Info (Aero+Terrestrial, Aeronautical, Terrestrial, Marine)
Nearest search
Direct-To navigation
Date and Time Format
Astronomic Data Calculation (Sun/Moon Info)
Distance Unit selection (KM, NM, SM)
Speed Unit selection (MPH, KTS, KMH)
Altitude Unit selection (FT, FL, MT)
Depth Unit selection (FT, FM, MT)
Fuel Unit selection (GAL, LIT, LB, KG, BGAL)
Descent Rate selection (FT/MIN, M/S, DEG)
Temperature Unit (C/F)
Alarms handling (Arrival, XTE, Waypoint Alarm Radius, Airspace)
Database(Airports, VOR, NDB, Intersections, POI objects, User Waypoints, File Manager)
Calculator (Countdown Timer, Elapsed Timer, Trip Computer, Vertical Navigation, Wind
Calculation, Fuel Consumption)
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Simulation mode (Speed, Heading)
Checklists (Engine Start, Ground Check, Pre Take-Off, Landing)
Communications (Waypoints Upload/Download, Flight Plan Upload/Download, Track Upload/
Download)
Interface
Serial I/O port
Physical Characteristics
Size
Ultra-sleek 100x139.7 x 35.4 cm
Weight
Under 1lib (390 g)
LCD display
Color 5 LCD TFT ultra bright, sun viewable
resolution 320x240 pixels
Power Supply
10-35 V (cigarette plug power cable)
Operating Temperature Range 32F to 131F (0C to 55C)
Storage Temperature
-13F to 158F (-25C to 70C)
Keyboard
Backlighted, silicon rubber
1.2 BASIC
The Geopilot II Plus is controlled by using 6 keys and the cursor key. As you press a key, a single
audio beep confirms the key action; three rapid beeps indicates that no response is available.
NEAR Key - For quick access to the GPS status press and hold 1 sec the NEAR key. The Brightness
and contrast will appear; the GPS status and current time are displayed at the bottom of this box.
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1.3 FLYING START
These pages provide a very brief overview of several of the Geopilot II Pluss important features, the
Main Menu, the Moving Map, GoTo flights and locating a Waypoint in the Database. It does not
replace the User Manual, which should be read to get the fullest possible use from your Geopilot
II Plus.
Note
The Geopilot II Plus is an aid to navigation. It does not replace paper charts and good judgement.
1.3.1 The Moving Map
Before starting, connect the Geopilot II Plus to power and place the antenna with a clear view of
the sky. Turn On the unit pressing NEAR. Press ENT to exit from the Warning page and enter the
Moving Map mode. The Moving Map is the default state displaying the Moving Map screen and the
Data Window. The Data Window contains navigation information boxes (See Chapter 3 for details
on Moving Map mode).
Note: If no Fix is available, red dashed cross is displayed over the map for increased Pilot
Awareness.
To Select Position
Use the cursor key to scroll to the location you want.
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differently based on the mode of operation selected. The Auto Home mode will allow the user to
pan away from his present position to view other parts of the map, and return to present position
automatically when no buttons are pushed for a pre-determined amount of seconds. Auto Zoom
mode will keep your present position, and your destination in the screen at all times. The screen
will automatically zoom in as you get closer. To shut off this function, simply select OFF.
The Cursor Mode (OFF Selected) will allow you to move the map to any position to view data or
details. To return to your present position, just press ESC while in moving map.
The control for these functions is found in the Moving Map Menu, under Auto Position Mode.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + COURSE
PREDICTOR + ENT
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1.3.6 GoTo
GoTo sets a 1-leg course from the present position to any location or selected Waypoint. To activate
a GoTo Flight Plan move the cursor to the desired location or Waypoint and press GOTO. The
GoTo menu box will open enabling you to activate the current cursor position or search the
Database for a specific object to fly to. To activate the current cursor position, highlight CURSOR
and press ENT. To activate a GoTo Flight Plan to a specific Database item, select the category and
press ENT. Select the database item and press GOTO again to activate.
To deactivate, press GOTO and select DEACTIVATE.
1.3.7 Database
The Database function allows the user to access information stored in the data cartridges on
Airports, VORs, NDBs, Intersections and User Waypoints. Searching the Database allows the user
to activate GoTo Flight Plans and locate the item on the map. There are two methods of accessing
the Database information. The first is through the Database function within the Main Menu and the
second is directly from the Moving Map display (see Chapter 3).
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2 The Basics
This chapter provides general information about the functions of the keys and entering data.
The Cycles appear in the first three columns and are labeled 1, 2 and 3. In order to adjust at which
Cycle features appear, use the Cursor Control key to highlight an item and hit ENTER to remove
the item from appearing. Hit ENTER again to check the item so that it will appear on the display
when that Cycle is activated. Continue to use this procedure to activate features in Cycles 1 - 3 as
desired.
The - key
Shows less detail of a larger area by changing the chart scale and zooming out on the map display.
The + key
Shows more detail of a smaller area by changing the chart scale and zooming in on the map display.
If pressed outside the Moving Map it can be used as an ENT key
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Esc 3 sec. on the moving map changes the position of the fix icon: one configuration displays
the fix icon on the 20% central area of the Moving Map and the other on the exact center of the
screen.
2.2.1 Turning On
Press and hold NEAR for 1 second. The Geopilot II Plus emits one rapid beep sound and a
Title page containing information about the Product name, Software version, library version and
cartridges installed is displayed. This data can also be viewed in the About page in the Main
Menu.
After a few seconds the Warning page is displayed, reminding you that the Geopilot II Plus is an
aid to navigation and should be used with appropriate prudence. The electronic charts are not
intended to substitute for the official charts. Press ENT to open the Moving Map screen.
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> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + GENERAL SETUP + ENT +
LANGUAGE + ENT
Choose the language you want and press ENT again to confirm.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENTER + FIX SETUP + ENTER + FIX
SOURCE + ENTER
Choose Internal GPS and press ENTER to confirm. Otherwise if the Geopilot II Plus is using an
external NMEA0183 positioning source, set the Fix Source as External NMEA0183. The recognized
Input NMEA0183 messages are the following: GGA, GLL, GSA, GSV, HDG, HDM, HDT, PCMPA,
RMC, VHW, VTG (see Appendix E for more details on NMEA sentences).
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENTER + FIX SETUP + ENTER + FIX
SOURCE + ENTER
The default setting is Off. The Output NMEA0183 messages are the following: APA, APB, BOD,
BWC, GGA, GSA, GSV, GLL, HSC, RMA, RMB, RMC, VTG, WCV, XTE (see Appendix F for more
details on NMEA sentences) BOD, BWC, GGA, GLL, HSC, RMA, RMB, RMC, VTG, WCV, XTE (see
Appendix F for more details on NMEA sentences).
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2.5.3 Down Or Up-load Flight Plans & Tracks
The Geopilot II Plus can also send and receive Flight Plans from the AvMap Flight
Planner or another device compatible with it through the serial port (the USB port is for factory
use only). This requires an optional data cable that can be purchased from your avionics dealer or
AvMap/Navigation for a proper connection to the device (see following figures).
The Upload Waypoint function allows you to receive Waypoints from the serial port using the
NMEA0183 $WPL sentence (see Appendix E):
The Upload Flight Plan function allows you to receive Flight Plans from the serial port using the
NMEA0183 $WPL and $RTE sentences (see Appendix E):
The received Flight Plan is saved in the current Flight Plan. If the current Flight Plan contains data
the user should be asked to confirm the action (overwriting the existing Flight Plan) or choose
another Flight Plan.
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ENTER
- Enter or edit data by pressing up/down cursor key to step through the available characters until
the desired character is displayed.
- Press right cursor key to move the cursor to the right.
- Use left cursor key to move the cursor to the left.
- Move the cursor over the displayed symbol and press up/down cursor key until the desired
symbol appears.
- Press ENT to continue to the next line or to return to the previous menu.
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3 The Moving Maps
The Moving Map is the default state of the software. This mode displays the Moving Map screen
and Data Window. The Moving Map displays map detail in Home, Auto Zoom or Cursor mode.
The operation mode will determine the options available within the screen. The Data Window
contains the navigation information pertaining to the active flight; these fields can be customized.
From the Moving Map screen you can obtain Automatic Info and Full Info for Database objects.
Here you can also open the Cursor/Position Menu for features related to Flight Plans, Waypoints
and airspace.
Note
Auto Zoom must be selected to Off in the Moving Map Menu.
A slow flashing airplane icon will indicate your current position. The airplane will be pointing in the
direction of movement. Home mode can display the map in North-up, Course-up or Track-up (see
Moving Map Settings, Par. 3.5). To deactivate Home mode press ESC activating the cursor at the
previous position or press a cursor key to enable the cursor under the current fix position.
Note
Auto Zoom must be selected to On in the Moving Map Menu.
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To activate Auto Zoom mode press ESC in Moving Map. Auto Zoom requires a position fix and an
active destination point. If a destination point is not present it works as Home mode.
To deactivate Auto Zoom mode press ESC to enable the cursor at the previous position or press a
cursor key to enable the cursor under the current fix position. Instead if you press + or - enables
the cursor under the current fix position and zooms on the map.
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area(s) of airspace queried is highlighted.
Like Automatic Info the window is opened in the top or bottom part of the screen. One window
displays all airspace objects. Displayed information is the following: Name of air-space; type of
airspace; altitude range; tower frequency for airport traffic areas or main airport frequency for Class
B and Class C areas.
Single airspaces under the cursor can be highlighted. Hold MENU 1 sec, then select the airspace to
be highlighted and press ENTER. Press ESC in order to return to the Moving Map.
Found objects are presented using a tree structure. Using the cursor key highlight the object desired
and press ENT for further details.
Using the cursor key enter the Bearing and press ENT. The Distance box is now active; using the
cursor key enter the Distance for the line to extend and press ENT. To remove a radial, select the
object icon or the radial line with the cursor, then:
A Warning message appears asking if you would like to remove the radial. Press ENT to confirm or
ESC to exit. To remove all radials stored in the Geopilot II Plus (see also Par. 14.9):
3.4.4 A - B Function
The A-B Function allows you to calculate distance and bearing between two specified points (A
and B). The distance and bearing will appear in the A-B data field box at the top of the screen.
(This must be selected for display; see Data Window, Par. 3.2). To measure two points:
You can also measure distance from the current fix position using the A-B feature. From Home or
Auto Zoom mode:
25
>Place the cursor at second position B + ENT + A-B FUNCTION + ENT
Add Waypoint
Edit Waypoint
The Edit Waypoint box will appear. Using the cursor key scroll through the alphanumerics to create
an eight character name, adjust the Latitude or Longitude or select an icon. Press ENT within each
character field to move to the next field. After completing the icon selection, the box will close and
the new data is stored. Remove Waypoint (present only if there is a Waypoint under the cursor
position):
A shadow of the icon will remain on the screen until the map is redrawn.
