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#1
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Has anyone out there experienced transponder problems with one controller
but not with a subsequent controller after a hand-of? For the third time yesterday (with the other two occurring over the past year or so) a NY Approach controller informed us that our transponder was only responding with a squawk and altitude once every couple of minutes or so. However, upon hand-off to another controller (who I believe was in the same facility), it was rock-solid. This has happened a couple of times before--all with NY Approach--where one guy said our xponder was inop and the next guy said it was fine. I don't think it was a warm-up issue since the last time it was on the descent from a long flight. Any ideas? I don't want to send-off my transponder for service unless I'm reasonably sure that the problem could be with the box. Marco Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#2
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Yes, I've had this happen. I don't understand all the physics behind it
but the transponder replies after a set amount of time. Apparently, if that time is off a variety of variables could cause certain controllers to have problems (perhaps distance from transmit station). In any case, an hour in the avionics shop fixed the problem for good. -Robert |
#3
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What did the shop do? Adjusted settings? Replaced tubes? Both?
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... Yes, I've had this happen. I don't understand all the physics behind it but the transponder replies after a set amount of time. Apparently, if that time is off a variety of variables could cause certain controllers to have problems (perhaps distance from transmit station). In any case, an hour in the avionics shop fixed the problem for good. -Robert Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#4
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They just did some sort of adjustment. It wasn't expensive.
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#5
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Likely they did nuttin other than a normal check out for actual
failure... The problem is often with TRACON receivers not the transponder... In my locality there is an area about five miles across where many aircraft are told they need to reset their transponder... Having flown this area for decades, when told that by the controller while near this area I simply reply, "roger that 5 7 pop", and do nothing... Sure enough 3 or 4 miles later he informs me "Mode C received"... I reply, "roger that 5 7 pop"... denny |
#6
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Marco Leon wrote:
Has anyone out there experienced transponder problems with one controller but not with a subsequent controller after a hand-of? For the third time yesterday (with the other two occurring over the past year or so) a NY Approach controller informed us that our transponder was only responding with a squawk and altitude once every couple of minutes or so. However, upon hand-off to another controller (who I believe was in the same facility), it was rock-solid. This has happened a couple of times before--all with NY Approach--where one guy said our xponder was inop and the next guy said it was fine. I don't think it was a warm-up issue since the last time it was on the descent from a long flight. Any ideas? I don't want to send-off my transponder for service unless I'm reasonably sure that the problem could be with the box. If it's an old KT-76/KT-78 it may be slightly off-frequency. Other makes of similar design age are also suspectible. One SSR (also called an interrogator) may have a wider tolerance to incoming response frequency than another. Of course, this line of thought needs that the controllers are looking at different SSR sensor stations. The frequency adjustment is simple. The transponder usually starts to drift off-frequency when the transmitter tube (valve in British) gets old. HTH -- Tauno Voipio tauno voipio (at) iki fi |
#7
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Likely they did nuttin other than a normal check out for actual failure...
No, they found something "out of phase". Since then I"ve not had a problem. If the radio is out of phase some ATC's will have problems, others will not. Best solution is to fix the radio. |
#8
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That sounds about like what my avionics shop said. I clearly remember
them saying something about the transponder being slightly out of phase. |
#9
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I have heard about problems where the transponder appeared inop at one
class D, but was good at the next a few miles away. Apparently the transponder's frequency was slightly off and some ground equipment could read it, while the other ignored it. That there should be an issue simply because a different controller has you on his screen sounds odd. As others have suggested recalibrating your transponder (or replacing worn out tubes) should make sure that it operates on exactly the right frequency. |
#10
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"Denny" wrote in message
oups.com... Likely they did nuttin other than a normal check out for actual failure... The problem is often with TRACON receivers not the transponder... In my locality there is an area about five miles across where many aircraft are told they need to reset their transponder... Having flown this area for decades, when told that by the controller while near this area I simply reply, "roger that 5 7 pop", and do nothing... Sure enough 3 or 4 miles later he informs me "Mode C received"... I reply, "roger that 5 7 pop"... Now THAT's interesting. I have a suspicion that that may be the case. However, Gary's experience as well as other's I've seen on Goggle searches point to at least a partial blame on the box. Maybe certain radars won't see weak signals? Marco Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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