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#1
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I was passenger on a $100 hamburger run.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBl3rbiwpTA Note, pilot is fresh on getting her VFR ticket and wanted to get some ground ops experience so she asked me to come along. She also thought it would be cool to capture her comms with ATC so I brought the recorder along. Little did we know how much "communicating" was in her future! Transponder acted silly on departure and video includes both ATC and in cockpit communications. Note, pilot is part owner of the C172 and I was totally clueless on the operation of her transponder. She just knew how to push the button to the squawk code. Durn thing is so automated it automatically goes to mode C on take off. My transponder is nothing as techie as what was installed in her plane. While she was flying the plane in the troubleshooting stage, I had pushed the standby button and saw no display indication that would show the transponder NOT sending the Mode C data. It still displayed the FL data. I would have expected that to disappear when I set it to standby or some indication that Mode C was shut off. Rather then troubleshoot in an area that was congested with ATC traffic and cause more chaos with an incorrectly reporting transponder, we figured to recycle to see if it would clear it up. Since it didn't clear it up, we canceled the flight following and turned off the transponder since we had cleared KJAN airspace. Reason for shutting it off was I was afraid we would be seen as "unverified traffic" by center at 700 foot higher then what we really were. Whether these decisions were "procedurally correct" or not I don't know, but the safe outcome of the flight shows the success of the flight. I had asked the pilot what would she have done had she been by herself, and she said she would have returned back to Madison which in my eyes is as equally a good decision as mine to cancel flight following. I felt the pilot was incredibly composed considering the extra tasks tossed back at her. Certain things training sure never covers, and this would be one of them.... For those interested http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ru6p-5dP5D0 was when I was her second passenger just three months ago. As you can see, she has come a long way on handling an airplane. |
#2
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You do not mention the make and model of the transponder and I did not see
it in the video. The newer garmin (and others) transponders (if tied to a GPS) will automatically switch from STBY to ALT when a set ground speed is reached and return to STBY when it is slowed below that ground speed. It is possible to turn off ModeC and just squawk the code. It is very unusual for the altitude to miss report. BT "A Lieberma" wrote in message ... I was passenger on a $100 hamburger run. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBl3rbiwpTA Note, pilot is fresh on getting her VFR ticket and wanted to get some ground ops experience so she asked me to come along. She also thought it would be cool to capture her comms with ATC so I brought the recorder along. Little did we know how much "communicating" was in her future! Transponder acted silly on departure and video includes both ATC and in cockpit communications. Note, pilot is part owner of the C172 and I was totally clueless on the operation of her transponder. She just knew how to push the button to the squawk code. Durn thing is so automated it automatically goes to mode C on take off. My transponder is nothing as techie as what was installed in her plane. While she was flying the plane in the troubleshooting stage, I had pushed the standby button and saw no display indication that would show the transponder NOT sending the Mode C data. It still displayed the FL data. I would have expected that to disappear when I set it to standby or some indication that Mode C was shut off. Rather then troubleshoot in an area that was congested with ATC traffic and cause more chaos with an incorrectly reporting transponder, we figured to recycle to see if it would clear it up. Since it didn't clear it up, we canceled the flight following and turned off the transponder since we had cleared KJAN airspace. Reason for shutting it off was I was afraid we would be seen as "unverified traffic" by center at 700 foot higher then what we really were. Whether these decisions were "procedurally correct" or not I don't know, but the safe outcome of the flight shows the success of the flight. I had asked the pilot what would she have done had she been by herself, and she said she would have returned back to Madison which in my eyes is as equally a good decision as mine to cancel flight following. I felt the pilot was incredibly composed considering the extra tasks tossed back at her. Certain things training sure never covers, and this would be one of them.... For those interested http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ru6p-5dP5D0 was when I was her second passenger just three months ago. As you can see, she has come a long way on handling an airplane. |
#3
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On Nov 24, 7:38*pm, "BT" wrote:
You do not mention the make and model of the transponder and I did not see it in the video. The newer garmin (and others) transponders (if tied to a GPS) will automatically switch from STBY to ALT when a set ground speed is reached and return to STBY when it is slowed below that ground speed. It is possible to turn off ModeC and just squawk the code. It is very unusual for the altitude to miss report. BT, I don't remember the make and model myself, it was digital in that it was LCD looking screen rather then LED (green background) Googling the Garmin transponder product, buttons look the same, just don't know the model. Plane had a Garmin 430 but I don't think it was tied into the GPS. What you describe going from STBY to ALT worked as advertised and that was a first for me. The display showed FL 4100 which I took to be the reported mode C as that is what KJAN said. It was 700 foot off the altimeter reading. Altimeter was spot on when we verified ASOS altimeter to field elevation. What got me was I couldn't and didn't know what the standby buttoon was (or was not) doing since it didn't indicate no mode C, just continued to show the FL value. I assume STBY would stop the altitude reads??? |
#4
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On Nov 24, 8:35*pm, Clark wrote:
I just put a 327 in my aircraft - thanks for posting this 'cause it gave me an excuse to re-read the manual to verify that "On" is Mode A. I'll check it tomorrow for some visual feedback that Mode A is active vice Mode C. If you could post your findings, this will be helpful for me for the next time I fly in that plane, even as a passenger. I hope that I don't have to use this new found knowledge on a transponder that was "just fixed" but one just never knows. For something as benign as a transponder, when it hiccups, it can add workload to "flying the plane" :-) |
#6
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On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 04:30:06 GMT, Mike wrote:
This is SHUT THE **** UP, ASSHOLE. -- Bear Bottoms website: http://tr.im/1f9t |
#7
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On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 04:30:06 GMT, Mike wrote:
This is correct. I much prefer tight little boibutts. wow -- Bear Bottoms website: http://tr.im/1f9t -- Bear Bottoms Private Attorney General |
#8
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On Nov 24, 5:38*pm, "BT" wrote:
You do not mention the make and model of the transponder and I did not see it in the video. The newer garmin (and others) transponders (if tied to a GPS) will automatically switch from STBY to ALT when a set ground speed is reached and return to STBY when it is slowed below that ground speed. It is possible to turn off ModeC and just squawk the code. It is very unusual for the altitude to miss report. My guess is that its a new C-172 with the G1000 with the transponder just built in. There is a button along the bottom of the PFD that brings up transponder options. The transponder is no longer a separate unit. -Robert |
#9
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On Nov 24, 7:54*pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
My guess is that its a new C-172 with the G1000 with the transponder just built in. There is a button along the bottom of the PFD that brings up transponder options. The transponder is no longer a separate unit. -Robert Robert, One thing I can say, it wasn't the G1000 I put in my reply to BT it was a Garmin product looking at pics on Google. I hope instructors learn from this to take the time to teach how to stop the mode C. In my training, I never got such training. My transponder on my plane is the king analogue flaver, just off, stby, alt and test and turn knobs to squawk. Nothing to think about on my transponder but when you start getting digitalized with more options, maybe some basic transponder 101 with explanations on why you do what should be in order for flight training??? |
#10
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I have flown with a couple of Garmin 327's and now have two 330's. The
pressure altitude readout on the transponder comes (as I recall) from the blind encoder. It is obviously not connected to the altimeter setting. So, the encoder could be culprit for the mis reported altitude. I suppose there could be a difference in altitudes of 700 feet if the day was very non-standard (such as very cold, high pressure, etc). |
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