This will create the first Waypoint within your Flight Plan. Continue this way to add the remaining
Waypoints within your Flight Plan.
Note
If several aero objects are found under the cursor, the system will default the selection as follows: Airport, VOR,
NDB, INT. If no aero object is found, a temporary Waypoint is placed at the coordinates of the cursor and is
named WPTxxx (where xxx is a number).
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Add Waypoint
To add a Waypoint (leg) to the viewed (current) Flight Plan place the cursor over the position.
This will place another leg onto the end of the current viewed Flight Plan.
Remove Waypoint (present only if there is a Waypoint under the cursor position)
>Place the cursor over existing Waypoint + ENT + REMOVE WAYPOINT + ENT
If the Waypoint was within the Flight Plan, the revised leg will be drawn on the screen.
Inserting a Waypoint
To edit a flight plan on the moving map, be sure the flight plan is selected as the Viewed flight
plan. (See Sec. 6.1). To insert a waypoint between two existing waypoints in the viewed flight plan,
move the cursor over the leg to be edited:
3.5.1 Viewed Fp
This item enables you to select the Flight Plan to display on the Moving Map from the list
of stored Flight Plans. The Flight Plan that is Viewed can then be edited or activated
from the Moving Map display.
The Flight Plan list will display, using the cursor key, highlight the Flight Plan and press ENTER.
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Select an EMPTY Flight Plan if you do not want a Flight Plan to display on the Moving Map, or to
create a new Flight Plan from the Moving Map.
OFF - The moving map display will remain in CURSOR or HOME mode as set by the user.
AUTO ZOOM - Used to keep the current position and the destination (Target) visible on the map.
The map is scrolled and zoomed automatically to keep the best view possible during all phases of
flight. When Auto Zoom is selected, and the cursor is active, the map will reposition the cursor to
the center point of the current position fix and the destination waypoint as needed to keep both
items visible on the display.
AUTO HOME - The Moving Map page will automatically change to the HOME mode when no
cursor activity is present for 60 seconds. The default setting is AUTO HOME. Auto Zoom is On
the Auto Zoom mode is activated (see Par. 3.1.3).
The Auto Zoom mode is used to keep the fix position and the destination (Target) visible on the
map. The map is scrolled and zoomed automatically to keep the best view possible.
The following options are available for the data window display:
OFF
Fields
HSI + Fields - Provides the HSI along with 6 data fields in the top half of the display window.
(Settings for the HIS display are selected in the HIS menu).
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3.5.4 Setup Data Fields
You can select the item to be displayed in each of the fields of the Data Window. The following
figure displays the options available. The fields selected for each window mode option (1-line, 2-
lines, etc.) are independent; therefore, you can select different fields for each window view.
After pressing ENT, a box in the Data Window will be highlighted. Using the cursor key, select the
box to be edited and press ENT. The OPTIONS box will appear (see previous figure) allowing you
to select the item to display in the highlighted is box. Highlight the desired item from the list and
press ENT to accept. You can then scroll to another box and proceed as above. Once all boxes are
set up, press ESC to exit.
Note
Dest. Wpt on the GeoPilot uses 2 fields. Still must be the top field, or the top left when in HSI + Fields mode.
The message DONE will appear to the right confirming the action is complete. The Default Fields
will only be applied to the currently selected Data Window Option.
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North-up - will rotate the map automatically to keep North pointing toward the top of the display.
During North - up mode the Screen Amplifier is active. Depending on the Heading, the fix icon
is placed on one of the 8 positions. For example, if the Heading is 45, the fix icon is placed on
the bottom left part of the screen (see Fig. 3.5.5). This method of icon placement allows for the
maximum view ahead of the aircraft at the given direction of travel.
Fig. 3.5.6 - 8 marks at the areas where the icon may appear
The default setting is generic. See paragraph 3.6 for further details.
3.5.9 Rangerings
Range rings, 30 degrees radials, added cross at rings center is selectable in TRACK_UP mode , in
the Fix position for increased Pilot Awareness .
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> MENU + VFR/AIRSPACE/LAND/MARINE/OTHER SETTINGS + ENT
Note
Low Airways are only displayed below 50 Nm.
The Airline Airway, Control Airway and Direct Route Airway are displayed below 5 Nm.
This is the default setting. It is also possible to select them in the 50 Nm, 20 Nm, 10 Nm map scales.
The Official Designated Airway and RNAV Airway are displayed below the 50 Nm map scale.
To change from default settings, select MENU + SELECTIVE DISPLAY, and scroll-down to any
of the following:
1. Airline Airway
2. Control Airway
3. Direct Route Airway
4. Official Designated Airway
5. RNAV Airway
Refer to Section 3.5.12 for detailed information on how to customize the map display settings.
When routing to a specific leg, the Airline Airway, Control Airway, Direct Route Airway and Official
Designated Airway are displayed in blue, while the RNAV Airway (Area Navigation) are displayed
in purple.
Important Note: When the Low Airways are enabled, the Land Elevation (shading) display will be
disabled below the 50 Nm map scale. The land elevation can be determined by moving the cursor
to any area on the map display, and the elevation for that location will be displayed.
The QUICK INFO window gives you the data that refers to the selected airways. They are:
In the QUICK INFO window, you may get duplicate information about the same airway. This
duplicate data refers to two different legs. An example of where this may occur is when you
place the CURSOR in the proximity of a User Waypoint or Navigational Aid where the two legs
connect.
In order to view additional data regarding the selected airway; in the Map mode, press the ENT
key once, select FULL INFO and press ENT again to confirm, select Enroute Airways and confirm
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pressing ENT.
Please Note: The Enroute Airways information displayed in the FULL INFO page may present two
options:
1. Outbound = 0 designates the ending leg of the airway
2. Inbound = 0 designates the starting leg of the airway
Note
Once you confirm the selection with the ENTER key, the airway is depicted in black.
2. CLEAR AIRWAY: selecting this item and pressing the ENT key, the airway color will revert to the
original one.
Controlled Areas: ON/OFF displays/hides controlled areas on the moving map. The default
setting is On.
Restricted Areas: ON/OFF displays/hides restricted areas on the moving map. The default setting
is On.
Display Airspaces: ALL/Below/Above enables to choose what airspaces cut basing on the threshold
chosen in Airspace Level
Airspaces Level: Sets the Altitude value that conditions the air spaces display if DISPLAY AIRSPACES
is set ABOVE or BELOW. If DISPLAY AIRSPACES is set ALL , AIRSPACE LEVEL is irrelevant.
FIR and UIR: ON/OFF displays/hides FIR and UIR on the moving map. The default setting is
OFF.
MORA: ON/OFF displays/hides MORA on the moving map. The default setting is OFF.
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colored in blue and [Max, 15000] colored in light blue. The default setting is 6 Ft for Depth Areas
Limit 1 and 50 Ft for Depth Areas Limit 2.
Navigational Aids: ON/OFF. The default setting is On.
Attention Areas: ON/OFF/CONTOUR. The default setting is Contour.
Tracks & Routes: ON/OFF. The default setting is On.
3.5.11 Terrains
The shaded elevation map Terrain Depiction and associated software features are designed
to aid pilots by graphically and numerically displaying the approximate elevation of any location on
the map. It is not designed to replace any onboard altitude/elevation instrumentation (i.e. altimeters
or other altitude/elevation measuring devices).Terrain Depiction can be displayed in either the
Vertical or Horizontal display modes.
The Map Orientation is set to Track-Up and the Terrain Depiction is set to ON at system start-up,
and can be changed as needed (see below for instructions on how to change the Map Orientation
from Track-Up to Course-Up or North-Up, as well as how to turn OFF the Terrain Depiction Shaded
Land Elevations).
3.5.11.1 Terrain ON
With the Terrain set to ON, the following occurs:
With Map Orientation set to North-Up and Track-Up, the Terrain Depiction is displayed on all
mapping scales from 1 Nm and above. No Terrain Depiction is displayed with the mapping scale
from1/2 Nm and below.
With the Map Orientation set to Course-Up, no Terrain
Depiction occurs on any map scale.
Note: Terrain Depiction is disabled at 1/2 mile and below to allow for a normal Track-Up Map
Orientation to be used thus allowing for airport traffic patterns to be displayed on the map.
The cursor, when moved anywhere on the map, will open up a dialog box that will give the
approximate elevation of that point on the map. Units of measurement default to feet. To switch
to meters, go to MENU.
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3.6 MAP PRESENTATION MENU
The Map Presentation Menu enables the user to switch quickly among several map presentation
modes : plain Land Elevation, TAWS and Weather (North America only) . From here use the cursor
key to select the item desired and press ENTER to activate. At any time, press ESC to back out
of the menus and return to the Moving Map. Hold 1 sec the MENU key from the Moving Map in
order to enter the Map Presentation Menu.
3.6.1 Generic
Generic is the default presentation, the Geopilot 2 will show just land elevation if selected in the
Moving Map Menu with neither TAWS or Weather information.
3.6.2 TAWS
TAWS (Terrain Awareness Warning System), depicts the separation that exists between the terrain
and the airplane.
In order to properly display TAWS, youll need to configure the Geopilot II Plus. In MAP mode,
press the MENU key, select TERRAIN and press ENT. A menu is displayed. Select TAWS and confirm
by pressing ENT.
Important Note: After TAWS is enabled; TAWS will not be displayed on the map. You will need to
acquire a position fix. The simulation mode can be used for training purposes. Press the MENU key
twice and select Simulator from the Main Menu. Press ENT, and set to ON.
Once TAWS has been enabled, the Geopilot II Plus will display a legend in the lower left corner of
the display that depicts the TAWS color scheme:
Please Note
When TAWS is enabled, the color scheme is always displayed. The rules for TAWS are divided into two levels:
1. L1=500 ft. agl / M1=1,000 ft. agl / H1=2,000 ft. agl
2. L2=1,000 ft. agl / M2=2,000 ft. agl / H2=3,000 ft. agl
The TAWS rules allow you to calculate the color scheme to be used for depicting the OCH: Obstacle Clearance
Height.
The OCH: Obstacle Clearance Height, is the difference of your own altitude (GPS Altitude) less
the Land Elevation:
OCH = ALT LE
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This calculation considers the Lowland and Highland definition, where:
In the Lowland case, the TAWS colors will be red, yellow and green according to the following
values of the OCH:
In the Highland case, the TAWS colors will be red, yellow and green according to the following
rules of the OCH:
In the Auto case, the Geopilot II Plus shifts the level of the TAWS depending terrain altitudre.
