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Airplane instruments (speedometer, altimeter, compass)

Airplane instruments (speedometer, altimeter, compass)
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Here's a fully functioning instrument rack HUD for all your aircraft creations.
This instrument rack HUD includes a working altimeter, speedometer, and compass.
All the meters function in analog as the dials turn, plus you get an extra digital readout for the compass and speedometer. The perfect instrumentation for your flying vehicles, jet, airliner,helicopter, spaceship, hovercraft, if it flies, you need instruments.

The instruments are copy only. No mod, no transfer. Pack includes the joined set of 3 instruments (worn on bottom HUD) plus the individual instruments.

Visit BARTLETT & NIELSEN and VIRGIN ISLE MARINA Quality by Belle Bartlett and Blaze Nielsen

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I LIKE THESE !!!
full star full star full star full star full star Posted May 27, 2017 by Max Demar

I mod planes, helicopters, you name it, I'll mod it. Especially helicopters...they needs some legible gauges if your serious about flying them. Stretch them out, make them big enough to see well. You wont want be without these .

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Great HUD
full star full star full star full star full star Posted May 02, 2015 by Trent

They work as expected.

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full star full star full star full star full star Posted June 05, 2010 by Lloyd Newman

Apparently the previous purchaser is unaware that in most of the world, even nations where the metric system is in official use, aircraft altitude is measured in feet, not meters. This reduces confusion on international flights, and enables aircraft to be built with standard sets of instruments. The pilot is also not required to convert mentally when flying, or forced to try to remember whether a specific aircraft is calibrated in meters or feet.

In fairness, they should change their rating. It is very proper for this instrument to read in feet, and it is only the user's unfamiliarity with actual aircraft instruments that is responsible for any confusion.

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full star empty star empty star empty star empty star Posted November 19, 2009 by Gokyu Ugajin

Be careful of this one. The 1000m hand doesn't read in meters, it reads in feet. So very hard to fly with.

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