Hi Phil,
I'm in the process of upgrading my T-18 panel and I wanted to spend as little money as possible on the panel until I made sure I liked the plane and got used to landing it.
ADS-B In:
Original - None
New - I purchased a Stratux ADS-B in device at Oshkosh brand new and assembled for only $150. It has everything you want except, of course, ADS-B Out. This includes WAAS GPS, subscription-free weather, dual-band ADS-B traffic, two antennas, and AHRS attitude. It doesn't have a battery and I'm powering it with ship power. Note that other guys in the forum are taking care of ADS-B out now and are liking the uAvionix equipment for both In/Out. See
https://www.uavionix.comproducts/echo-uat/Electronic Charts / Electronic Flight Bag:
Original - None
New - I chose FlyQ from Seattle Avionics (
https://seattleavionics.com/)
Honestly, most people tend to buy the ForeFlight application along with the more expensive Stratus ADS-B receiver. In my case, I preferred FlyQ, although these vendors' features are converging with mostly the same features. In my opinion, you should try out each system (FlyQ, ForeFlight, etc) at Sun-n-Fun or Oshkosh and see what you like best. I'm a software guy and know that many times the choice between similar feature sets comes down to which user interface you are most comfortable with. In other words, it operates the way you like the best and isn't hard for you to learn. FlyQ costs $69/year for VFR charts subscription. You can use it on as many devices as you own for that subscription.
Tablet:
Original - None
New - Apple iPad Mini 4.
- Glare: I did a lot of research (see picture of 4 tablets) on this to determine which screen would be most readable in our cockpits with the full canopy. I tended to like Samsung tables because the 10" tablet we got for a client for field use (drilling gas wells) worked super well and the guys really liked them. However, I tested four tablets last Fall to see which was best in full sunlight and was very surprised that the iPad was decisively better. I didn't expect this. What the difference was is that Apple applies a proprietary anti-reflective coating to their screens. Note however that Apple doesn't do this to all their iPads - only some. They apply it to the iPad Mini 4 and the new iPad Pros.
- Size: The iPad Mini 4 has a small 7.75" screen size that I prefer. Many iPad users who have planes with small cockpits prefer the iPad Mini because they can put it on their knee or more easily panel-mount it. A full 10" iPad Pro is very large in a T-18.
- Mount: I used a RAM articulating mount. They are heavy but really solid. It installs with 3 bolts/screws.
- Obsolete iPads: Not worth the trouble. You want a fast processor, at least 128 GB memory and anti-glare.
- WiFi or Cellular: An iPad with cellular is better because you can be sitting at the airport and downloading the latest charts and weather while you're waiting using just the tablet. If you opt for just the WiFi version, you'll have to use your smartphone's hotspot feature or find a WiFi source. I actually bought the WiFi version and use my phone's hotspot.
As for uploading pictures to this site, I've had trouble too, and it seems to work if I scale the size of my picture in Paint to only 25% and save it and then upload it using the size "1280x1024 (19-inch monitor)".
Hope this helps with your panel. Good luck!