vwglenn wrote:My fuel gauge is the tank itself. I emptied it and filled it two gallons at a time. I set it level and on it's tail and marked each side of the tank with a sharpie (one side is for three point on the ground and the other is for flight). I installed a wifi reverse camera under the panel and facing the tank. Fuel level can be viewed in real time on my phone or ipad. I got the idea when I saw a video of a biplane with an efis that had a screen set up with a forward facing camera for taxi operations. Most of the backup cameras have a IR capability so it can see the tank with very little available light. I think I'm going to back light the tank with an LED to make the fuel more visible. The only problem with the camera is it projects the image in "reverse" as if you're looking in a mirror so the numbers written on the tank are backwards. Think it would work just as well with a GoPro or any other wifi camera. I chose the reverse camera because it was around $40 and I could use my Ipad/iphone as the display.
samiam wrote:
Glenn, neat idea. Just curious as to what the DAR thought about this. I know a functioning fuel gauge is a required instrument for VFR flight, so I'm guessing that he counted this as acceptable.
samiam wrote:Glenn, neat idea. Just curious as to what the DAR thought about this. I know a functioning fuel gauge is a required instrument for VFR flight, so I'm guessing that he counted this as acceptable.
radfordc wrote:samiam wrote:
Glenn, neat idea. Just curious as to what the DAR thought about this. I know a functioning fuel gauge is a required instrument for VFR flight, so I'm guessing that he counted this as acceptable.
A functioning fuel gauge is required for standard category aircraft (ie, Cessna, etc). It is not required for day time, VFR in an experimental aircraft. There are no mandatory instruments for experimentals unless flown at night or IFR.
samiam wrote:radfordc wrote:samiam wrote:
Glenn, neat idea. Just curious as to what the DAR thought about this. I know a functioning fuel gauge is a required instrument for VFR flight, so I'm guessing that he counted this as acceptable.
A functioning fuel gauge is required for standard category aircraft (ie, Cessna, etc). It is not required for day time, VFR in an experimental aircraft. There are no mandatory instruments for experimentals unless flown at night or IFR.
I'm not sure that this is true. I'm not Mr. FAR, but I believe that experimentals operating under Part 91 still need to comply with 91.205 minimum instrument requirements.
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