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PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display
Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 |
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On Oct 21, 10:36*am, "kirk.stant" wrote:
PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 Very very few right now - if you can find better information I'd love to know. UPS and a few others are working on equipping faster than most. There is very little reason for biz jets to equip. UPS and some others can argue for playing with this to look at scheduling, future in-trail separation benefits etc. and UPS has been a leader in ADS-B technology for a while -- their Louisville airport hub has ADS-B ground station deployment early for this reason. Biz jets and others there are very few argument for being an early user. The FAA recently set the pretty draconian requirement for every ADS-B data-out installation to be done via an STC, and specifically forbade 337/field approval. So even with full TSO approval of the WAAS GPS and ADS-B data-out device they require each installation type (airframe + equipment combo) to have an STC. This is supposed to go away eventually, but who knows when. This single requirement will stifle ADS-B data-out deployment in GA aircraft. This impediment to ADS-B data-out deployment is a double whammy in the USA since you need ADS-B data-out for TIS-B and ADS-R to work effectively (not that the infrastructure to do those are widely deployed yet they will be over the next few years). You've got to scratch you head with the whole FAA handling of ADS-B. The only think I think we can say with confidence is that by 2020 most aircraft that today have transponders will have ADS-B data-out. I expect many of those will be 1090ES (but will see). Of course there is some finite probability the wheels could come off the bus along the way. Darryl |
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On Oct 21, 11:30*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Oct 21, 10:36*am, "kirk.stant" wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 Very very few right now - if you can find better information I'd love to know. UPS and a few others are working on equipping faster than most. There is very little reason for biz jets to equip. UPS and some others can argue for playing with this to look at scheduling, future in-trail separation benefits etc. and UPS has been a leader in ADS-B technology for a while -- their Louisville airport hub has ADS-B ground station deployment early for this reason. Biz jets and others there are very few argument for being an early user. The FAA recently set the pretty draconian requirement for every ADS-B data-out installation to be done via an STC, and specifically forbade 337/field approval. So even with full TSO approval of the WAAS GPS and ADS-B data-out device they require each installation type (airframe + equipment combo) to have an STC. This is supposed to go away eventually, but who knows when. This single requirement will stifle ADS-B data-out deployment in GA aircraft. This impediment to ADS-B data-out deployment is a double whammy in the USA since you need ADS-B data-out for TIS-B and ADS-R to work effectively (not that the infrastructure to do those are widely deployed yet they will be over the next few years). You've got to scratch you head with the whole FAA handling of ADS-B. The only think I think we can say with confidence is that by 2020 most aircraft that today have transponders will have ADS-B data-out. I expect many of those will be 1090ES (but will see). Of course there is some finite probability the wheels could come off the bus along the way. Darryl One thing I meant to include was that Europe has a 2015 mandate for 1090ES data-out for existing heavy aircraft (5,700kg) and a 2011 mandate for new aircraft (,5700kg) - so that likely gets many international carriers to equip earlier than they otherwise might for the USA alone. So that will drive some of the fleet flying in the USA to be equipped. Not that it is likely the international B767/B777/B747 type airliners that we get near most of the time with gliders in the USA. Darryl |
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On Oct 21, 2:30*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Oct 21, 10:36*am, "kirk.stant" wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 Very very few right now - if you can find better information I'd love to know. UPS and a few others are working on equipping faster than most. There is very little reason for biz jets to equip. UPS and some others can argue for playing with this to look at scheduling, future in-trail separation benefits etc. and UPS has been a leader in ADS-B technology for a while -- their Louisville airport hub has ADS-B ground station deployment early for this reason. Biz jets and others there are very few argument for being an early user. The FAA recently set the pretty draconian requirement for every ADS-B data-out installation to be done via an STC, and specifically forbade 337/field approval. So even with full TSO approval of the WAAS GPS and ADS-B data-out device they require each installation type (airframe + equipment combo) to have an STC. This is supposed to go away eventually, but who knows when. This single requirement will stifle ADS-B data-out deployment in GA aircraft. This impediment to ADS-B data-out deployment is a double whammy in the USA since you need ADS-B data-out for TIS-B and ADS-R to work effectively (not that the infrastructure to do those are widely deployed yet they will be over the next few years). You've got to scratch you head with the whole FAA handling of ADS-B. The only think I think we can say with confidence is that by 2020 most aircraft that today have transponders will have ADS-B data-out. I expect many of those will be 1090ES (but will see). Of course there is some finite probability the wheels could come off the bus along the way. Darryl Anyone seen this little jewel, seems there is a new report out from the OIG that ADS-B will be far more expensive than the FAA has projected... FAA Report Number AV-2011-002 issued 10-12-2010 see dot.gov//library-item/5415 Like up to 30 for GA aircraft and 600K for airliners.... |
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On Oct 21, 6:47*pm, ray conlon wrote:
