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-   -   NARCO gone bust (https://www.pprune.org/private-flying/447706-narco-gone-bust.html)

IO540 3rd April 2011 15:29

NARCO gone bust
 
NARCO Header

ferrydude 3rd April 2011 15:57

Is a shame, I thought it strange that there was no presence at Sun N Fun

gordon field 3rd April 2011 18:11

Wot no further warranty support for my Superhomer and Omniplexer!

IO540 3rd April 2011 21:10

The consensus in the USA appears to be that their products were mostly crap.

Fuji Abound 3rd April 2011 21:39

I can barely contain my indifference . .


But I suppose I did look.

A and C 4th April 2011 07:11

IO540
 
I would have said the products were vairiable, the NAV/COMS were reliable, the KNS80 look alike was very reliable, I own two AT150 transponders that that had very few problems. The ADF was as IO540 says.....Crap!

Narco in some areas failed to look forward, I just cant understand why they failed to produce a Mode S slide in replacement for the AT150 transponder.

In other areas they were so far ahead of the game that the GA community failed to understand how advanced the kit was, the STARNAV was the first and I think the only multi-sensor navigation unit that has ever been produced for the GA market, the STARNAV used VOR, DME, GPS to locate the aircraft position (with optional LORAN input) and provide area nav.

The STARNAV was more akin to an airliner FMS but very few in GA could grasp the concept.

IO540 4th April 2011 19:42

I vaguely recall reading that Collins did something similar, just before GPS came along, and then the bottom dropped out of the market for any king of multi-sensor nav for GA, so they dropped it.

A and C 4th April 2011 20:48

IO540

The Narco STARNAV used GPS, VOR & DME, it was a bit like a GNS430 except that you still had RNAV if the GPS dropped off line as long as you had VOR/DME, to this you could also feed Loran data (overkill perhaps). The only Collins RNAV that I remember was a unit that was KNS80 like in function but a lot less intuative to use.

Silvaire1

Correct me if I am wrong but I was under the impression that the ADS-B had to data link via a mode S transponder, if this is so the mode S would hardly be Ancient history + an evolutionary dead end.

Fit the master switch.............. you wont regret it!

IO540 5th April 2011 06:16

You should have an avionics master to disconnect the avionics during engine start, because the starter motor puts a lot of crap onto the positive supply line.

The Collins product was never marketed.

I would not have thought that the Americans would have the UK-style "civil liberties" issues with Mode S. After all, unless you fly in the "wild west" and under the radar, you will be tracked everywhere you go.

I can see Narco did not bother to do a Mode S transponder because Garmin owned the avionics business by then. The only openings were for "cheap" Mode S transponders but (hey what a suprise; you'd never think this is aviation would you) all those which came out were (basically) at Garmin prices minus 0.0001% :) It only costs about £100 to make a Mode S transponder, in 1k batches, but nobody is going to bomb the price and anyway most of the installs are done by avionics shops and they will always sell the product with the biggest trade discount.

IO540 5th April 2011 17:11

But the USA has loads of mandatory Mode C transponder zones anyway... I don't see any way of flying there seriously without carrying a Mode C.


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