I hope this is the correct forum for this. I received a Garmin aera 500 for 
Christmas. I had expressed an interest in it after seeing it demonstrated on 
YouTube, and reading about its features. This is a real step forward for an 
aviation GPS, and makes it almost as easy to use as Garmin's automotive GPS, 
the nuvi. In fact, in automotive mode, the aera IS a nuvi!

My previous GPS was a Lowrance 600C, which 3 years ago was really cool to me. 
Its screen, however, was small, not very bright and kind of difficult to read. 
I always had to have a pair of reading glasses handy to be able to read the 
numbers on the bottom of the map on the 600C. I also found moving the cursor to 
a spot on the map to get more information about something very difficult, 
particularly in rough air.

The aera is a touch screen GPS, so if you want more information about something 
on the map, just touch it. Also, this is a 4.3-inch screen and the display is 
brighter and easier to read than the Lowrance. I flew in direct sunlight and 
had no problems.

The NEAREST feature on the aera is cool. It can show nearest airports, nearest 
nave aids, nearest ARTCC frequencies (really cool) or nearest airports with 
weather and the frequencies. It will also show nearest FSS frequencies. Very 
cool. And it shows the names - so I don't feel stupid calling FSS not knowing 
the name of the radio station. Same for ARTCC.

The HSI screen is cool, with lots of instruments simulated, including bank 
indicator. 

One thing the 600C I miss is a runway extension feature that helped you line up 
to a runway from afar.

Now for the coolest part (for me). If you own a Garmin SL30 or SL40 radio, you 
MUST get an aera!

Four years ago I had a Garmin SL40 installed in my Ercoupe. Little did I know 
how well that would work out! You can get a bare wire harness for the aera that 
wires directly into the radio. When you select the frequency tab on an airport, 
or ARTCC or FSS, if you just touch the frequency on the screen it loads 
automatically into the standby frequency on the radio! Also, you can have it 
download the complete list of frequencies associated with an airport into the 
REM list on the radio. Just flip through and pick it out.  I will never have to 
tune a frequency manually again! If I want to contact ATC for flight following, 
I just touch NEAREST, then touch ARTCC, then touch the frequency and hit the 
flip-flop button. When I approach my destination, I can bring up the frequency 
list for it on the GPS, touch the AWOS frequency, flip-flop, then touch the 
CTAF frequency and it is now loaded into standby on the radio. Awesome!

I also wired the audio output from the GPS to the intercom so I get its audible 
warnings through the intercom (PULL UP!).

There are getting to be a lot of touch screen GPSs out there, and many have 
bigger screens than this one. But I can easily read this one without glasses 
and everything on the screen is big enough that I don't fat-finger things too 
often.

I have the low-end model the 500. The 510 supports XM weather, the 550 has a 
few additional feature and higher resolution terrain data (you have to be 
really pushing it to need that kind of resolution) plus the AOPA airport data 
(which I have on my iPhone) plus SafeTaxi diagrams (I never land at big 
airports). The 560 is just the 550 with XM weather support. So for me, the base 
model is all I need. If I need to worry about weather en route, I don't go.

I hope this is informative to folks - if not, I won't do it again.

Larry
N99340

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