A pocket enroute computer for pilots. Offline.
A pocket enroute computer for pilots. Offline. No accounts. No telemetry.
Email mikemyersco@gmail.com — please include:
I read every message personally and usually respond within a couple of days.
No. After installation, every calculation runs on your device. The only feature that uses the network is the oceanic Radio reference, which fetches frequencies from ARINC the first time you open it and caches them. You can use every other feature with airplane mode on.
Fix Timer is a solo project. The seller name is the developer’s legal name.
Check that your takeoff time is in Zulu (UTC), not local time. Tap the takeoff readout and re-enter the correct 24-hour HHMM. All ETAs propagate forward from takeoff, so a wrong takeoff means every fix is wrong.
Yes — tap the share button (the box-with-up-arrow icon in the header). Fix Timer generates a clean monospaced nav-log you can send via Messages, email, AirDrop, or copy to Notes.
Tap the trash icon in the header. It will ask you to confirm before wiping the current trip’s takeoff time and fixes.
Open the Trips library (folder icon), swipe left on the trip you want to remove, tap Delete.
By design. Fix Timer does one job — enroute timing — and does it well. For full-blown flight planning, use ForeFlight, FltPlan Go, or your airline’s EFB.
Pull down on the Radio list to refresh. If that doesn’t work, the source page at arinc.net may be temporarily unavailable; the previously-cached values stay usable.
I read every email. The roadmap so far:
See the Privacy Policy. Short version: Fix Timer collects nothing.