OK, I admit that 90% of the previous thread is WAY over my head, but it seems to be saying that PowerFlarm is the simplest method of getting ADS-B signals into the flight computers we use (like the LX90xx). My question is, considering the "quality" of the PowerFlarm antennae, just how good is PowerFlarm at receiving, processing and outputting the data?
I fly with PowerFlarm and the aforesaid LX9000, and while Moriarty isn't a "High Traffic" environment, we do get all sorts of other GA airplanes, Military and Commercial Airliners through the airspace. I get at least some of the traffic on my LX000 display, but I am not convinced I am getting it all. In fact, I have seen airliners visually that either never appear on the display or show up AFTER they have gone by. This is also true for Flarm contacts, but I recognize that other gliders' antenna placement is often not optimal, and signal blockage by metal or carbon airframe components is also a factor. I am running a lower fuselage (interior) Flarm antenna, as well as the two dipole antennae upright on either side of the glare shield with clear sky views through the canopy.
The PowerFlarm PFCONFIG file is set to reasonable values to ignore contacts that are too far or too high to worry about. Some of these visually acquired contacts are well within the range parameters I have set, but do not show on the display. Any enlightenment from the RAS users who have successfully come to grips with the acronym-heavy ADS-B world?
(I will be adding ADS-B Out via Trig TN-70 or TN-72 to my Trig TT-22 this winter)