Emir wrote:
My son – rarely wears headset, rather enjoys his choice of music
Is it not too loud for him? (The engine noise! Not the music )
If you have noise cancelling headphones then the experience is much the same as piping music through the audio panel or bluetoothing it into your headset.
I have a pair of Sony noise cancelling headphones which cost something like £250. The noise cancelling performance is as good as any high-end GA headset, but obviously there is no mic. Adding the mic evidently accounts for the other £750 on GA headsets ;-)
Graham wrote:
I have a pair of Sony noise cancelling headphones which cost something like £250. The noise cancelling performance is as good as any high-end GA headset, but obviously there is no mic. Adding the mic evidently accounts for the other £750 on GA headsets ;-)
:) You mean £180? AvMike for QC25? Works OK for me!
arj1 wrote:
Works OK for me!
And for me! I have some QC25 for passengers and a QC35 ii with bluetooth for me. I would never’ve bought so many heftily overpriced Aviation headsets. But the QC25 is 50 Euros (second-hand like-new condition), best thing you can buy also for kids. Lightweight. Robust. And if it should break, when kids are kids, well, then it’s at least not too expensive. So I have 4 fully operational headsets, plus one spare (which would be operational if I married headset and mike), plus two normal “classic” headsets as spare of the spare. In fact, I seldom activate noise-cancellation in the Comanche, but like to fly without headset at all – only when COM is very busy and I need more concentration to understand the controller. But then you have all the silence you could wish for.
So yes, the kid could carry this.
dublinpilot wrote:
Is it not too loud for him?
He claims not hearing engine noise with his Beats headphones
This is funny. So many “olde English” icons in one place
A Robin advert from 1967. I remember thinking a few years ago that American car adverts on television are informational, listing horsepower, acceleration etc, but European adverts are aspirational, showing a happy family and beautiful scenery. This one looks like it’s the other way round.
There was a Robin advert in the 1980s that mirrored François Mitterrand’s la France profonde type presidential campaign appealing to heartland values (example below, a village 10 minutes from us). DR400 in the foreground, a couple of fields, then a wooded hillside with a church near the top. Unfortunately I can’t find it.
Another Robin advert I saw on the wall in Portorož was a map of Europe showing a route from Dijon Darois to Portorož with the time and fuel required for the Ecoflyer. I assume Robin tailored one each for lots of flying schools and clubs and sent them out as direct advertising.