There's an app for that.
I don't own a cell phone (no, I'm not kidding), so to me (horse person), "app" means appaloosa.

There's an app for that.
I can understand your feelings on this, but have come to realise that sometimes the easy & sensible way is just to accept the electronic gizmo in all it's glory & then ONLY use the features you want/need from it!! .........
I tried one of the compasses with the suction cup and had to mount it up high on the windshield to get away from any interference. I didn't leave it on for any long rides, so I can't say whether it would stay on or fall off.
Your iPhone has a campus use that
And break my record of refusing to enter the 21st century without kicking and screaming?? Never!Besides, I keep reading in here about extraneous devices causing all sorts of problems, or at least being suspect, by interfering with various Spyder operations.
Uhhh, iPhone? What's an iPhone?![]()
Just a thought, let's say you found a compass ( cheap ) that wasn't effected by the speaker magnets..... How could you possibly read it while moving and not crash :yikes: ..... and every compass I've ever seen needs to be stationary ..... So just get one and stop , get off the Spyder get a reading and move on...... :clap:............Mike :thumbup:
So you have not seen many compasses I guess...
Boat compasses for instance do not need to be stationary. The are gimbaled.
This is what I tried to use in my Spyder. It's a boat compass you mount in the dash.
It's a Ritchie X21BU. This will fit in the Spyder gauge hole perfectly!
It would have worked fine while moving but like I said, the magnets and electronics threw it WAY OFF.
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Bob
Every small aircraft out there is full of metal and electronics, yet they all have a wet or "whiskey" compass. It's not rocket science, you just have to allow for the magnetic variation by "swinging the compass". Here is how:
http://www.eaa.org/en/eaa/aviation-...instruments-and-avionics/swinging-the-compass
call around to your local general aviation airports and ask them if they have a compass rose painted on their taxiway. Then ask for permission to bring your Spyder there once you have installed the compass. Create your compass deviation card and go ride.
Keep in mind you need a compass with adjustment screws, which one of our members stated may be more costly than it's worth. But it can be done, so ignore those who say it can't.
I have looked into this.... Both mechanical and 100% electronic compasses that allow deviation or disturbance adjustments.
They are over $1000 dollars! FYI Aircraft compasses are not all one unit. The sensing unit is NOT in the dash. The display on the dash is just that, the display. The sensing unit is mounted elsewhere for most aircraft.
There are also compasses where the sensing unit is remote and can be placed somewhere other than near electronics and on the dash is the readout (like aircraft compasses). Over $2,000 for those!
But the huge problem with the Spyder RT. The dash is very close to the front speakers with pretty large magnets! No deviation adjustment will be able to compensate for that. For the Ritchie I show above, the speaker magnets locked the compass to a position and it would not move at all. No compensation will fix that. I tried using copper and lead to try and block that but to no avail...
Anyway, to get a compass that will work on the Spyder, the cost is too much for me for just for a compass.
Bob
Buy a silva ranger compass. If you can't figure out direction, a good Silva can't be beat. I've had mine 20+ years, and it has never failed! It is a pocket compass, but I keep it in a saddlebag.
Bob, I have to disagree. I think you are referring to a DG or directional gyro which uses the aircraft vacuum system. Gyros are expensive. Peek in the window of almost any single engine aircraft and you will see a simple wet compass. They aren't that expensive, but you have to swing them to determine the variation. That's what the card is for. There are also compass errors which occur in flight due to the earth's magnetic field but that's for another day.
I would agree with you that mounting in the dash would create problems, but above the dash would be similar to aircraft installations. I personally think it's too much trouble.
Paul
Ummm, you do know that unless it's a real antique, your wrist watch probably has a basic 'computer' inside it, don't you?? And you do realise that your Spyder has & relies on a few Computers & similar electronic control systems to operate too, don't you?? :shocked: ....[cut].......Like I said before, the only real way to avoid any exposure to advances in technology is pretty terminal, & generally will really upset your family & friends as well as making a bloody mess for someone to clean up!!.....[cut].... :sour: Choosing to live your Life instead is a much smarter idea ......... :thumbup:
...I simply feel that my options for using products that make my life simpler because they're more reliable and/or easier to operate are disappearing. ...There are other examples of good old fashioned devices, like manual can openers, that not only operate for free, but they operate, PERIOD, during a power outage. I can cook on our woodstove throughout our frequent power outages, but my meal choices are limited if I can't get at them because the can opener requires electricity.
I love my many modern inventions as much as the next gal, but when they become more of a burden than an asset, and when they exist just because they can, and when their inexplicable popularity nudges sane, logical, practical products into extinction, technology has gone too far for this old girl.
Everybody can use the good old P-38, to open up a can of beans, for some old-fashioned campfire cooking!
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