
I was more than a little surprised - and not a bit disappointed - to see the beast's large instrument panel almost empty - with a Garmin 1000 system in place of the old analog.
Ick.
OK, I know many of the arguments for glass cockpits - ease of use, instrument weight, etc. I just don't like them. At all. I find the G-1000 bewildering, not intuitive at all, unneccesarily complex. Admittedly, I've never taken the opportunity to learn the system - I just prefer analog systems.
Perhaps the thing that really drives me nuts about the G-1000 though is how the whole aviation world seems to be jumping on the Garmin bandwagon. You can't open a single magazine or flyer without seeing G-1000 ads all over the place. Flight schools proudly blare 'G-1000 equipped!'. Every airgraft reviewed in Flying, Plane & Pilot, Canadian Aviation etc. are G-1000 equipped. You can't get away from the bloody thing.
I dunno - I know it's a superb system with many good qualities, but I can't help having an itchy feeling about the G-1000. It's nothing I can really put my finger on; perhaps it's just my own preference for the 6-pack. But well... You know the current discussion going on in the Flight School forum about high-wing vs. low-wing trainers? (I'm high-wing taildragger partial myself

Sorry this is rambling - too much coffee again. I'd like to hear your thoughts. To sum up mine; I think the G-1000's fine for experienced commercial/privare flying; for pilots who have good analog skills. I think it should NOT be used by inexperienced pilots and especially by students and for me personally, I just don't like looking at the G-1000 display. Your thoughts?
Cheers!