Against an onslaught of inexpensive if not cheap electronic displays, how much longer can conventional iron gyros persist? The latest nail in the coffin comes from a startup called AeroVonics, which unveiled a pair of new instruments at AirVenture last year aimed center-lane at legacy panels.
The company has two models: The diminutive AV-20 that’s best thought of as a clock with high-level features and the more sophisticated and flexible AV-30 that mimics the look of a traditional spinning gyro, but overlays a ton of additional flight data. Both are priced as bargain entries.