On the question of audio filters: BOOPS and BEEPS occur in the vicinity of the thermal.
Descending from the upper reaches of a thermal will result in what sounds like random BEEPS with occasional BOOPS. This is neither noise nor raw data, but INFORMATION. However, since this information is of no immediate use to the XC hang glider pilot, who is simply descending from cooler to warmer layers toward an area where he plans to again search for thermals, I frequently wished I could quiet down the Snooper and wait for a stronger series of BEEPS or BOOPS. The ideal way to do this is may be with always-on shaded green and red LEDs, with audio enabled when the Snooper gets excited. The range of audio-triggering should be controlled by the pilot through a sensitivity adjustment and must contain a bypass where filtering is disabled.
Remember, the BOOPS, indicating cooler air but not necessarily sink, are just as valuable as BEEPS, indicating warmer air but not necessarily lift, when you are passing through tumbling air in the vicinity of a thermal.
The primary purpose of the SNOOPER is to indicate the presence of a thermal in the vicinity by getting excited. Nothing more. Its purpose is not to indicate the presence of lift or warm air or sink or cool air. Most pilots receiving a Snooper for the first time are concentrating on looking for the warmer air "because that's where the lift is." This preconception limits the effective use of the Snooper because a thermal variometer best detects tumbling parcels of air shed from a thermal. These parcels are both warm and cool, and segments of the tumbling air are both rising and falling. The entire parcel, containing tumbling elements, can itself be rising or falling and be rotating along any point of a horizontal or vertical axis. Many "small thermals" we think we were in during our soaring careers were probably these parcels, and as we skillfully worked lift through half a turn and sink through the other, the main thermal, nearby, escaped us.
1) The primary purpose of the Snooper is to get excited, signaling to the pilot that he should initiate a search pattern. If the thermal is of adequate size, he will encounter it.
2) The secondary purpose of the Snooper is to verify the core of the thermal. When the hang glider centers the core, the Snooper will quiet down in the warm central rising air.
3) The third purpose of the Snooper is to tell the pilot when the thermal is topping out. The thermal will begin to slowly BOOP as the variometer indicates decreasing lift. Eventually the Snooper will fall silent as cooler upper air dominates. On racing or XC flights, the decreasing rising speed of the thermal can indicate it is time to go rather than wasting time thinking you have drifted outside the core and searching for it.
4) The fourth purpose of the Snooper is to indicate the presence of eddies. These atmospheric ripples do not have a changing temperature component so the Snooper will remain silent. Shears and the path of shears can also be recognized by the astute pilot.
-- Note to soaring parachutists -- I am discussing the Thermal Snooper for use by hang glider and sailplane pilots.
It would seem to me the height of stupidity and hubris to go searching for large, powerful, tumbling masses of swirling air on something so ridiculously inadequate as a parachute.
-- Don't bring a knife to a gunfight. Get an airframe. --