In addition to the TAWS legend in the lower left corner of the screen, all vertical obstructions (i.e.
towers, tanks, etc.) will be displayed in the appropriate TAWS color scheme.
Note
If no Fix and/or no Altitude are available, TAWS legend window content is displayed with red background and
warning message NO ALTITUDE NO TAWS AVAILABLE .
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Scroll through the cells using the cursor key. To select the desired scale you would like the map to
begin displaying data for the category, place the cursor within the cell and press ENT. (The map
scale for the cell is displayed at the top right.) Any box with an X indicates the feature is not
available at that chart scale.
All data for that category will begin to display at that chart scale checked and all scales below. It
is also possible tochoose the catrografic information to be shown based on the selected Cycle
program.
There are 3 programs available thatthe user can personalize through the 1/2/3 Cycle columns. For
each of them it is possible to activate/deactivate any cartographic object. To change the program
from the map pages it is necessary to press CYCLE.
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4 Navigation & Location
The Navigation and Location screen displays a full page of navigation information with location
coordinates. To access from the Main Menu:
Note
Distances are measured horizontally.
If the icon rotates 180 and points toward the bottom of the display, you are moving away from the
destination. The numbers on either side of the CDI represent a full-scale deflection.
To change the CDI scale press the left/right cursor key.
The Geopilot II Plus references navigation information to the next Waypoint in the active Flight
Plan. When you reach the destination of one leg, the Geopilot II Plus automatically switches to
the next leg.
This leg switching occurs when the airplane crosses the bisector of the 2 legs, as shown in
the diagram. The pilot may choose a different leg (forward of the present location) by using the
Flight Plan menu and activating the leg destination.
Highlight the destination Waypoint of the desired leg and press GOTO to activate that leg of the
Flight Plan.
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Fig. 4.1 - Flight Plan
The Location information displayed on the Nav/Location screen includes the destination waypoint,
Bearing (BRG), Track (TRK), Estimated Time Enroute (ETE), Distance to waypoint (DST), Ground
Speed (GS), Cross Track Error (XTE), LAT/LON coordinates, GPS Altitude, Time to Descent, Estimated
Time of Arrival (ETA), and the current time.
Note
If you are using an external GPS, combinations of time, date and altitude may not be displayed. Normal GPS
altitude accuracy can be +/- 1000 feet.
The Altitude (ALT), distance and velocity units of measure are selected from Units Setup in the
System Setup Menu; the clock format (time and date) is selected from Time Format in Date & Time
Setup, also in the Setup Menu (refer to Chapter 14).
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5 The HSI Screen
The HSI screen presents the desired course to be flown and the current Track in a graphical format
similar to the Horizontal Situation Indicator of an aircraft; using the compass rose as the center of
the display. From Moving Map:
The Vertical Situation Indicator (VSI) scale is displayed on the left side of the screen, while the
Course Deviation Indicator (CDI) scale is displayed at the bottom of the screen. Use the cursor keys
up/down to change VSI scale among 250, 500 and 1000 FT. Use the cursor key left/right to change
CDI scale among 0.1, 0.5, 1, 2, 5 and 10 NM.
The units of measure are selected from Units Setup in the System Setup Menu, (refer to Chapter
14).
An information box will appear confirming the creation of the User Waypoint and informing of the
default name applied by the software; press ENT to accept. To edit this Mark see Par. 8.1.3 and
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Par. 8.2.2.
> MENU 1 sec. + HSI SCREEN + ENT + MENU + SETUP DATA FIELDS... +
ENT
After pressing ENT a box in the Data Window will be highlighted. Select the box to be edited and
press ENT. The OPTIONS box will appear allowing you to select the item to display in this box.
Once selected, press ENT to accept.
You can then scroll to another box and proceed as above. Once all boxes are set up, press ESC
to exit.
Note
Full screen HSI is displayed now with black background if DARK option is selected in Data Window Color
setting. The same rule that is applied to Data Window HSI thumbnail.
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6 Flight Plan
> MENU 1 sec + FLIGHT PLAN + ENT
The Flight Plan mode allows you to create a Flight Plan with User Points, Temporary Waypoints
or Jeppesen object as Waypoints. Flight Plans can be entered on the Moving Map (see Par. 3.5)
or in the Flight Plan Menu if all Waypoints are known objects. The Geopilot II Plus can store up
to 15 Flight Plans with up to 100 individual legs each. Additional Flight Plans can be stored in the
Compact Flash entering File Manager (Database).
The Flight Plan Menu page provides the BRG, DST, ETA and Fuel data for the active/viewed Flight
Plan. By using the left/right cursor key it is possible to change the table columns displayed, choosing
between BRG, DST, ETA and DST, ETA, Fuel.
The Flight Plan Menu is where you can edit, view and activate Flight Plans. To open the Flight Plan
Menu press MENU from the Flight Plan page.
Fig. 6 - Flight Plan page with Flight Plan menu box open
See section 3.4.6 regarding Flight Plan creation from the moving map page.
Using the cursor key, select the Flight Plan desired for viewing/activating/editing.
The Viewed Flight Plan will display on the Moving Map. Select an Empty Flight Plan if you do not
want a Flight Plan to display on the Moving Map. In addition, the viewed Flight Plan can be selected
from the Moving Map Menu. (See Sec. 3.5.1.)
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The Flight Plan Menu will open. You will need to select Flight Plan number to view. When creating
a Flight Plan select an EMPTY Flight Plan number:
Press + to begin adding the Waypoints of your Flight Plan. The Add Waypoint box will open
allowing you to select the type of object for your first Waypoint. Use the cursor key to select the
object type and ENT to activate. This will bring up the Database Menu for that object. Select the
Database item desired (see Par. 8.3.1 in the Database Menu for details on selecting objects) and
press ESC or MENU to add to the Flight Plan. A warning box will appear asking you to confirm
your selection before adding it to the Flight Plan. Press ENT to accept or ESC to quit.
Use the down cursor key to move the highlighted line to the next blank space and proceed as
above to continue adding legs to the Flight Plan. As each leg is added, the software will calculate
the bearing and distance between legs. The total distance will appear at the bottom of the screen.
During flight, the ETA and Fuel data will be calculated based on your actual flight conditions.
Be sure the Flight Plan you would like to activate is the Viewed Flight Plan appearing on the
screen. If it is not, you will need to select it from the Flight Plan menu:
1. The Flight Plan page displays each leg with the first Waypoint highlighted. To activate a leg of the
Flight Plan, use the cursor key to select the leg and press GOTO. This will activate navigation
to that Waypoint. This method is useful when continuing a Flight Plan after a stop. The letter A
(Activated) will be shown near the chosen Waypoint.
2. The Flight Plan Menu allows you to Activate/Deactivate the Flight Plan by the following
procedure:
> MENU 1 sec. + FLIGHT PLAN + ENT + Select Waypoint + MENU + ACTIVATE/
DEACTIVATE FP + ENT + ESC
Note
The first line of the Flight Plan menu will read Activateor Deactivate dependent upon the current status of the
Flight Plan mode.
It is necessary to deactivate a Flight Plan before activating another. Other Flight Plans can be created
or edited while another Flight Plan is Active. An active Flight Plan can be edited.
In addtioni, the Flight Plan can be activated/deactivated from the GOTO Menu box.
This will activate/deactivate the currently Viewed Flight Plan (See Sec.3.5.1.).
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Note
The current leg of the Active Flight Plan is displayed DASHED.
In this case a D appears in front of the destination waypoint in the FLIGHT PLAN page.
Note
When there is a DIRECT go to waypoint a menu item RESYNC DIRECT is added to the GOTO menu.. With this
option you can resync from your current position to the destination waypoint.
Use left/right cursor key to select the field and the up/down cursor key to insert the desired name.
At any time in the rename screen, ENT will activate the name change.
A Warning window will appear to confirm deletion: press ENT to confirm, ESC to abort.
The message DONE will appear to the right of the menu selection and the sequence of the
Waypoints change immediately on the screen.
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6.7.2 GoTo - Moving Map Mode
To activate a GoTo Flight Plan from the Moving Map, press GOTO. A GoTo Menu box will
appear on the screen. You can select the current cursor position or select a Database object
category. When selecting the Database category, the Database menu will appear (see Chapter 8 for
details on searching the Database Menu). Once the desired object has been found, press GOTO
to activate.
The GoTo menu changes according the navigation:
No Navigation
- With NO FP displayed (currently in view EMPTY): the ACTIVATE FP option is removed
- With any non empty FP displayed the: DIRECT TO FP WAYPOINT option is added
Standard FP Navigation
- With any non empty FP displayed the: DIRECT TO FP WAYPOINT option is added
Direct to FP Waypoint Navigation
- With any non empty FP displayed the: DIRECT TO FP WAYPOINT and DEACTIVATE
DIRECT TO FP WAYPOINT options are added The ACTIVATE FP item is removed.
Note
GOTO creates a temporary Flight Plan that is not stored in the Geopilot II Plus memory.
The Nearest page will display the identifiers, bearing To and From, Distance and Estimated Time
44
Enroute (ETE). Using the cursor key select the desired object and press GOTO to activate a Route
to this item.
To obtain additional details regarding the object, press ENT and the Database page will appear.
To locate the object on the Moving Map without creating a GoTo Flight Plan, press and hold
GOTO for 2 seconds.
Note
The Nearest list displayed is based on your current GPS position. If no GPS position is available, the list is based on
the current cursor position.
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7 The Global Positioning System
The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a constellation of satellites that orbit the earth twice a day,
transmitting precise time and positioning information to anywhere on the globe, 24 hours a day.
The system was designed and deployed by the U.S. Department of Defense to provide continuous,
worldwide positioning and navigation data to U.S. and allied military forces. GPS broad commercial
applications were recognized early in the systems development, and the U.S. government decided
to allow free access to GPS signals. Today, GPS is used in a wide variety of commercial and scientific
applications.
This page displays the current status and location of all available satellites in the GPS constellation,
referenced to the initial position or last fix.
On the bottom half of the screen (see previous figure) there is a polar representation of the Azimuth
and Elevation of the satellites used to compute a position fix.
The Elevation is the height of the satellite above the horizon, with 5 (lowest) near the horizon and
90 (highest) being directly overhead (the Geopilot II Plus does not normally use satellites with
Elevations lower than 10). Azimuth is the satellites location in relation to true north, measured
clockwise as a bearing. A satellite with an Azimuth of 90 is to the east.
The circle contains a number indicating the number of the satellite and it is green when it is used for
the fix solution (red otherwise). On the left side there are histograms indicating the S/N ratio (SNR).
