![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I had an interesting experience Thursday. I often fly from Baltimore to
Cumberland for business. This past Thursday, I decided to drive. I took my Garmin Nuvi GPS along for the ride. In the vicinity of Hagerstown (Maryland) the GPS went tango uniform. The screen worked, but the unit indicated that satellite reception was lost. A few minutes later, the GPS came back on, but then quickly died. On the way back to Baltimore late Thursday morning, the unit remained nonfunctional. The satellite reception page showed absolutely no signal from any bird. I tried wiggling the little antenna panel, thinking that perhaps the antenna failed. I have a spare antenna from my 295 which I thought I could use to test the receiver function. I tried recycling the GPS, but nothing worked. The unit went through its startup procedure, inquiring about relocation since last use, etc. Even when reception is poor, the satellite page always shows some level of signal unless the unit is indoors. There was nothing. I left the unit on at the satellite page, primarily because I was too lazy to reach up and turn it off. As I was coming down the ridge towards Frederick (east), the unit lit up, and worked perfectly since, up through today. For those of you not familiar with this area of the country, P-40 or Camp David is a little north of the route I was driving, just to the east of Hagerstown. I received an email from AOPA that P-40 was supersized the following day, Friday, indicating presidential or VIP presence. I have seen notams about NAS Pax River spoofing/degrading/screwing with the GPS signal in their vicinity, but I haven't seen anything about a remote interference with the GPS signal (but since I drove, I didn't really check recently, either). So, for those of you (like me) who have become dependent upon GPS, you may want to think about whether the government has a reason to block the signal in the vicinity of your flight. If so, you may wish to make sure those VOR frequencies are handy. The disappearance and reappearance of the signal was so dramatic that my only conclusion is that the signal was blocked locally. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It
would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. On Jul 20, 10:29 pm, "LWG" wrote: I had an interesting experience Thursday. I often fly from Baltimore to Cumberland for business. This past Thursday, I decided to drive. I took my Garmin Nuvi GPS along for the ride. In the vicinity of Hagerstown (Maryland) the GPS went tango uniform. The screen worked, but the unit indicated that satellite reception was lost. A few minutes later, the GPS came back on, but then quickly died. On the way back to Baltimore late Thursday morning, the unit remained nonfunctional. The satellite reception page showed absolutely no signal from any bird. I tried wiggling the little antenna panel, thinking that perhaps the antenna failed. I have a spare antenna from my 295 which I thought I could use to test the receiver function. I tried recycling the GPS, but nothing worked. The unit went through its startup procedure, inquiring about relocation since last use, etc. Even when reception is poor, the satellite page always shows some level of signal unless the unit is indoors. There was nothing. I left the unit on at the satellite page, primarily because I was too lazy to reach up and turn it off. As I was coming down the ridge towards Frederick (east), the unit lit up, and worked perfectly since, up through today. For those of you not familiar with this area of the country, P-40 or Camp David is a little north of the route I was driving, just to the east of Hagerstown. I received an email from AOPA that P-40 was supersized the following day, Friday, indicating presidential or VIP presence. I have seen notams about NAS Pax River spoofing/degrading/screwing with the GPS signal in their vicinity, but I haven't seen anything about a remote interference with the GPS signal (but since I drove, I didn't really check recently, either). So, for those of you (like me) who have become dependent upon GPS, you may want to think about whether the government has a reason to block the signal in the vicinity of your flight. If so, you may wish to make sure those VOR frequencies are handy. The disappearance and reappearance of the signal was so dramatic that my only conclusion is that the signal was blocked locally. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tina wrote:
Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. In the US, it is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. However, the the US government is not bound by this. Generally, all governmental organizations follow FCC rules, allocations, etc. or there would be chaos. But, if the magic words "National Security" are invoked, all bets are off. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... Tina wrote: Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. In the US, it is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. However, the the US government is not bound by this. Actually, it is in a theoretical sense. Otherwise the US would be a police state. In practice, however, the citizens seem to turn a blind eye to the practice of the government violating its own laws. See Gitmo. Generally, all governmental organizations follow FCC rules, allocations, etc. or there would be chaos. But, if the magic words "National Security" are invoked, all bets are off. This, IMHO, is bull****. Not your statement, but the fact that "National Security" can call off the rule of law unilaterally. If *I* as a citizen were to kill someone and claim "National Security," the cops would laugh at me all to way to the jail g |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
