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I would be surprised if any variometer manufacturer discloses filter tech, as that is the essence what vario r&d is. Many problems with electric varios are related to predictive filtering of noisy signal, which for example causes familiar needle overshoot/undershoot behaviour, unless heavily damped with long time constant, and therefore loosing speed advantage over mechanical vario.
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...Many problems with electric varios are related to predictive filtering of noisy signal, which for example causes familiar needle overshoot/undershoot behaviour, unless heavily damped with long time constant, and therefore loosing speed advantage over mechanical vario.
I use one MC value (typically 4) in my flight computer, which many years of flying has shown it generally can get me to a safe landing place.
I use a different one in my speed-to-fly vario, typically 0-4 range, with 2 or 3 being sort of average. Why stop at 4? Well, 4 on strong days, often indicates I should fly at a frightening speed in sink, well over "yellow line", and I'm not going there. Also, when I used to fly Nationals, the pilots that finished near the top flew fairly steadily, obviously not following a STF, and STF theory (and tests) indicate the MC setting has a small effect on task speed once you exceed 2.
Rule of Thumb: Looks Great ahead - 90 knots; looks Good ahead -
75 knots; looks Poor ahead - 60 knots.
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I finally found time to watch the presentation. Very interesting, thanks. I think it correctly outlines the need for inertial platform to show correct airmass movement while flying fast.
Kalman filter slide gives the basis for the overshoot/undershoot problem. When you insert polynomial regression into noisy signal and extrapolate into future, that is exactly what happens.
We are still talking about different problems here. While thermalling (constant low speed), the need for inertial system is less. I have used TE and full inertial variometer for thermalling now for 1000+ hrs, side by side, and still think that TE is valuable source of information. Many of us would argue that you actually can take advantage of horizontal gusts while thermalling. Maybe you have tried straightening to upwind in very windy thermal, pulling up extract extra altitude from the horizontal gust, just before turning back at thermal windward edge? That is basically dynamic soaring, shown only by TE.
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