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I just wanted to let you know how my SVT came in handy during my last trip to Mass two weeks ago. I was scheduled for an Angel Flight from Norwood (OWD) to Philly (PNE). But I had been parking the airplane at an airfield 10 miles away Mansfield (1B9) visiting family for a couple of days. The plan was to hop over to OWD and pick up patient and then head to PNE. The weather was just at approach minimums to OWD when I launched. So even though it was only 10 miles away, I had to file IFR. As soon as I got airborne I was getting vectors left and right from Boston to line me up for the LOC 35 approach into OWD. That all kept me busy enough but throughout it all, I was able to cage my brain just by looking at the Synthetic Vision with the superimposed runway. It provided great Situational Awareness. Given that it was right in front of me and I was flying single pilot IFR……, having the SVT in the same display as my flight instruments made it even more valuable than the moving map at times. Anyway, not an exciting story but when flying single pilot IFR to mins in a congested airspace AND in a rushed flight sequence, I felt the SVT made a significant difference.
Mark R. Brightman
Owner of a 2008 Diamond DA40 XLS










GlassPilot
September 22nd, 2008 at 1:27 pm
Great use case for that. There is nothing harder in an airplane for me than a quick succession of tasks. And that’s one of the best examples – an approach you have little time to setup for.
It gets 2x harder in the clouds, so I’d certainly think that having that SVT display would help a tremendous amount – especially with the flight path marker and the boxes.
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