The bar is green when the satellite is used for the fix (red otherwise). When a valid fix is received,
the Geopilot II Plus displays the current position coordinates, Date, Time, HDOP, VDOP,GS, TRK
and ALT on the GPS page.
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Cold Start (avg): < 45 sec.
Warm Start (avg): < 40 sec.
Hot Start (avg): 8 sec.
7.3.1 Accuracy
In general, an SPS receiver can provide position information with an error of less than 25 Meters
and velocity information with an error of less than 5 Meters per second. For applications that require
much greater accuracy the effects of SA and environmentally produced errors can be overcome by
using a technique called Differential GPS (DGPS), which increases over-all accuracy.
7.3.2 WAAS
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), in cooperation with other DOT organizations and DOD,
is augmenting the GPS/SPS with a satellite-based Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS). WAAS
will provide a signal-in-space to WAAS compatible receivers to support en route through precision
approach navigation. After achieving initial operational capability, WAAS will be incrementally
improved to expand the area of coverage, increase the availability of precision approaches, increase
signal redundancy and reduce operational restrictions.
47
be successful.
48
8 Waypoint & Database
The Geopilot II Plus uses three types of Waypoints:
Jeppesen Waypoints are contained in the Compact Flash and include Airport, VOR, NDB and
Intersection Waypoints. Each of these Waypoints is displayed on the Moving Map by an icon. These
Waypoints can be searched in the Database Menu and identified on the Moving Map with Quick
Info or Full Info. Each of these Waypoints can be used in a Flight Plan, for the Nearest Search or
GoTo functions. When used in a Flight Plan, details regarding the Waypoint are displayed in the
Destination box during flight (when DEST is chosen for display in the Data Window, see Par. 3.5.2).
Our Jeppesen library is updated every 28 days. Please contact your local C-MAP office for update
orders and pricing.
User-Defined Waypoints (also called User Waypoints) are created by the user. The user can
create unique 8 character names and choose from 16 icons for each waypoint. Waypoints can be
created and edited both on the Moving Map and in the User Waypoint Database page. Like the
Jeppesen Waypoints, they can be used in a Flight Plan, for the Nearest Search or GoTo functions.
The Geopilot II Plus can store up to 1,000 User-Defined Waypoints within the internal memory.
The internal waypoint memory capacity is shared with Flight Plan waypoints; i.e. if you have 10
flight plans with 10 waypoints stored in the unit memory, there is room for 900 User Waypoints.
Temporary Waypoints are created only on the Moving Map and are associated with a particular
Flight Plan. They are named in the format WPT001, WPT002 etc. Temporary Waypoints can be
used at the beginning, middle or end of Flight Plans. They can be used as the destination of a
Direct-To Flight Plan, but cannot be accessed in the Nearest function.
A name is automatically assigned in the format USRxxx, where xxx is a sequential number. You
may use the default display name, LAT/LON and symbol or edit them.
Note
When editing the waypoint, select the picture icon to associate the waypoint with the Waypoint Alarm (See Sec
14.3.3).
>ENT 1 sec.
A name is automatically assigned in the format USRxxx, where xxx is a sequential number. The
default icon is an X. You may use the default display name, LAT/LON and symbol or edit them.
> Place the cursor over the Waypoint + ENT + EDIT WAYPOINT + ENT
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To edit Name field (up to 8 characters): press left/right cursor key to select the character to be
changed and then up/down cursor key to scroll to the desired character. Press ENT to accept and
to pass to the next field. Repeat the same procedure to change the Coordinates and Icons fields.
> Place the cursor over the Waypoint + ENT + REMOVE WAYPOINT + ENT
Note
Only User Waypoints may be deleted and only if they are not contained in a Flight Plan. If the option to Edit or
Remove Waypoint is not displayed in the Cursor/Position Menu, adjust the cursor closer to the object icon.
Edit the name (up to 8 characters) using the left/right cursor key to select the character to be
changed and then up/down cursor key to scroll to the desired character. Press ENT to accept and
to pass to the next field. Repeat the same procedure to change the Coordinates and Icons fields.
Waypoint to edit + ENT Using the up/down and left/right keys, select a user icon and press ENT
to move to the next column. Continue in this manner through each column. When you have
reached the last column and press ENT the Waypoint will be saved and sorted into the table
alphanumerically.
A warning box will appear asking you to confirm deletion of the Waypoint. Press ENT to confirm
or ESC to cancel.
8.3 DATABASE
The Database functions allow the user to search for and display information stored in the data
cartridges on Airports, VOR, NDB, Intersections and User Waypoints.
50
To access the main Database menu from the Moving Map:
Options are: Airports, VOR, NDB, Intersections, POI Objects, User Waypoints and File Manager.
A window shows the different categories of Database items within the Geopilot II Plus. Highlight
the category to be searched and press ENT. Depending upon the category of object, the Database
can be searched by one of three methods: identifier, name or city (and in the Pro version; Places,
Streets).
Fig. 8.3.1.1 - Airport Database page with the arrow active on the ID
Or use the left/right cursor key to select the character to be changed and then the up/down cursor
key to scroll to the desired character. Press ENT or ESC to obtain the full information for the item
displayed. From the Database page, pressing GOTO will begin a direct flight to the waypoint.
Pressing GOTO for and holding will redraw the moving map centered on the object.
You will enter in the File manager, now you can save, load and delete your user data.
To Refresh or Initialize the FileManager press MENU, select one of the two options and press ENT.
The first time that this function is used with a certain card it will be needed to initialize it. Press
MENU in the page and select INITIALIZE.
Note
The Initialization creates a new database file removing all the data stored in the card in case the database file is
already present.
To save user files press ZOOM IN. Edit the name (up to 8 characters) using the left/right cursor
key to select the character to be changed and then up/down cursor key to scroll to the desired
character. Press ENTER to accept and to pass to the next field in order to choose the file type to
vbe saved (Routes, Tracks , Waypoints). Once the two fields are selected press ENTER again. A
warning box will appear asking you to confirm the deleting of the file. Press ENTER to confirm
or CLEAR to cancel. Wait for the STATUS tag at the top of the page to return Idle.The function
will save all user data of the selecte type at the moment on the navigator. Multiple saves wont be
necessary in case of multiple data. (ex. in case there are 500 waypoints in the navigator, an unique
save sill store all of them in an unique file).
After a RAM clear or a software update you can reload previously saved data. To load user files
use the up/down cursor key to scroll to the desired data and press ENT. A warning box will appear
asking you to confirm the loading of the file. Press ENT to confirm or ESC to cancel.
To permanently delete user files use the up/down cursor key to scroll to the desired data and press
ENT. A warning box will appear asking you to confirm the deleting of the file. Press ENT to confirm
or ESC to cancel.
Note
It is not possible to overwrite the content of an existing file.
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9 Approach Data Procedures
WARNING!!!
The Geopilot II Plus is not certified for use as the only navigation device during Instrument Flight Rules as established
by the FAA. Instrument approach points displayed in the unit are for information only and do not establish authority
for a pilot to fly the IFR approach procedure in actual instrument flying conditions. For IFR flight. The final Approach
Segment & Missed Approach Point the Geopilot II Plus is to be used strictly as a monitoring instrument only.
Note
You must start with an empty flight plan.
While navigating or planning in the moving map screen, the pilot will not be able to establish an
approach on a flight plan, without changing into the Flight Plan mode, but can place the cursor over
the selected airport. To display the quick data box press:
The detailed information on the airport will be displayed, beginning with the general information
and frequencies. By pressing the cursor key on the left, the approaches for the chosen airport will
display in the box and the bearing for the viewed approach will display on the moving map. By
continuing to press the cursor key on the left the other approaches for the airport will display, the
last bearing for the last approach viewed will become white on the moving map and the bearing for
the viewed approach will be displayed in black on the moving map.
Note
The white approach bearings will disappear once the screen redraws itself.
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> MENU + MENU + FLIGHT PLAN + ENT + MENU + CHANGE APPROACH
- select the approach + ENT.
This will substitude the previous approach including the waypoints on the moving map for the new
approach and add the new waypoints to your flight plan and the moving map.
To remove desired approach
and the screen is displaying approach information, by pressing GOTO you will activate a GOTO
to the selected airport and automatically opened the Select Approach window.
If you dont want to select any approaches just press ESC.
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10 Calculator
The Calculator functions assist the user in preflight and in-flight calculations for Vertical Navigation,
Wind and Fuel consumption. In addition, clock functions and trip data can be found in this menu.
The Calculator uses GPS data and user data for computations.
All Calculator functions are based on the active Flight Plan. The active Flight Plan is selected and
activated on the Waypoint/Flight Plan menu (see Chapter 6).
A box will appear in the right hand column allowing you to set the hours, minutes and seconds.
Using the cursor key select the number desired and press ENT to accept and begin the countdown.
Entering 00:00:00 equals Off. The default setting is Off (00:00:00).
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This will begin the timer. To turn Off the timer, press ENT from this menu. A warning box will
appear on screen to confirm your action. Press ENT to confirm or ESC to quit and continue the
timer calculation. The default setting is Off (00:00:00).
Note
The Fuel Calculator Starting Fuel entry will reset the partial trip data.
56
Setup Menu, see Par. 14.5). This feature requires that a Flight Plan be activated.
> MENU 1 sec.+ CALCULATOR + ENT + VERTICAL NAVIGATION + ENT
User data is entered in the fields at the bottom half of the screen. To set Vertical Navigation
parameters use ENT to edit the selected field (a box appears around the active field) and the
cursor key to move between fields. Press ESC to return to Calculator menu.
Note
The Vertical Navigation solution estimates the target altitude (altimeter reading) from glideslope, distance to the
Waypoint, and the total altitude change. GPS altitude is not accurate enough for stand alone vertical navigation.
Some values are automatically displayed. Time To Go, Distance, Descent Rate and Altitude From
are based on current GPS data. An Altitude To is displayed if a Traffic Pattern Altitude for the
destination exists in the Database. Altitude From, Altitude To, Offset Distance and Glide Slope can
be edited.
Vertical Navigation is a full screen page with the following structure:
57
Vertical Navigation can be activated (On) only if a Flight Plan is active (destination present).
Destination point for Vertical Navigation is the last point of the Route or destination of GoTo
mode.
Prior to the Descent Point being reached the Distance To Go displays TO, Time To Go to Descent
point and Descent Rate from the current position. After passing Descent point the system displays
TO, Time To Go to the Destination and Target altitude based on actual descent profile. Time To
Descent or Target ALT values can be displayed in the Data Window of Moving Map and HSI modes.
The Vertical Navigation value displayed in the HSI is calculated as a difference between current
altitude (from GPS) and Target altitude.