DougS wrote:
wrote in message ... Tina wrote: Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. In the US, it is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. However, the the US government is not bound by this. Actually, it is in a theoretical sense. Otherwise the US would be a police state. The topic is interference with radio services. In practice, however, the citizens seem to turn a blind eye to the practice of the government violating its own laws. See Gitmo. Gitmo has nothing to do with radio services. Generally, all governmental organizations follow FCC rules, allocations, etc. or there would be chaos. But, if the magic words "National Security" are invoked, all bets are off. This, IMHO, is bull****. Not your statement, but the fact that "National Security" can call off the rule of law unilaterally. If *I* as a citizen were to kill someone and claim "National Security," the cops would laugh at me all to way to the jail g There is no FCC rule against killing someone. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... DougS wrote: wrote in message ... Tina wrote: Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. In the US, it is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. However, the the US government is not bound by this. Actually, it is in a theoretical sense. Otherwise the US would be a police state. The topic is interference with radio services. *And* the legality thereof. Premise: It is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. Premise: The US government is bound by its own laws. Conclusion: The US government cannot legally cause interference to any radio service. Your statement: The US government is not bound by this [the law that states that it is illegal to cause interference]. OK. Either the law was written to give tacit government approval to cause interference, or the US government can violate its own laws. I do not know the exact law regarding interefernce, and don't know whether or not the law explicity grants the rights of interference to the government, I presumed case B. In practice, however, the citizens seem to turn a blind eye to the practice of the government violating its own laws. See Gitmo. Gitmo has nothing to do with radio services. But it has EVERYTHING to do with the government's violating its own laws. Gitmo was used as an example of our blind eye in the name of "National Security." My point is that the government starts small. (Violating laws that noone really cares/knows about). But by doing so, the citizens of the country are slowly giving up liberties. It sets a dangerous precedent and allows the country to follow a VERY slippery slope. Generally, all governmental organizations follow FCC rules, allocations, etc. or there would be chaos. But, if the magic words "National Security" are invoked, all bets are off. This, IMHO, is bull****. Not your statement, but the fact that "National Security" can call off the rule of law unilaterally. If *I* as a citizen were to kill someone and claim "National Security," the cops would laugh at me all to way to the jail g There is no FCC rule against killing someone. What does it matter? You've stated that there are magic words (namely: National Security) that cause all bets to be off. Replace "kill someone" with "interfere with radio services" if it makes you happy. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 22 Jul 2007 16:09:12 -0400, DougS wrote:
Either the law was written to give tacit government approval to cause interference, or the US government can violate its own laws. I do not know the exact law regarding interefernce, and don't know whether or not the law explicity grants the rights of interference to the government, I presumed case B. In fact, given the history of GPS, I'm not be particularly surprised to find it legal for the US to degrade the signal, one way or another, in times of National Emergency. It's not that long since it was degraded - for civilian use - as a matter of course. - Andrew |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
DougS wrote:
wrote in message ... DougS wrote: wrote in message ... Tina wrote: Does anyone know if it's legal to interfere with nav sat reception? It would be interesting to know, for example. if there were known outages when the president was at his father's estate in Maine. In the US, it is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. However, the the US government is not bound by this. Actually, it is in a theoretical sense. Otherwise the US would be a police state. The topic is interference with radio services. *And* the legality thereof. Premise: It is illegal to deliberately cause interference to any radio service. Premise: The US government is bound by its own laws. Conclusion: The US government cannot legally cause interference to any radio service. The FCC doesn't write laws. The FCC writes regulations. The Congress writes laws. I doubt you understand the difference and I have no desire to either educate you or get into a long drawn out discussion on something not at all related to piloting based on your dislike for the current crop of government officials, all of which will change with the next election anyway. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"DougS" wrote in