On Oct 21, 2:30*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Oct 21, 10:36*am, "kirk.stant" wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 Very very few right now - if you can find better information I'd love to know. UPS and a few others are working on equipping faster than most. There is very little reason for biz jets to equip. UPS and some others can argue for playing with this to look at scheduling, future in-trail separation benefits etc. and UPS has been a leader in ADS-B technology for a while -- their Louisville airport hub has ADS-B ground station deployment early for this reason. Biz jets and others there are very few argument for being an early user. The FAA recently set the pretty draconian requirement for every ADS-B data-out installation to be done via an STC, and specifically forbade 337/field approval. So even with full TSO approval of the WAAS GPS and ADS-B data-out device they require each installation type (airframe + equipment combo) to have an STC. This is supposed to go away eventually, but who knows when. This single requirement will stifle ADS-B data-out deployment in GA aircraft. This impediment to ADS-B data-out deployment is a double whammy in the USA since you need ADS-B data-out for TIS-B and ADS-R to work effectively (not that the infrastructure to do those are widely deployed yet they will be over the next few years). You've got to scratch you head with the whole FAA handling of ADS-B. The only think I think we can say with confidence is that by 2020 most aircraft that today have transponders will have ADS-B data-out. I expect many of those will be 1090ES (but will see). Of course there is some finite probability the wheels could come off the bus along the way. Darryl Anyone seen this little jewel, seems there is a new report out from the OIG that ADS-B will be far more expensive than the FAA has projected... FAA Report Number AV-2011-002 issued 10-12-2010 *see dot.gov//library-item/5415 Like up to 30 for GA aircraft and 600K for airliners.... How about these gems? http://www.aviationtoday.com/webinars/2010-1118.html I guess the price of the webinar is to keep the riff raff out. I don't suppose they will be carrying TCAS or ADS-B any time soon either. Frank Whiteley |
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On Oct 22, 1:49*am, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Oct 21, 6:47*pm, ray conlon wrote: On Oct 21, 2:30*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Oct 21, 10:36*am, "kirk.stant" wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 Very very few right now - if you can find better information I'd love to know. UPS and a few others are working on equipping faster than most. There is very little reason for biz jets to equip. UPS and some others can argue for playing with this to look at scheduling, future in-trail separation benefits etc. and UPS has been a leader in ADS-B technology for a while -- their Louisville airport hub has ADS-B ground station deployment early for this reason. Biz jets and others there are very few argument for being an early user. The FAA recently set the pretty draconian requirement for every ADS-B data-out installation to be done via an STC, and specifically forbade 337/field approval. So even with full TSO approval of the WAAS GPS and ADS-B data-out device they require each installation type (airframe + equipment combo) to have an STC. This is supposed to go away eventually, but who knows when. This single requirement will stifle ADS-B data-out deployment in GA aircraft. This impediment to ADS-B data-out deployment is a double whammy in the USA since you need ADS-B data-out for TIS-B and ADS-R to work effectively (not that the infrastructure to do those are widely deployed yet they will be over the next few years). You've got to scratch you head with the whole FAA handling of ADS-B. The only think I think we can say with confidence is that by 2020 most aircraft that today have transponders will have ADS-B data-out. I expect many of those will be 1090ES (but will see). Of course there is some finite probability the wheels could come off the bus along the way. Darryl Anyone seen this little jewel, seems there is a new report out from the OIG that ADS-B will be far more expensive than the FAA has projected... FAA Report Number AV-2011-002 issued 10-12-2010 *see dot.gov//library-item/5415 Like up to 30 for GA aircraft and 600K for airliners.... How about these gems? http://www.aviationtoday.com/webinars/2010-1118.html I guess the price of the webinar is to keep the riff raff out. I don't suppose they will be carrying TCAS or ADS-B any time soon either. Frank Whiteley- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No its like the WASS/GPS bird that got fried by a solar flair April 3rd. and they don't have the money to build a new replacement and launch it into orbit..maybe the Chicoms will be nice enought to launch it for us (for a price I am sure) since we don't have the booster to put new birds in orbit... The FAA has been very quiet about the fact they lost the WASS west of the Rockies.... |
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On 10/21/2010 1:36 PM, kirk.stant wrote:
PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 If PowerFLARM was a full blown ADS-B IN/OUT system, you would be able to see all transponder equipped aircraft using the TIS-B data transmitted from your local ADS-B ground station. But...... -- Mike Schumann |
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On Oct 22, 6:55*am, Mike Schumann
wrote: On 10/21/2010 1:36 PM, kirk.stant wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 If PowerFLARM was a full blown ADS-B IN/OUT system, you would be able to see all transponder equipped aircraft using the TIS-B data transmitted from your local ADS-B ground station. *But...... -- Mike Schumann The question was about airliners and you will not need ADS-B data out to see the 1090ES data out from airliners or many of the other aircraft who (fly above FL180 and so) are all required to equip with 1090ES by 2020. PowerFLARM will do that just fine out of the box. For one I am glad that Flarm and Butterfly are not stupid enough to go down that rathole. If you want 1090ES data-out you add a Mode S transponder. There are many reasons to separate the functions in two boxes, starting with there is a large market worldwide already for stand alone Mode S transponders and by decoupling the highly regulated data-out functions from the data-in functions allows innovative companies to develop innovative products--just like PowerFLARM. And in most countries you do not need ADS-B data out to see other ADS-B data out equipped aircraft - only in the USA. Vendors are going to optimize products for a worldwide market? I seems Mike Schumann thinks the answer to everything is more complexity... and this is yet another awful suggestion. And if PowerFLARM had 1090ES data-out it would cost thousands of dollars more plus likely require a certified GPS (the FAA may have closed off any chance of not requiring this by forcing STC approval-experimental gliders might still get away eith this?) that currently costs thousands plus for the forseablefuture require an STC approval for each glider type it is installed in |
