


If you wanted to equip your 170 for light IFR work - let us assume for this discussion we are talking about personal minimums of 1000' ceilings and 1 mile vis - which of the following three avionics packages would you prefer and consider adequate:
1. dual comm radios, single navigation radio with vor/localizer but no glideslope
2. single comm radio, dual nav radios with one vor/loc only and the other VOR/LOC/GS/DME
3. dual nav/comms with one nav VOR/loc only, one nav VOR/LOC/GS capable but no DME in the mix.
Each setup would be accompanied by a 396/496 or equivalent with satellite weather capability.
Before you go suggesting ifr gps's and other options, first I thank you for and appreciate your opinions and given the funds I too would go straight to the Garmin 430. However, even the most rudimentary (fancy word for cheapest) IFR GPS setup has been investigated and determined to not be a financially viable option at the current time. The facts are that our VFR equipped 170 is not meeting our needs and a large capital outlay for the panel of my dreams in not gonna happen unless one of my two kids in college comes up with some serious financial aid and soon!. The three options above represent the boxes sitting on my bench or available to me today and I need to decide how I want to proceed.
A third question: What would you consider the minimum required equipment for the stated mission (light VFR with 1000/1 mins).
Again, our desire is to be able to legally file IFR when the conditions are less than hospitable for VFR flight. There are no plans to routinely shoot ILS's to mins, fly heavy night IFR or tackle winter cold fronts and icing. I just want to get above the crap when we are getting beat to death down low.
regards,
Bruce