news:OaudnasLKOUmOT7bnZ2dnUVZ_gKdnZ2d@wideopenwest .com: This, IMHO, is bull****. Not your statement, but the fact that "National Security" can call off the rule of law unilaterally. If *I* as a citizen were to kill someone and claim "National Security," the cops would laugh at me all to way to the jail g And yet if you actually took out Osama or one of his 52 pickup face cards, and were able to prove it, you would quickly be released as a national hero. They'd probably even name a holiday after you. People have turned a blind eye to rule-breaking in the name of protecting the "greater good" for a very long time. It is only the recent blatant abuse of this privilege by the current administration that has made the entire world cynical about it, and has eradicated the trust in our country and what it stands for by its own people and world population. So now, you can claim, like everyone else who cries wolf, that you have behaved in the best interests of National Security or the Greater Good. But it's so played out that no one buys that load of crap anymore. At one time in history, America was admired as a country that stood for courage, integrity, dignity, and true democracy, even in the face of terror, war (won or lost), and economic despair. Our current president, and the 2 presidents before him, have effectively turned this country into the punchline of a very bad ethnic joke. Maybe I am wrong, because I am too young to remember personally, but I don't think anyone ever questioned the _integrity_ of our entry into the Vietnam war, even though many people objected to it. And when we left, we still maintained a decorum of respect, instead of being laughing stocks and depicted as wild, stupid, corrupt cowboys. No one remembers the Depression as a time when the government manipulated the country to eliminate the middle class and further separate the rich from the poor. Instead, the government established public services specifically to help the poor and prevent a recurrence. There was nothing to Fear but Fear itself... This country has gone through many tough times in its relatively short history. But in our pursuit of Freedom and its protection, it always seemed as though "Right beat Might", and in the end, and we were remembered in history for our integrity and dignity, as we progressed further forward as a world power. Our Great Presidents were able to move worlds with just a few words and their own passion, integrity, and respectability. We desperately need a Great President. I can't say how we will be remembered in history, but I don't think it will match our model through time till now... |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am old enough to remember 'Nam, and Johnson and McNamara playing
their games, sending messages, and wasting lives while doing it. The men and women wearing uniforms were insulted by those who objected to that war, but the real objection should have been directed at the leadership. It was bad policy, or no policy. Nearly every conflict model suggests if one side goes in with overwhelming force, total bloodshed will be reduced. It took less time to end WW2 than this conflict, or for that matter 'Nam, because the leadership lacked the courage to plan so as to win and give the people in uniform all they need to finish a job with a defined endpoint. 'Nam was a shame and we have a wall with 55,000 names on it because of failed leadership. A shrine to those who fell in Iraq might have an identical story. We weep at the graves in Normandy and elsewhere, but most would agree the blood shed there, although tragic, brought a worthwhile end. At the Wall in Washington I am as likely to curse as weep because of the stupid waste of lives. The ending in 'Nam and Iraq to not justify the means, and one could argue Truman erred in Korea as well. In time the US will become a minor power, and historians in China or whomever is the world leader then might study this country's path from about the 1950s onward to understand our decline as a world power. Maybe their study will help them avoid making the same mistakes. Tina |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Harriers in the neighborhood this afternoon 2 | Tom Callahan | Aviation Photos | 2 | April 15th 07 05:30 PM |
Harriers in the neighborhood this afternoon 1 | Tom Callahan | Aviation Photos | 0 | April 13th 07 08:30 PM |
Do you fly in your own neighborhood? | Mxsmanic | Piloting | 26 | February 16th 07 03:38 AM |
Greetings from your friendly, neighborhood, TERRORIST! | Peter R. | Piloting | 198 | October 17th 04 11:57 PM |
It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood. | Richard Lamb | Home Built | 0 | March 8th 04 01:20 AM |