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On 10/22/2010 10:30 AM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Oct 22, 6:55 am, Mike wrote: On 10/21/2010 1:36 PM, kirk.stant wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 If PowerFLARM was a full blown ADS-B IN/OUT system, you would be able to see all transponder equipped aircraft using the TIS-B data transmitted from your local ADS-B ground station. But...... -- Mike Schumann The question was about airliners and you will not need ADS-B data out to see the 1090ES data out from airliners or many of the other aircraft who (fly above FL180 and so) are all required to equip with 1090ES by 2020. PowerFLARM will do that just fine out of the box. For one I am glad that Flarm and Butterfly are not stupid enough to go down that rathole. If you want 1090ES data-out you add a Mode S transponder. There are many reasons to separate the functions in two boxes, starting with there is a large market worldwide already for stand alone Mode S transponders and by decoupling the highly regulated data-out functions from the data-in functions allows innovative companies to develop innovative products--just like PowerFLARM. And in most countries you do not need ADS-B data out to see other ADS-B data out equipped aircraft - only in the USA. Vendors are going to optimize products for a worldwide market? I seems Mike Schumann thinks the answer to everything is more complexity... and this is yet another awful suggestion. And if PowerFLARM had 1090ES data-out it would cost thousands of dollars more plus likely require a certified GPS (the FAA may have closed off any chance of not requiring this by forcing STC approval-experimental gliders might still get away eith this?) that currently costs thousands plus for the forseablefuture require an STC approval for each glider type it is installed in I think the answer to everything is more complexity????? Adding a 3rd collision avoidance technology is more complexity. If I was running the the FAA, we'd have a single ADS-B technology period. That's simplicity. It seems that Darryl has consumed so much Koolaid that he's starting to hallucinate. -- Mike Schumann |
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On Oct 22, 7:34*am, Mike Schumann
wrote: On 10/22/2010 10:30 AM, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Oct 22, 6:55 am, Mike wrote: On 10/21/2010 1:36 PM, kirk.stant wrote: PowerFLARM is supposed to have the capability to detect and display Mode S 1090ES position data on its display. *How many aircraft (Airliners, bizjets?) currently send out 1090ES data? This is for the US, of course. Kirk 66 If PowerFLARM was a full blown ADS-B IN/OUT system, you would be able to see all transponder equipped aircraft using the TIS-B data transmitted from your local ADS-B ground station. *But...... -- Mike Schumann The question was about airliners and you will not need ADS-B data out to see the 1090ES data out from airliners or many of the other aircraft who (fly above FL180 and so) are all required to equip with 1090ES by 2020. PowerFLARM will do that just fine out of the box. For one I am glad that Flarm and Butterfly are not stupid enough to go down that rathole. If you want 1090ES data-out you add a Mode S transponder. There are many reasons to separate the functions in two boxes, starting with there is a large market worldwide already for stand alone Mode S transponders and by decoupling the highly regulated data-out functions from the data-in functions allows innovative companies to develop innovative products--just like PowerFLARM. And in most countries you do not need ADS-B data out to see other ADS-B data out equipped aircraft - only in the USA. Vendors are going to optimize products for a worldwide market? I seems Mike Schumann thinks the answer to everything is more complexity... and this is yet another awful suggestion. And if PowerFLARM had 1090ES data-out it would cost thousands of dollars more plus likely require a certified GPS (the FAA may have closed off any chance of not requiring this by forcing STC approval-experimental gliders might still get away eith this?) that currently costs thousands plus for the forseablefuture require an STC approval for each glider type it is installed in I think the answer to everything is more complexity????? *Adding a 3rd collision avoidance technology is more complexity. *If I was running the the FAA, we'd have a single ADS-B technology period. *That's simplicity.. It seems that Darryl has consumed so much Koolaid that he's starting to hallucinate. -- Mike Schumann Mike I focus here on trying to point out what technologies will do and what they won't and trying to help pilots navigate the reality of a complex mess of technology. You seem to spend a lot of time dreaming about what might be if only... Regardless of how impractical or unlikely for practical market reasons they might be. The collision concern for most glider pilots is I believe glider- glider risk. The clear, well proven and logical choice for helping reduce that risk is for pilots to deploy FLARM asap and stop dreaming about ADS-B UAT vaporware for glider-glider collision avoidance. I think folks here can look at the mess around ADS-B right now and realize that the minimal complexity path to solve that problem is PowerFLARM (which also provides PCAS and a future path to ADS-B). If airliners are a concern then add a transponder (right now-it also is simple, straightforward and just works). Darryl |
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