User data is entered in the fields at the bottom half of the screen. To set Wind Calculation parameters
use ENT to edit the selected field (a box appears around the active field) and the cursor key to
move between fields. Press ESC to return to Calculator menu.
Note
This function works best when the airplane is straight and level.
The Geopilot II Plus computes wind velocity and direction from the information entered above
and from the current Ground Speed,Track and Altitude, which are derived from GPS data. ETE to
Waypoint is also based on GPS Ground Speed and Track. Wind information will be recomputed
when the heading, air speed, air temperature or Altitude values are edited.
Note
The wind calculator does not correct for local barometric pressure, which may not be known accurately enroute.
The values produced by the wind calculator may therefore differ from the true winds by up to 5%.
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10.6 FUEL CONSUMPTION
The Geopilot II Plus computes Fuel Consumption for each leg of the active Flight Plan or the
fuel used in flight, based on entries made by the pilot. This is a useful feature for flight planning
purposes. Actual Fuel Consumption will vary based on flight conditions and engine settings.
Fuel can be calculated in pounds, liters or gallons; the units of measure used for the valuesentered
here are selected from Units Setup menu in the System Setup Menu (see Par. 14.5).
To set Fuel Consumption parameters use ENT to edit the selected field (a box appears around the
active field) and use the cursor key to move between fields. Press ESC to return to the Calculator
Menu. If your current Ground Speed is over 20 Knots, the Geopilot II Plus will display Actual GS
and will not allow you to edit the value.
The Geopilot II Plus will compute and display Fuel Consumption for each leg of a Flight Plan, and
total fuel needed for the flight in the Flight Plan page (see Chapter 6). When selected for display,
the data fields window will provide information on the flight time remaining before the reserve fuel
has been reached.
Note
The Fuel Consumption represents calculated fuel use based on user data. The reserve does not represent actual
fuel available in the aircraft.
Fuel Consumption can be modified en route by increasing or decreasing the fuel burn rate to match
actual usage. The new fuel computation will be averaged over the full distance and provide a good
estimate of fuel remaining. When refueling en route, combine the amount of new fuel and the
remaining fuel to enter the new Starting Fuel total for true computation of To Reserve data.
Note
Fuel calculations are only as accurate as the entries made. Always double-check fuel calculations.
59
Fig. 10.6a - Sample Calculation
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11 The Checklists
The Geopilot II Plus provides a checklist of standard procedures for Engine Start, Ground Check,
Pre-Take-off, Cruise in Flight and Landing. The Checklists can be customized by inserting and/or
deleting aircraft procedures. Hit MENU + MENU + CHECKLISTS + ENT + ENGINE START (or any
other Checklist field) + ENT. Press + to INSERT a Checklist Item. Using the Toggle Key, move up
or down to select the letter desired. Scroll to the right and continue until the words or abbreviations
are completed. Hit ENT to save. Use the - key to append a checklist item. Up to 16 Checklist Items
can be created in the Vertical Mode.
Note
Your aircraft may have additional items that require checking for each procedure. Consult your aircraft manual for
a complete list.
After pressing ENT select each item (Doors/Belts, Parking Brake, CKT BRK, Carb. Heat, Throttle,
Mixture, Master Switch, Fuel Pump, Start Engine, RPM/Gauges).
Press ENT to mark each item after checking is completed. If all the items of the list are not
checked upon exit a warning message appears on the screen that states the check-list has not been
completed. Press any key to accept.
After pressing ENT select each item (Brakes/Steer, Props/Mags, Vacuum, Oil Tmp/Press, Fuel
Pressure, Carb. Heat, Ammeter, Primer-Locked, Flt Controls, Lights).
61
Press ENT to mark each item after checking is completed. If all the items of the list are not
checked upon exit a warning message appears on the screen that states the check-list has not been
completed. Press any key to accept.
After pressing ENTER select each item (Instruments, Fuel Tanks, Prop/Mixture, Fuel Pump, Engine
Gauges, Carb. Heat-Off, Doors/Belts, Flaps/Trim, Transponder, Radios). Press ENT to mark each
item after checking is completed. If all the items of the list are not checked upon exit a warning
message appears on the screen that states the check-list has not been completed. Press any key to
accept.
After pressing ENTER select each item (Power as Required, Carburetor Heat Check, Mixture Lean,
Engine Parameters, Lights as Required, Electrical Load).
Press ENT to mark each item after checking is completed. If all the items of the list are not
checked upon exit a warning message appears on the screen that states the check-list has not been
completed. Press any key to accept.
11.5 LANDING
>MENU 1 sec. + CHECKLISTS + ENT + LANDING + ENT
After pressing ENTER select each item (Mixture, Prop/Mixture, Fuel Tanks, Fuel Pump, Carb. Heat,
Seat Belts, Trim, Flaps, Gear, Lights) .
Press ENT to mark each item after checking is completed. If all the items of the list are not
checked upon exit a warning message appears on the screen that states the check-list has not been
completed. Press any key to accept.
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12 Simulator
The built-in Simulator function allows you to become proficient in the use of the Geopilot II Plus
before ever taking it into the cockpit. No current position fix is required because the Geopilot II Plus
simulates position data internally. The Geopilot II Plus simulates flight in two ways: a straight flight
path or following a selected route. The Simulator will display various altitudes during simulation
mode. Fix status displayed in the GPS page during this mode is Simulation.
Using the cursor key select the desired Speed and press ENT.
Using the cursor key select the desired Heading and press ENT.
Using the cursor key select the desired Altitude and press ENT. (Speed , Heading and Altitude can
be adjusted during the simulated flight.)
All functions of the Geopilot II Plus will work as in normal flight except for Altitude related
functions.
Using the cursor key select the desired Speed and press ENT. Speed can be adjusted during the
simulated flight.
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The simulated aircraft position will now fly the active Flight Plan from the first Waypoint.
All functions of the Geopilot II Plus will work as in normal flight except for Altitude related
functions.
Nota
As stated earlier, in the Simulation mode the Geopilot II Plus retains full functionality. It is recommended that the
Simulator be used to experiment with the full range of capabilities contained within the Geopilot II Plus so that you
may get the most out of it when used in the cockpit.
If the Geopilot II Plus had a position fix before the Simulation mode was entered, then normal
operation will resume. If there was no position fix, the Geopilot II Plus begins a satellite search and
should obtain a position fix in the same manner as normal start-up.
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13 The Communication MENU
The Communications Menu contains options that control the GPS data input:
The Download Waypoint function allows the unit to send the current Waypoints to the serial port
using the NMEA0183 $WPL sentence (see Appendix E):
The received Flight Plan is saved in the active Flight Plan. If the current Flight Plan contains data the
user will be asked to confirm the action (overwriting the existing Flight Plan) or to choose another
Flight Plan.
The Download Flight Plan function allows the unit to send the current Flight Plan to the serial port
using the NMEA0183 $WPL and $RTE sentences (see Appendix E):
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13.3 TRACK DOWNLOAD
The Download Track function allows the unit to send Track data from the serial port using the C-
MAP Proprietary NMEA0183 $PCMPT sentence (see Appendix E):
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14 The System Set-up Menu
The System Setup Menu allows the user to change how the Geopilot II Plus displays information.
System Setup options are arranged in sub-menus. For example, all options that relate to the Fix
functions are in Fix Setup sub-menu and all options related to time or date are in Date Time
Setup.
Once you are in the System Setup Menu, use the cursor key to highlight the sub-menu desired and
press ENT to activate or to proceed to the next selection.
14.1.1 Beeper
The Geopilot II Plus makes a beep with each key press, warning or alarm message.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + GENERAL SETUP + ENT + BEEPER
+ ENT
Use the cursor key to select and ENT to accept. The Off selection of this menu will turn all beeper
sounds Off. The default setting is On.
BAR - the width of the screen is equal to the bar length times the number displayed.
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LEVEL - a letter associated with C-MAPs chart cell level is displayed.
WIDTH - the width of the screen is displayed.
Use the cursor key to select and ENT to accept. The default setting is Bar.
14.1.3 Language
Selects the language in which you wish menu information to be displayed (i.e. screen labels, menus
and options). Map detail will remain in English.
Use the cursor key to select and ENT to accept. The default setting is English.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + GENERAL SETUP + ENT + MILITARY
FREQUENCY + ENTER
Use the cursor key to select and ENT to accept. The default setting is Off.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + FIX SOURCE
+ ENT
Use the cursor key to select and ENTER to accept. When connecting the Geopilot II Plus to an
external source, be sure the data output of the external device is set for the correct format (see Sec.
2.5). The default setting is Internal GPS.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + DIFFERENTIAL
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CORRECTION SOURCE + ENT
Options are: NONE, WAAS, RTCM 1200, RTCM 2400, RTCM 4800, RTCM 9600, RTCM 19200,
RTCM 38400. The default setting is NONE. WAAS corrections are handled by the internal GPS
receiver and do not require additional equipment.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + FIX SYMBOL
+ ENT
This setting allows you to select among a Plane or Standard (circle with an X) icon. The default
setting is Plane.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + STATIC
NAVIGATION + ENT
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + COURSE
PREDICTOR + ENT
Setting options are: OFF, INFINITE, 1 MIN, 3 MIN, 6 MIN, 10 MIN, 30 MIN, 1 HOUR, 2 HOURS.
The default setting is 10 MIN.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + HEAD UP
RESPONSE + ENT
Setting options are: +/-5, +/-10, +/-15, +/-45, +/-90. The default setting is +/-15.
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To set this alarm:
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + ALARM SETUP + ENT + ARRIVAL
ALARM RADIUS + ENT
After pressing ENT a box will appear with 00.00. Using the cursor key select the number desired
and press ENT. The default setting is Off (00.00).
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + ALARM SETUP + ENT + XTE
ALARM RANGE + ENT
After pressing ENT a box will appear with 00. Using the cursor key select the number desired and
press ENT. The default setting is Off (00).
Note
The alarm is only active for User Waypoints with this symbol selected for the icon: .
> MENU 1 sec + MENU + ALARM SETUP + ENT + AIRSPACE AHEAD ALARM
+ ENT
After pressing ENT a box will appear with 00.00. Using the cursor key, select the number desired
and press ENT. The default setting is OFF (00.00). After pressing ENT a window is displayed.
In this files the 00.00. default value is set. Choose a parameter moving the arrows keys and press
ENT to confirm.
Note
Vertical ALRM string appears at the right down edge of the TAWS Legend BOX when the TAWS Alarm is
enabled.
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> MENU 1 sec + ALARM SERUP: + ENT AIRSPACE AHEAD ALARM + ENT
After pressing ENT a box will appear with 00.00. Using the cursor key, select the number desired
and press ENT.
