1. Weather decoding would be nice, too, but there are plenty of other apps for that.UPDATE 2/29/20: Returning to aviation after a 12 year hiatus, I found that this has all the stuff I used to need a flight bag full of charts and gear for.
2. It looked promising until I noticed that it installed 4 different apps, but most of all, about 100(!) beeps and vibrations on my phone while downloading databases and during the first simple flight planning.
3. I would also like to see an interface with Garmin Flightstream, although I imagine that Garmin may not license such a feature.Edit: Thanks for the quick reply! I had confused "Max Zero Fuel weight" with "Hull weight" as I haven't ever heard it called that before.
4. -Lat and Long points seem to suffer heavy rounding, can this be improved? -Specific to my needs- a large format continuous Time to Target count down display option.
5. Otherwise it's looking like it has some potential! Original post: First thing I tried was the weight and balance screen and i was unable to get it to work.
6. Other reviewers report better response times from Support.The user interface is perhaps the best of all the Android aviation apps.
7. I'm currently running 2 Android flying apps and may drop Driod EFB when my annual sub ends.I downloaded this to try as an alternative to Foreflight (because I have an Android phone).
8. Requested a refund multiple times and did't hear a word back from them.This is a robust and reliable solution for Android, and runs well on my Samsung tablet as a dedicated EFB.
9. Weight and balance was a little difficult the first time I entered numbers for the plane I usually fly, but got it figured out.
10. Its straightforward and intuitive to operate and permits primary navigation without working very hard at it, a very important feature when you have to operate multiple aircraft with different FMSs and EFBs.
11. I don't really care about 'value-added' features like weight and balance, aircraft profiles, GPS geo-referencing, etc.