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#1
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Just saw an On-Star commercial, went something like this:
Mrs. Jones, This is your On-Stat advisor. I show an air-bag deployment and automatic activation of your on-star system, on Route 16, north of Albany, are you all right? Mrs. Jones, Nooooooo! On-Star advisor, I'm calling the State Police and your husband. Mrs. Jones, Thaaaank Youuuu. I let this percolate in my fertile mind, over a cup of coffee and came up with this: Mr. JJ, I show a sudden stoppage, resulting in a G-switch activation of your On-Star system, 10 miles south of Callahan. I show no airports in that area. Are you all right? No answer. On-Star advisor, In accordance with your instructions, dated 6/6/03, I am notifying the Siskiyou County Sheriff, Contest Headquarters and your crew. I show your location as; 40-53.3 north and 123-05.6 west. Good luck! Does anybody know how much On-Star costs and would they consider taking on aviation customers? It's got to beat ELT. JJ Sinclair |
#2
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JJ,
I like the concept, but if On-Star uses the cell-phone system, won't that render the service useless in areas without coverage? Or does On-Star use satellite(s) for communication/data transfer? I guess they use satellites, thus the name 'On-Star'?? (Or, is it a combinaton of both: cell phone for voice and satellite for data?) Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA LS-1d 'W8' At 18:12 18 November 2003, Jj Sinclair wrote: Just saw an On-Star commercial, went something like this: Mrs. Jones, This is your On-Stat advisor. I show an air-bag deployment and automatic activation of your on-star system, on Route 16, north of Albany, are you all right? Mrs. Jones, Nooooooo! On-Star advisor, I'm calling the State Police and your husband. Mrs. Jones, Thaaaank Youuuu. I let this percolate in my fertile mind, over a cup of coffee and came up with this: Mr. JJ, I show a sudden stoppage, resulting in a G-switch activation of your On-Star system, 10 miles south of Callahan. I show no airports in that area. Are you all right? No answer. On-Star advisor, In accordance with your instructions, dated 6/6/03, I am notifying the Siskiyou County Sheriff, Contest Headquarters and your crew. I show your location as; 40-53.3 north and 123-05.6 west. Good luck! Does anybody know how much On-Star costs and would they consider taking on aviation customers? It's got to beat ELT. JJ Sinclair |
#3
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Would be a nice feature for the GPS mfg's to incorporate into their handhelds.
Just press a button, or sudden stoppage would activate the unit, coordinates then go to the big screen somewhere. |
#4
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I looked into the UK system earlier this year and spoke
with a company rep. Several companies offer a similar service to track commercial vehicles and manage the fleet. Briefly as I understand it, the system here works on a GPS reciever and logger in the vehicle and this transmits data via ground cell telephone systems back to base. The cell phone system has numerous 'spare' channels not used for the 'phone system. The problem is that trying to use the cell phone in the air, unless low down on a ridge, or behind a mountain, causes the cell phone to shut down. The basic cost was about £700 for the vehicle kit and then a further load of cash to get kit to manage the data. So at present not practical and expensive |
#5
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On 18 Nov 2003 19:35:42 GMT, Dave Martin
wrote: I looked into the UK system earlier this year and spoke with a company rep. Several companies offer a similar service to track commercial vehicles and manage the fleet. Briefly as I understand it, the system here works on a GPS reciever and logger in the vehicle and this transmits data via ground cell telephone systems back to base. The cell phone system has numerous 'spare' channels not used for the 'phone system. The problem is that trying to use the cell phone in the air, unless low down on a ridge, or behind a mountain, causes the cell phone to shut down. The basic cost was about £700 for the vehicle kit and then a further load of cash to get kit to manage the data. So at present not practical and expensive CDMA cellphones work great in the air unlike that piece of Eurotrash GSM system. Mike Borgelt |
#6
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link to a U.S. coverage map in pdf format
http://www.onstar.com/us_english/dow...age_map_us.pdf Canada map http://www.onstar.com/us_english/dow...ge_map_can.pdf Quoted from http://www.onstar.com/us_english/jsp...mp%3B+Hardware Made shorter link http://makeashorterlink.com/?R6CC12396 Q. How does OnStar work? A. OnStar uses existing emergency service providers, cellular telephone and satellite technologies. It operates alongside the electrical system in your vehicle and is powered by your vehicle's battery. If your vehicle's battery is damaged or disconnected, our service will not function. Onstar currently uses the analog cellular network maintained by separate cellular companies. This provides the broadest geographic coverage of any current wireless system in the United States and Canada. |
#7
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JJ Sinclair wrote:
Does anybody know how much On-Star costs and would they consider taking on aviation customers? It's got to beat ELT. JJ Sinclair There is a satellite based system developed by Orbcomm (Orbcomm.com) that has a data link for weather graphics, email, and so forth. For aviation use, the system is incorporated into products by Avidyne, Echo Flight, SKytrac, and Garmin. The system can provide automatic flight following, so that the flight can be followed on a web site. It'd be great for locating a downed pilot or following contestants during a conttest, but the unit look big, complicated, and expensive. -- ----- Replace "SPAM" with "charter" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#8
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Dave Martin wrote in message ...
... The problem is that trying to use the cell phone in the air, unless low down on a ridge, or behind a mountain, causes the cell phone to shut down. Not really an issue if you've landed out or crashed, is it? This system might be usefull in countries where, unlike in the U.S., you can reliably get coverage more than 5 miles outside a major city. |
#9
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At 21:42 18 November 2003, Eric Greenwell wrote:
JJ Sinclair wrote: Does anybody know how much On-Star costs and would they consider taking on aviation customers? It's got to beat ELT. JJ Sinclair There is a satellite based system developed by Orbcomm (Orbcomm.com) that has a data link for weather graphics, email, and so forth. For aviation use, the system is incorporated into products by Avidyne, Echo Flight, SKytrac, and Garmin. The system can provide automatic flight following, so that the flight can be followed on a web site. It'd be great for locating a downed pilot or following contestants during a conttest, but the unit look big, complicated, and expensive. -- ----- Replace 'SPAM' with 'charter' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Looks like just the thing from Avidyne! FlightMax EX500 High resolution 5.4' diagonal display with integrated datalink, terrain and water base map with man-made obstacles, curved flight paths when interfaced with a Garmin 400/500 series GPS, traffic awareness when interfaced to the Goodrich Skywatch/HP TAS, the Ryan TCAD 9900B/BX or the Bendix/King KTA-870 TAS, and a Goodrich WX-500 Stormscope interface. Retail price $8,995 |
#10
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guess you have not seen some of the early Garmin hand helds.. contained a
pre recorded message with your N number and would broadcast your coordinates on the radio freq. BT "Lord Struthers" wrote in message ... Would be a nice feature for the GPS mfg's to incorporate into their handhelds. Just press a button, or sudden stoppage would activate the unit, coordinates then go to the big screen somewhere. |
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