Mini-X Installation, Setup & User Manual GRT Avionics
Revision A9 30
b. It will exit calibration mode, and will show “Calibration INVALID - Maximum correction
exceeded” if a correction of greater than 127 degrees is required. (Invalid - OVERLIMIT will
be displayed on the AHRS maintenance page next to the Magnetometer Calibration field.)
A correction of greater than 127 degrees can be caused by incorrect mounting of the
magnetometer, or location of the magnetometer too close to ferrous metal in the aircraft,
or starting with the airplane not pointed toward magnetic north or magnetometer wiring
errors.
The validity of the location for the magnetometer calibration can now be verified.
10. Point the airplane toward magnetic north.
11. Turn ON the Mini (if already ON, turn it OFF, and then back ON).
12. Verify the AHRS (on AHRS Maintenance page) shows a heading close to north. (Small errors
are likely to be a result of not positioning the airplane to the exact heading used during
magnetometer calibration.)
13. Select the Magnetometer Calibration page. (Do not activate the calibration this time.)
14. Rotate the airplane through 360 degrees, and inspect the Calculated Error graph (the red line)
drawn on the screen. The magnetic heading errors should be less than 5 degrees, and can
typically be reduced to about 2 degrees. Accurate magnetic heading is required for the AHRS
to display accurate heading data, and to allow accurate wind speed/direction calculations.
The graph will also show the correction stored in the AHRS as a green line. The green line will
be within the +/- 30 degree range if the magnetometer was mounted in a good location and
the orientation was set prior to calibration.
The status of the magnetometer correction data is indicated by the field next to the
Magnetometer Calibration setting on the AHRS Maintenance page. If the field has the message
“Change to open page,” then no valid data is stored within the AHRS and it must be recalibrated.
If the field says “Valid,” it means that the data is present. Keep in mind that the accuracy of
this data is not assured because it is dependent on how carefully the user performed these
steps. The calibration data should be cross-checked with reliable ground references such as
a compass rose or runway headings before flight.
Measuring the Accuracy of the Magnetic Heading
The accuracy of the magnetic heading can be easily observed while taxiing and comparing the
magnetic heading displayed on the AHRS maintenance page, to the gps groundtrack. The difference
between them is the heading error in that direction.
This can also be observed on the PFD screen, although the heading data on this screen is slaving
the yaw gyro, and thus will respond slowly to the difference between the displayed heading and