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#1
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I was thumbing through the FAR/AIM last night,
trying to fall asleep and I noticed something that I couldn't understand. It appeared (in my half-asleep state) that the FAR says not to operate an out-of-calibration transponder at all, and the FAR says to operate it with altitude reporting off. On the face of it, the FAR would have the authority of law behind it. Any clarification? |
#2
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Jim Stewart wrote:
I was thumbing through the FAR/AIM last night, trying to fall asleep and I noticed something that I couldn't understand. It appeared (in my half-asleep state) that the FAR says not to operate an out-of-calibration transponder at all, and the FAR says to operate ^ Should say AIM it with altitude reporting off. On the face of it, the FAR would have the authority of law behind it. Any clarification? |
#3
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Jim Stewart wrote:
I was thumbing through the FAR/AIM last night, trying to fall asleep and I noticed something [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] FAR says not to operate an out-of-calibration transponder at all, and the FAR says to operate ^ Should say AIM it with altitude reporting off. On the face of it, the FAR would have the authority of law behind it. Any clarification? Since you didn't reference any particular passages, I'll take a blind stab at this one. There is an FAR that says you should not operate a transponder that has not had a certification within the last 24 months. While FARs don't have the authority of law, they do have the authority of regulation. I'm guessing that the AIM reference you're talking about is the one that refers to your turning off altitude reporting if ATC notes that the reported altitude differs from actual altitude. In that case, it's a temporary measure to allow ATC to contiue seeing your aircraft on their scope on that particular flight. You still need to get the problem checked out. You can't just keep flying around with the Mode/C turned off. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200709/1 |
#4
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JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote:
You can't just keep flying around with the Mode/C turned off. You can if you aren't in an area that requires Mode/C can't you? |
#5
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On 09/13/07 12:33, Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote: You can't just keep flying around with the Mode/C turned off. You can if you aren't in an area that requires Mode/C can't you? Have a look at FAR 91.215, especially paragraph (c): Transponder-on operation: "While in the airspace as specified in paragraph (b) of this section or in all controlled airspace, each person operating an aircraft equipped with an operable ATC transponder maintained in accordance with §91.413 of this part shall operate the transponder, including Mode C equipment if installed, and shall reply on the appropriate code or as assigned by ATC." Although paragraph (b) refers to the airspace where Mode C is required, I read the "or" in the above sentence to mean: "if you're in controlled airspace (A, B, C, D or E), and your transponder support Mode C, you must have Mode C turned on." -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane, USUA Ultralight Pilot Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#6
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
You can't just keep flying around with the Mode/C turned off. You can if you aren't in an area that requires Mode/C can't you? I guess it depends on how you interpret the letter of the law. I think it's clear that you're OK in class G airspace. FAR 91.215(c) says you should have it on (with mode C) in all controlled airspace if so equipped and operable. I suppose you could get out of the requirement by claiming that the mode C is not operable. In that case, I guess you'd have to placard the unit in accordance with the regs. Here's FAR 91.215(c) : "Transponder-on operation. While in the airspace as specified in paragraph (b) of this section or in all controlled airspace, each person operating an aircraft equipped with an operable ATC transponder maintained in accordance with Sec. 91.413 of this part shall operate the transponder, including Mode C equipment if installed, and shall reply on the appropriate code or as assigned by ATC." In real life, if you're operating in an area where Mode C is required and your Mode C isn't working, you will often get a letter from the FSDO asking what you did to rectify the situation. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200709/1 |
#7
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JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote:
Gig 601XL Builder wrote: You can't just keep flying around with the Mode/C turned off. You can if you aren't in an area that requires Mode/C can't you? I guess it depends on how you interpret the letter of the law. I think it's clear that you're OK in class G airspace. FAR 91.215(c) says you should have it on (with mode C) in all controlled airspace if so equipped and operable. I suppose you could get out of the requirement by claiming that the mode C is not operable. In that case, I guess you'd have to placard the unit in accordance with the regs. Here's FAR 91.215(c) : "Transponder-on operation. While in the airspace as specified in paragraph (b) of this section or in all controlled airspace, each person operating an aircraft equipped with an operable ATC transponder maintained in accordance with Sec. 91.413 of this part shall operate the transponder, including Mode C equipment if installed, and shall reply on the appropriate code or as assigned by ATC." In real life, if you're operating in an area where Mode C is required and your Mode C isn't working, you will often get a letter from the FSDO asking what you did to rectify the situation. Class G is what I was wondering about. With an out-of-calibration transponder in G is it better to leave it off or put it in normal mode? |
#8
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Jim Stewart wrote:
Class G is what I was wondering about. With an out-of-calibration transponder in G is it better to leave it off or put it in normal mode? If all you are flying in is class G then it really doesn't matter. ATC probably won't be even seeing you on radar in class G and you won't be talking to them anyway. |
#9
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in Class G airspace, ATC radar in most cases won't illuminate your
transponder, so it won't reply anyway, so as far as ATC is concerned it probably doesn't matter if you have it on or not. However, TCAS equipped aircraft will interrogate your transponder, so to be visible to them you might want to keep it on mode3/A so that it doesn't report a misleading altitude but does return a reply. |
#10
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![]() If all you are flying in is class G then it really doesn't matter. ATC probably won't be even seeing you on radar in class G and you won't be talking to them anyway. There is a lot of Class G out here in the west... and a lot of it in radar coverage.. B |
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