The default setting is OFF (00.00). In addition, you can select the category of airspace associated
with the alarm. To select the categories:
Use the cursor key to select each category of airspace and turn ON/OFF the alarm for that category.
The time interval set above is for all airspace selected as ON.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + ALARM SETUP + ENT + EVENT
LOG... + ENT
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + ALARM SETUP + ENT + CLEAR
EVENT LOG + ENT
After pressing ENT a window appears: press ENT to confirm deletion (or ESC to abort function).
The message DONE will appear confirming the action.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + TRACK SETUP + ENT + TRACK
DISPLAY + ENT
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14.4.4 Track Color
Defines the color of the line which represents the track.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + TRACK SETUP + ENT + TRACK
RECORDING STEP + ENT
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + TRACK SETUP + ENT + CLEAR
TRACK + ENT
After pressing ENT a window appears; press ENT to confirm deletion or ESC to abort function.
The message DONE will appear confirming the action.
Distance measurements can be displayed in Statute Miles (SM), Nautical Miles (NM) or kilometers
(KM). The default setting is NM.
Speed measurements can be displayed in miles per hour (MPH), Knots (KTS) or kilometers per hour
(KMH). The default setting is Knots.
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14.5.3 Altitude Unit
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + UNITS SETUP + ENT + ALTITUDE
+ ENT
Altitude measurements can be displayed in Feet (FT), Meters (MT) or Flight Levels (FL). The default
setting is Feet. It is possible for the altitude to be displaied negative. Please
Note: This may be due to the imprecision of the GPS engine vertical calculation. Caution should be
exercised; do not rely on GPS derived altitude.
Depth measurements can be displayed in Feet (FT), Fathoms (FM) or Meters (MT). The default
setting is Feet.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + UNITS SETUP + ENT + FUEL +
ENT
You may select Gallons (GAL), Liters (LIT), Kilograms (KG), Pounds (LB) or British Gallons (BGAL).
The default setting is Gallons.
The Vertical Speed is used in the Vertical Navigation calculation. It can be displayed as Feet per
Minute (FT/MIN) or Meters per second (M/S) or Degrees (DEG). The default setting is Feet per
Minute.
14.5.7 Temperature
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + UNITS SETUP + ENT +
TEMPERATURE + ENT
The Temperature is used in the Wind Calculation. You may select Fahrenheit (F) or Celsius (C). The
default setting is Celsius.
The North Reference for calculations can be shown as Magnetic or True (Magnetic uses an automatic
adjustment for local magnetic variation).
The North Reference used for wind computations and runway information is always Magnetic;
all other heading, bearing and Track computations are based on the user-selected reference. The
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default setting is Magnetic.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + DATE & TIME SETUP + ENT
Using the cursor key select the desired setting and press ENT.
Time can be displayed as 24/UTC (Zulu time), 12 hour or 24 hour local time. The default setting is
24/UTC. If you select a local time display, continue with the next step.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + DATE & TIME SETUP + ENT +
LOCAL TIME DIFFERENCE + ENT
After pressing ENT a window appears; using the cursor key, select the difference between local
time and UTC to the nearest 30 Minutes. Press ENT to activate.
Note
If you are unsure what the time difference is for your area, get a position fix using the UTC format. Display the
Location page and note the displayed time. Compare UTC to your local time and note the difference. Key in the
difference as hours and minutes to the nearest half hour, using a negative value if you are in the western hemisphere
(for example, the difference in New York is -5 hours, or -4 hours on Daylight Savings Time).
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Year. The default setting is MM/DD/YY.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + CLEAR USER DATA + ENT
After pressing ENT a window appears; press ENT to confirm deletion, or ESC to abort function.
The message DONE will appear confirming the action.
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + CLEAR ALL RADIALS + ENT
After pressing ENT a window appears; press ENT to confirm deletion, or ESC to abort
function.
The message DONE will appear confirming the action.
After pressing ENT a window appears; press ENT to confirm , or ESC to abort function. The
message DONE will appear confirming the action.
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15 Operating Requirements
The Geopilot II Plus must be connected to a 1035 V DC power source and the antenna requires
a clear view of the sky in order to operate.
Note
The cable that ends with wires is available as an optional part. Please contact your local C-MAP office for details.
15.1 BATTERY
The Geopilot II Plus comes with the battery uncharged, but the navigator can be used right away
with the power supply. The battery will require 4 hours charging to be fully charged. The battery
recharges when the navigator is fed with the power supply cable, either if it is on or if it has been
switched off with the NEAR button. In this case, the keyboard flashes until the Geopilot II is fully
charged.
15.1.1 Battery Functioning
The Geopilot II Plus battery allows the navigator to operate even without feeding it with the power
supply cable. A data field Battery Status can be set in order to check the status of the battery, it
indicates the actual voltage of the battery and if it is in use or is in charge. If the voltage is more
than 7.2 volts it means that the level of charge is more than half, if its between 7.2 and 6.5V its
low, under 6.5 V is nearly depleted.
The maximum autonomy of the battery in optimal conditions ranges from 30 minutes to 2 hours
(according to the usage patterns). It is possible to extend the autonomy of the battery optimizing
the energetic waste: in the system setup it is possible to choose among three levels of power save
(no, medium, maximum).
ATTENTION when the device encounters internal temperatures of higher than 60, the battery will
not recharge and an alarm message
will be displayed. This can happen if the navigator is exposed for a long time to direct sunlight in hot
weather. In such cases, it is suggested that you switch off the navigator to recharge the battery.
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15.2 DIMENSIONS
15.3 TROUBLESHOOTING
The following is a brief guide to some of the problems you may experience while using the Geopilot
II Plus with common solutions.
15.3.1 Power
No Power The power connections are loose or not fully engaged. Make sure all Power Cable
connections are secure. Make sure the power supply is operating properly. Check the fuse located
at the end of the cigarette plug. (To open unscrew the middle circle at the tip of the adaptor.)
Review the number of satellites in use. If zero, check that the antenna has a clear view of the
sky and that the connections have been made properly. If less than four satellites are in use, the
GPS receiver may have difficulty receiving a fix. Try repositioning the antenna. A GPS fix requires
a minimum of three satellites and a poor Signal Quality on one or more satellites may preclude
receiving a position fix.
Verify the user setting for Fix Source is listed as Internal GPS:
> MENU 1 sec. + SYSTEM SETUP + ENT + FIX SETUP + ENT + FIX SOURCE
+ ENT + INTERNAL GPS + ENT
If the Geopilot II Plus is using an External GPS receiver, proceed to Fix functions screen:
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Verify that the Fix Source is listed properly (External NMEA) as indicated in the System Setup section
(see Chapter 14) and that the Baud Rate is set correctly for your GPS receiver (the Geopilot II Plus
requires 9600- Baud Rate). Verify that the data cable connections are proper.
External device is not responding The data port is not turned on or is not outputting messages
in the correct format. Refer to the external devices user guide to determine the correct message
format. Check the Installation Settings menu and make any necessary changes. The Geopilot II
Plus may not be properly connected to the external device. Check all connections to be sure they
are correctly made and secure.
Navigate feature does not work Blanks are displayed in the navigation data fields until a GPS
fix has been obtained; this usually occurs within a few Minutes. Also a Flight Plan must be active
to display values for navigation-related information (such as Cross Track Error) and you must be
travelling at least 2 Knots to display values for velocity-related information (such as GS). Activate
a Flight Plan and/or increase your speed.
Fluctuations in positioning and navigation data Small fluctuations in positioning and velocity-
related navigation is normal.
If this does not help, you can try one additional memory clear option. This is a factory default RAM
Clear that should only be tried after all other attempts have been made. When using the RAM Clear
feature, you will loose all user stored information and the Geopilot II Plus will default to factory
settings. Before this step, you have the option of saving user Marks, Track history and Routes to a
User Compact Flash (this is an optional purchase from your dealer). To perform a RAM Clear see
Par. 15.5.1.
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If it is necessary to return your Geopilot II Plus for repair, you must obtain a return authorization
(RA) number from C-MAP Aviation prior to shipping the system. Include with the Geopilot II
Plus a description of the problem, your RA number, and your name and address. If your return
shipping address is different, please include it. All packages are to be returned postage paid. As we
are not responsible for packages in transit, we recommend you purchase insurance and tracking
information.
Note
The additional tests in the System Test Menu are intended for factory testing. Faulty findings within these menus
is not necessarily a true result, as factory settings and equipment are often used during these tests.
RAM Test
ENT on RAM Test to verify the integrity of the RAM. If the message ERROR appears the RAM is
physically damaged.
RAM Clear
ENT on RAM Clear to to activate, press ENT again to confirm (at this time if you do not wish to
clear RAM press ESC).
This operation will erase all Marks, Flight Plans, stored Track plots and destinations. It will also
return all selections (Input Data Format, selective display etc.) to original default values.
SD Test
To test the SD. There are the following possible situations:
1. If there is a SD inserted in the slot and there is not a malfunction, the name of the SD zone and
the message OK are shown.
2. If there is a SD inserted in the slot, but it is a damaged SD, the name of the SD zone and the
message Faulty are shown.
3. If there is not any SD inserted in the slot, the message not present is shown.
4. If there is an User SD inserted in the slot, the message USER CARTRIDGE is shown.
C-CARD Connector
Indicates if there is a malfunction in the connector. It is used only in production.
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Change Parameters
To change the parameters of the serial interface. This menu allows to select the Port (Signal Source)
between UART0 or UART1, the Baud Rate between 4800 or 9600, the Data Bits (Word Length)
between 7 or 8, the Parity between EVEN, ODD or NONE, the Stop Bits between 1 or 2, the
Polarity between + or -. Default settings are: Port = UART1, Baud Rate = 4800, Data Bits =
8, Parity = NONE, Stop Bits = 1, Polarity = +.
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Appendix A - Terms
This section explains the terms that you may find unfamiliar.
ACQUISITION - Occurs when the Geopilot II Plus locates a signal and collects data from a
satellite.
AIRPORT DATABASE - A series of files of airport positions (described near the geographical center
of the airport and as defined by ICAO), with runways, frequencies (with sectors) and services
available information. Based on the
ARINC 424 - format for Jeppesens Database.
ALMANAC - Data on the general location and health of all satellites in the GPS constellation. Can
be collected from any available satellite in about 15 minutes.
ALT - ALTITUDE - Height above mean sea level. Density Altitude and the Altitude computed by a
GPS receiver may differ due to the effects of selective availability.
