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Last issue of AW&ST has article stating "Following a three-year delay
to correct software problems, the FAA has commissioned the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) to refine GPS guidance for en route and approaches".......................... "It will take years for the FAA to design and certify approaches to runways at the current rate of about 300 per year." .................. "by using WAAS and GPS as the sole means of navigation, aircraft can operate lower and still be safely above terrain and obstacles."........ "Dan Hanlon, FAA's WAAS program manager, emphasized that the two key benefits that WAAS has over GPS are vertical guidance and improved availability of signals".............. "the FAA has spent $886 million on WAAS to date" .................... So now you know ![]() Big John. |
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Big John wrote:
"the FAA has spent $886 million on WAAS to date" .................... Gaaah! And the way they're planning things, I'm sure lower mins won't be available until the airport sinks a million or so into an approach lighting system of sorts. Help me out here, fellow campers. IIRC I read a Wally Roberts interview on AVWEB which referred to the cost of an ILS (minus approach lights) as being about $1.5 million dollars. And it's fair to consider "minus approach lights" because the airport will need to come up with an ALS etc even w/ WAAS. So....how many airports are there in the country? Looks to me as though the FAA could have installed ILS at about 500 GA airports for the cost of WAAS, and people would be flying 'em today Wonder how that compares to the number of US airports where other factors (obstructions, terrain, rwy length etc) are otherwise compatible w/ a precision- type approach. Oy. Your tax dollars at work. Cheers, Sydney |
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One of the advantages of WAAS is that it can provide approaches with
vertical guidance to minimums that are better than non-precision approaches but worse that an ILS *without* the full ALS, etc. At my home airport that could often make the difference between missing the NDB approach and going to the nearest airport with an ILS or landing and driving my own car home. The idea being you can get a whole lot more utility for no additional costs for ground-based infrastructure. Dave Reinhart Sydney Hoeltzli wrote: Big John wrote: "the FAA has spent $886 million on WAAS to date" .................... Gaaah! And the way they're planning things, I'm sure lower mins won't be available until the airport sinks a million or so into an approach lighting system of sorts. Help me out here, fellow campers. IIRC I read a Wally Roberts interview on AVWEB which referred to the cost of an ILS (minus approach lights) as being about $1.5 million dollars. And it's fair to consider "minus approach lights" because the airport will need to come up with an ALS etc even w/ WAAS. So....how many airports are there in the country? Looks to me as though the FAA could have installed ILS at about 500 GA airports for the cost of WAAS, and people would be flying 'em today Wonder how that compares to the number of US airports where other factors (obstructions, terrain, rwy length etc) are otherwise compatible w/ a precision- type approach. Oy. Your tax dollars at work. Cheers, Sydney |
#5
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In a previous article, Sydney Hoeltzli said:
So....how many airports are there in the country? There are 5026 public airports and 8906 private airports in the FAA database. Also 10 private and 1 public balloonport, 25 private and 4 public gliderport, 5261 private and 78 public heliports, 282 private and 201 public seaplane bases, 85 private and 3 public STOLports, and 129 private and 6 public ultralight fields. -- Paul Tomblin , not speaking for anybody SCSI is *NOT* magic. There are *fundamental technical reasons* why it is necessary to sacrifice a young goat to your SCSI chain now and then. |
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In article , Sydney Hoeltzli
wrote: Looks to me as though the FAA could have installed ILS at about 500 GA airports for the cost of WAAS, and people would be flying 'em today There are 40 ILS frequencies. Thus, frequency management is a "challenge." There are very tough siting criteria for installation of ILS, especially the GS. Some airports that could get WAAS or LAAS approaches can't have ILS. -- Bob Noel |
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David Reinhart wrote:
One of the advantages of WAAS is that it can provide approaches with vertical guidance to minimums that are better than non-precision approaches but worse that an ILS *without* the full ALS, etc. At my home airport that could often make the difference between missing the NDB approach and going to the nearest airport with an ILS or landing and driving my own car home. Well, it depends upon the airport of course, but around here the above frequently describes what you get w/ a non-precision GPS approach. For example UNO (West Plains MO), the VOR 36 will get you to 672 agl; the GPS 36 will get you to 372 agl (what a GPS approach with a clean obstruction path can do for ya; in the other direction it's only 412). The idea being you can get a whole lot more utility for no additional costs for ground-based infrastructure. What minimums would an ILS with no ALS get you? a WAAS approach? Even if it's down to 200 AGL, is 172 ft worth $886 million? Holy cow, and I'm a big fan of GPS approaches! Cheers, Sydney |
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On Tue, 22 Jul 2003 00:44:30 GMT, Sydney Hoeltzli
wrote: Paul Tomblin wrote: There are 5026 public airports Thanks Paul! Any way to tell how many of 'em already have ILS? In theory, I suppose the $886 million which could have put ILS at another 10% of the public airports, will enable nice low approach minimums at many more. But I'm wondering how many of those other airports just won't meet the TERPS criteria for a lower approach, and won't gain much from WAAS. Maybe I'm being too negative here, I dunno. Cheers, Sydney I have a flying buddy who has reason to be informed about big vacuum tubes. The other day, we were talking about LORAN and he told me the feds had already stopped ordering new tubes and were working through their spares. We didn't talk about VHF, so I don't know if anything similar is true for VOR/ILS, but I imagine the same philosophy holds. It makes sense. I was talking to another buddy who sells obsolete MIL-SPEC ICs for old but still-in-use military systems. He reckons the current premium on these parts is around a thousand percent, and will only go higher until the systems are replaced with newer ones that use commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) parts or the stock of old ICs is exhausted. So using the WAAS money for new ILSs would probably have been a short-sighted economy. I dunno if that makes you feel any better. Don |
#9
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KHYX already has an NDB, and a GPS approach, and a VOR-A off of KMBS 13
miles away... And now, drum roll we are getting an ILS... Uncle Sugar is sweet... Denny "Sydney Hoeltzli" wrote in message ... David Reinhart wrote: One of the advantages of WAAS is that it can provide approaches with vertical guidance to minimums that are better than non-precision approaches but worse that an ILS *without* the full ALS, etc. At my home airport that could often make the difference between missing the NDB approach and going to the nearest airport with an ILS or landing and driving my own car home. Well, it depends upon the airport of course, but around here the above frequently describes what you get w/ a non-precision GPS approach. For example UNO (West Plains MO), the VOR 36 will get you to 672 agl; the GPS 36 will get you to 372 agl (what a GPS approach with a clean obstruction path can do for ya; in the other direction it's only 412). The idea being you can get a whole lot more utility for no additional costs for ground-based infrastructure. What minimums would an ILS with no ALS get you? a WAAS approach? Even if it's down to 200 AGL, is 172 ft worth $886 million? Holy cow, and I'm a big fan of GPS approaches! Cheers, Sydney |
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