ARTCC - AIR ROUTE TRAFFIC CONTROL CENTER
ATTENTION AREAS - Areas in which special attention by the mariner is required, because of
natural or man-made hazards, or sailing regulations and restrictions. Moreover a special symbol
(!) is placed inside the area selecting On or Contour options. This is valid also for the categories:
FISHING FACILITY, MARINE FARM/CULTURE, MILITARY PRACTICE AREA, RESTRICTED AREA,
SEAPLANE LANDING AREA. When the area is small, it is identified only by the boundary.
ATIS - AUTOMATIC TERMINAL INFORMATION SERVICE - Recorded information about weather
and other conditions at an airport, periodically updated when conditions change.
AUTOMATIC MODE - The mode of operation that uses 2D or 3D, depending on the number of
available satellites (preference is given to 3D; LAT, LON and ALT).
AUTOMATIC SWITCHING - Flight Plans automatically switch from one leg to the next when the
Waypoint is reached.
AUTO ZOOM (mode) - The Auto Zoom mode is used to display fix position and destination
(Target) always visible on the map. The map is scrolled and zoomed automatically to have the
best view displaying fix and destination together on the screen. When this mode is active the
cursor is hidden.
AWOS - AUTOMATIC WEATHER OBSERVATION STATION
AZIMUTH - Bearing measured clockwise from true or magnetic north.
BATHYMETRIC LINES - Imaginary lines connecting points of equal water depth.
BEACON - An airport rotating beacon (white or white and green).
BISECTOR - A straight line that divides an angle into two equal parts.
BRG - BEARING - The horizontal direction of a destination or Waypoint measured in relation to
true or magneticnorth.
CDI - COURSE DEVIATION INDICATOR - A graphical representation of Cross Track Error (XTE)
showing distance left or right of course. An airplane icon indicates the direction of relative motion,
toward or away from the intended Track.
COG - COURSE OVER GROUND - Direction of the path over ground actually followed.
CONSTELLATION - The satellites in the Global Positioning System (GPS). Positioned in six orbital
planes approximately 11,000 NM above the earth.
COORDINATES - A Latitude and Longitude position that corresponds to a specific point on the
earths surface.
COURSE - The planned line of travel: the line between your start position and the destination.
CTAF - Common Traffic Advisory Frequency - May be Unicom, Multicom or Tower Frequency.
CULTURAL FEATURES - Any man-made topographic feature as built-up area, buildings, roads, ...
CURSOR (mode) - In Cursor mode the screen is controlled by your movement of the cursor. When
in Cursor mode, a data field line will appear under the Data Window providing LAT/LON of the
cursor position. If a fix has been computed, a distance and bearing will also appear from the
position fix to the cursor. In this mode it is possible to scroll on the map such that the position fix
will not be displayed on the screen. When this occurs, you can quickly display your position by
81
activating Home mode.
DATA WINDOW - Data Window is an information panel representing customized data fields. The
layout of these fields depends on the screen mode.
DATABASE - A collection of data that can be accessed by the user for airports, VORs, NDBs,
Intersections and User Waypoints.
DATUM - A method of assigning position coordinates to real-world locations. Based on an
underlying ellipsoidal model of the earth and subject to other scientific assumptions. Identified
by a unique name, such as WGS84 or NAD27.
DEFAULT - The value or setting automatically chosen by the Geopilot II Plus unless directed
otherwise.
DEGREE - 1/360th of a circle. On a Great Circle, 1 = 60 min.
DGPS - DIFFERENTIAL GPS - Provides even greater positioning accuracy than standard GPS.
DME - Distance Measuring Equipment
ELEVATION - Altitude above sea level (MSL). Usually refers to field Elevation of an airport. Also
refers to a satellites height above the horizon.
EPHEMERIS DATA - Data on the specific location of a satellite that is collected from that satellite
when it is first located and is periodically updated while the satellite is being tracked. Remains
current for up to 2 hours.
ETA - ESTIMATED TIME OF ARRIVAL - The estimated time of day the destination Waypoint will be
reached, based on your current speed and the distance to destination.
ETE - ESTIMATED TIME ENROUTE - The estimated time needed to reach your destination, based
on your current speed and the distance to destination.
FILE - It is collection of information (of the same type) stored on a User COMPACT FLASH. Each
file must have a unique name, ideally one that describes its contents. File names are kept in a
directory on each User COMPACT FLASH.
FP - FLIGHT PLAN - A planned course of travel, with one to twenty-five legs, each with its own
origin and destination.
FP LEG - The line connecting two waypoints within a Flight Plan.
FSS - FLIGHT SERVICE STATIONS - Provide pilot briefings en route.
FUEL - BURN RATE Fuel burn rate in a cruise configuration.
GLIDE SLOPE - The desired descent path for Vertical Navigation.
GPS - GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM - A satellite based navigation system operated by the
US Department of Defense. It operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year under any weather
conditions.
GQ - GEOMETRIC QUALITY - A measurement of the geometry of the satellites used to triangulate
the position. A low GQ is inaccurate and generates a GQ warning. Navigation data should be
used with caution when the GQ warning appears.
GREAT CIRCLE - Distance measured along the curved surface of the earth. Over long distances, a
Great Circle distance is more accurate than a Rhumb Line distance measured from a mercator
chart.
GS - GROUND SPEED - The speed over the ground; can vary from air speed as it is affected by
the prevailing winds.
HDG - HEADING - The direction your aircraft is facing, defined as an angle from true or magnetic
north.
HDOP - HORIZONTAL DILUTION OF PRECISION - It is the index for position-fixing accuracy. The
smaller the HDOP value, indicates a better position calculation.
HOME (mode) - The Home (called also Screen Amplifier) mode is used to keep the fix position
within the visible map. The map is scrolled and redrawn automatically when the fix position is
moved. When this mode is active the cursor is hidden.
ICON - A symbol shown on any display as a representation of a Waypoint .
IDENTIFIER - An abbreviated name that is assigned to an airport or navaid. The identifier may be
any combination of letters and numbers, up to five characters in length.
INT - INTERSECTION - A Waypoint defined by any combination of courses or radials between two
or more navaids. Enroute and terminal intersections are part of the Geopilot II Plus Database.
KTS - KNOTS - One Knot is a unit of speed equal to one Nautical Mile per hour.
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LANDMARKS - Any prominent object such as monument, building, silo, tower, mast, on land
which can be used in determining a location or a direction
LAT - LATITUDE - The distance north or south of the equator, measured in an arc with the equator
being 0 and the poles being 90.
LON - LONGITUDE - The distance east or west of the Prime Meridian (0), which intersects
Greenwich, England. The range is 0180E, moving east of 0 and 0180W, moving west of
0.
LORAN - The Loran chains are groups of transmitting stations that use timed radio pulse
transmissions.
MAGNETIC NORTH - The migrating pole where the earths magnetic lines converge. The north
magnetic pole is some distance from true north at 76.1N 100W.
MARK - Reference points related to cursor position.
MASK ANGLE - The Elevation (height above the horizon, measured in Degrees) below which the
Geopilot II Plus will not search for satellites. The Mask Angle used by the Geopilot II Plus is
variable. It starts at 8 and under certain conditions, may drop as low as 0.
MIN - MINUTE - A unit of measure, equal to1/60th of one Degree of a circle.
MORA - This Minimum Off-Route Altitude provides minimum altitudes for terrain and obstruction
clearance within the section outlined by the Latitude and Longitude lines. Mora values clear
all terrain and obstructions by 1,000 in areas where the highest terrain and obstructions are
5,000 MSL or lower. Mora values clear all terrain and obstructions by 2,000 in areas where the
highest terrain and obstructions are 5,000 MSL or higher. Moras are not shown where there is
no published data.
MOVING MAP - The Moving Map is the default state of the software. This mode represents the
Moving Map screen and Data Window.
MT - METER - A metric distance measurement equal to 39.37 inches.
NATURAL FEATURES - Any topographic feature formed by the action of natural processes:
coastlines, relief, glaciers, ...
NDB - NON-DIRECTIONAL BEACON - A low/medium-frequency navigation aid that sends non-
directional signals that can be used for navigation.
NM - NAUTICAL MILE - A distance measurement equal to 6,076 feet or 1.15 Statute Miles. Also
equal to one Minute of Latitude.
NMEA - NATIONAL MARINE ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION - Professional organization that
defines and maintains the standard serial format used by marine electronic navigation equipment
and computer interfaces. NMEA format has been adopted by parts of the avionics industry.
OFFSET - Distance away from desired course.
OSGB - ORDNANCE SURVEY OF GREAT BRITAIN - A Coordinate System describing only Great
Britain. Generally used with GBR36 datum, which also describes only Great Britain. This
Coordinate System cannot be used in any other part of the world.
POSITION - A location that is obtained in real-time and expressed as coordinates. Sometimes
called a fix. Also a Waypoint location obtained from a chart or other source.
RECEIVER - The electronic components of the Geopilot II Plus that receive satellite signals.
RHUMB LINE - A constant true Heading between a starting point and a completion point.
RMS - ROOT MEAN SQUARE - A measurement of error that is: the square root of the average of
the position errors, squared.
RTCM - RADIO TECHNICAL COMMITTEE MARITIME - The data format created by the
Radio Technical Committee Maritime (Special Committee 104) to transmit differential GPS
corrections.
SA - SELECTIVE AVAILABILITY - The degradation of the GPS data broadcast by the SPS (Standard
Positioning Service), the U.S. Government discontinued the use of SA in April 2000.
SIMULATION - Enables use of the Geopilot II Plus without a GPS fix.
SM - STATUTE MILE - A distance measurement equal to 5,280 feet or 0.87 Nautical Mile.
SOG - SPEED OVER GROUND - A calculation of the rate of movement over the ground.
SPS - STANDARD POSITIONING SERVICE - The civilian-access signal broadcast by the GPS
satellites.
SQ - SIGNAL QUALITY - An indication of the signal-to-noise ratio of each satellite signal being
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used. Ranges from 00 (lowest) to 99 (highest). A scale for indicating the strength of the signal and
the likelihood of the lock on the signal being lost.
TCA - TERMINAL CONTROL AREA - Class B airspace.
TPA - TRAFFIC PATTERN ALTITUDE - The Altitude required when entering the traffic pattern.
TRACK - The historical movement over the ground.
TRACKS & ROUTES - Recommended and established routes for ships at sea, including traffic
separation schemes, deep water routes.
TRUE NORTH - Geographic north, located at the earths north pole.
TTG - TIME TO GO - The estimated time needed to reach your destination, based on your current
speed and the distance to destination.
TWR - TOWER FREQUENCY - The radio frequency for contacting the tower.
UNICOM - UNICOM FREQUENCY - Used for general traffic advisories. Provides airport information
for non controlled airports.
UTC - UNIVERSAL TIME - The current time at the Prime Meridian. Abbreviated as UT or UTC. Also
ref. to as Zulu time (Z)
USER COMPACT FLASH - The Geopilot II Plus uses the optional User COMPACT FLASH to save
user data: it is a convenient medium to store and retrieve your information.
USER WAYPOINT - Place on the chart identified by its coordinates and displayed on the screen
with a reference symbol .
UTM - Universal Transverse Mercator - Metric Grid system used on most large and intermediate
scale land topographic charts and maps.
VDOP - (Vertical Dilution Of Precision)
VNAV - Vertical Navigation - The actual path of the aircraft descending to a final destination.
Provides descent point, Altitude and rate information.
VORTAC - A navaid that provides a VOR, DME and TACAN at one site.
WAAS - Wide Area Augmentation System - The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), in
cooperation with other DOT organizations and DOD, is augmenting the GPS/SPS with a
satellite-based augmentation system, the WAAS. It will provide a signal-in-space to WAAS users
to support en route through precision approach navigation. After achieving initial operational
capability, the WAAS will then be incrementally improved over the next years to expand the area
of coverage, increase the availability of precision approaches, increase signal redundancy and
reduce operational restrictions.
WAYPOINT - Any point to which one intends to navigate. A sequence of Waypoints makes up a
Flight Plan.
WGS84 - World Geodetic System 1984 Coordinates System or Datum developed by the Defense
Mapping Agency (DMA).
XTE - Cross Track Error - The perpendicular distance between the present position and the course
line. Given as a distance right or left of course when facing the destination. Displayed in NAV as
XTE or on the CDI as a deflection.
+ - Shows more detail in a smaller area.
- - Shows a wider area with less details.
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found in the legend. If the datum is not WGS84 means that position coordinates determined with
the Geopilot II Plus may not appear to agree with coordinates determined from a printed chart.
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Fig. C - ICAO Codes for areas included in the database
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ICAO
CODE NAME
A1 Antarctica (Aus/NZ)
BG Greenland
BI Iceland
CF Miquelon Island/St Pierre Island (Canada)
CY Canada
DA Algeria
DB Benin
DF Burkina Faso
DG Accra/Ghana
DI Ivory Coast
DN Nigeria
DR Niamey/Niger
DT Tunisia
DX Togo
EB Belgium
ED Germany
EE Estonia
EF Finland
EG Shanwick Oceanic/United Kingdom
EH Netherlands
EI Ireland
EK Denmark/Faroe Islands
EL Luxembourg
EN Norway
EP Poland
ES Sweden
ET Germany
FA Bophuthatswana/Ciskei/Johannesburg/Namibia/South African Republic/Southwest
Africa/Transkei/ Venda
FB Botswana
FC Brazzaville/Congo
FD Swaziland
FE Central African Republic
FG Equatorial Guinea
FH Acension/St. Helena
FI Mauritius
FJ British Indian Ocean Tr/Chagos Archipelago
FIC Cameroon
FL Zambia
FM Antananarivo/Cormors/Madagascar/Mayotte Island/Reunion
FN Angola
FO Gabon
FP Sao Tome and Principe
FQ Mozambique
FS Seychelles
FT Chad/NDjameno
FV Zimbabwe
FW Malawi
FX Lesotho
FZ Zaire
F1 Antarctica (Afr.)
GA Mali
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ICAO
CODE NAME
GB Gambia
GC Canary Islands
GE Melilla
GF Sierra Leone
GG Guinea-Bissau
GL Liberia/Roberts
GM Dakhla and Laayoune/Morocco
GO Dakar/Dakar Oceanic/Senegal
GQ Mauritania
GU Guinea Republic
GV Cape Verde/Sal Oceanic
HA Ethiopia
HB Burundi
HC Somalia
HE Egypt
HF Djibouti
HK Kenya/Nairobi
HL Libya
HR Rwanda
HS Sudan
HT Tanzania
HU Uganda
K1 USA; Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming
K2 USA; Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah
K3 USA; Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota
K4 USA; Houston Oceanic Control Area, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas
K5 USA; Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin
K6 USA; New York Oceanic Control Area, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia,
Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia
K7 USA; Miami Oceanic Control Area, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
LA Albania
LB Bulgaria
LC Cyprus/Republic of North Cyprus
LE Spain
LF France
LG Greece
LH Hungary
LI Italy
LK Czecho Republic
LL Israel/Jerusalem
LM Malta
LO Austria
LP Azores/Madeira Island/Portugal/Santa Maria Oceanic
LQ Bosnia and Herzegovina
LR Romania
LS Switzerland
LT Turkey
LX Gibralter
LY Yugoslavia
LZ Slovakia
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ICAO
CODE NAME
MB Caicos Islands/Turks Islands
MD Dominican Republic
MG Guatemala
MH Honduras
MK Jamaica
MM Mexico
MN Nicaragua
MP Panama
MR Costa Rica
MS El Salvador
MT Haiti
MU Cuba
MW Cayman Islands
MY Bahamas
MZ Belize
NC Cook Islands
NF Fiji Islands/Tonga
NG Kiribati/Tuvalu (S. Pacific)
NI Niue (S. Pacific)
NL Futuna Islands/Wallis Islands
NS American Samoa/Western Samoa
NT French Polynesia/Society Islands/Tuamotu Islands
NV Vanuatu
NW New Caledonia
NZ New Zealand
OA Afghanistan
OB Bahrain
OE Jedda/Saudi Arabia
OI Iran
OJ Jordan
OK Kuwait
OL Lebanon
OM United Arab Emirates
OO Oman
OP Pakistan
OR Iraq
OS Syria
OT Qatar
P Oakland OCTA
PA Alaska
PC Kiribati
PG Guam/Mariana Islands
PH Hawaii
PJ Johnston Atoll
PK Marshall Islands
PL Kiribati
PM Midway Island
PT Caroline Islands/Micronesia/Palau
PW Wake Island
QY Yemen Arab Republic
RC Taiwan
RJ Japan
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ICAO
CODE NAME
RK Korea
RO Japan
RP Philippines
SA Argentina
SB Brazil
SC Chile/Easter Island
SE Ecuador
SF Falkland Island
SG Paraguay
SK Colombia/San Andres
SL Bolivia
SM Suriname
SO French Guiana
SP Peru
SU Uruguay
SV Venezeula
SY Guyana
S1 Antarctica (Argentina, Chile)
TA Antigua
TB Barbados
TD Dominica
TF Guadeloupe/Martinique
TG Grenada
TI Virgin Islands
TJ Puerto Rico
TK St. Kitts/Nevis Island
TL St Lucia
TN Aruba/ Netherland Antille
TQ Anguilla
TR Montserrat Island
TT Tobago Island/Trinidad
TU British Virgin Islands
TV St Vincent
TX Bermuda
UA Kazakhstan/Kyrgyzstan/USSR
UB Azerbaijan/USSR
UE Russia/USSR
UG Armenia/Georgia/USSR
UH Russia/USSR
UI Russia/USSR
UK Moldova/Ukraine/USSR
UL Russia/USSR
UM Belarus/Latvia/Lithuania/Russia/USSR
UN Russia/USSR
UO Russia/USSR
UR Kazakhstan/Russia/USSR
US Russia/USSR
UT Kazakhstan/Tajikistan/Turkmenistan/USSR/Uzbekistan
UU Russia/USSR
UW Russia/USSR
VA India
VC Sri Lanka
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ICAO
CODE NAME
VD Kampuchea
VE India
VG Bangladesh
VH Hong Kong
VI India
VL Laos
VM Macau
VN Nepal
VO India
VQ Bhutan
VR Maldives
VT Thailand
VV Vietnam
VY Myanmar
WA Indonesia
WB Brunei/Malaysia
WI Indonesia
WM Malaysia
WP Indonesia
WR Indonesia
WS Singapore
YB Australia
YD Australia
YG Solomon Islands
YM Australia
YN Nauru (South Pacific)
YP Australia
YS Australia
YY Papua/New Guinea
ZB China, Peoples Republic of
ZG China, Peoples Republic of
ZH China, Peoples Republic of
ZK Korea, Democratic Peoples Republic of
ZL China, Peoples Republic of
ZM Mongolia
ZP China, Peoples Republic of
ZS China, Peoples Republic of
ZU China, Peoples Republic of
ZW China, Peoples Republic of
ZY China, Peoples Republic of
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CONTINENTAL NAVDATA
Jeppesen Database that includes information about airports, VOR, NDB, Intersections and
airspace.
SUB-CONTINENTAL
These Compact Flashs combine Jeppesen Navdata and land cartography for those customers
traveling outside The Americas to provide users with worldwide coverage.
NAVDATA UPDATES
AvMap supplies the file including the aeronautical data file. The Jeppesen cycle is released every 28
days. Contact [email protected] for more information about availability and payment conditions.
APA Autopilot Sentence A contains navigation receiver warning flag status, cross-track-
error, Waypoint arrival status and initial bearing from origin Waypoint to the destination
Waypoint for the active navigation leg of the journey.
APB Autopilot message contains all of the above plus: heading to steer toward destination,
bearing from the present position to the destination (magnetic or true).
BOD Bearing Origin to Destination.
BW Bearing and Distance to Waypoint.
GGA GPS position, time, fix quality, number of satellites used, height of antenna, HDOP
(Horizontal Dilution of Precision), differential reference information and age.
GLL GPS-derived Latitude, Longitude and time of fix.
GSA GPS receiver operating mode, satellites used in the navigation solution reported by the
$ GGA sentence and
DOP (Dilution of Precision) values.
GSV Number of satellites in view, satellite numbers, elevation, azimuth, and SNR value.
HDG Heading, Deviation & Variation.
HDM Heading Magnetic.
HDT Heading True.
HSC Heading Steering Command.
PCMPA C-MAP Proprietary Sentence A contains Time, Fix Latitude/Longitude, SOG, COG,
Date. For more information contact your local dealer.
PCMPT C-MAP Proprietary Sentence used to transfer Track history data and all additional
information ssociated to the Track. For more information contact your local dealer.
RMA Recommended Minimum Specific Loran-C Data.
RMB Data status, Cross Track Error, direction to steer, origin, destination Waypoint, Waypoint
location, bearing to destination and velocity toward the destination.
RMC Time, Latitude, Longitude, Speed Over Ground, Course Over Ground and date.
RTE Routes RTE - Routes.
VHW Water Speed and Heading.
VTG Course Over Ground & Ground Speed.
WCV Waypoint Closure Velocity
WPL Waypoint Location.
XTE Cross-Track Error
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For information about the NMEA format specifications:
93
AvMap
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Mashpee MA 02649
www.avmap.us