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Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5
MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...998&TYP E=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. |
#2
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Jim Logajan wrote:
Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." More news of that type just in: "People of Earth, your attention, please. This is Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz of the Galactic Hyperspace Planning Council. As you will no doubt be aware, the plans for development of the outlying regions of the Galaxy require the building of a hyperspatial express route through your star system. And regrettably, your planet is one of those scheduled for demolition. The process will take slightly less than two of your Earth minutes. Thank you." .... "There's no point in acting surprised about it. All the planning charts and demolition orders have been on display at your local planning department in Alpha Centauri for 50 of your Earth years, so you’ve had plenty of time to lodge any formal complaint and it's far too late to start making a fuss about it now. ... What do you mean you’ve never been to Alpha Centauri? Oh, for heaven’s sake, mankind, it's only four light years away, you know. I’m sorry, but if you can't be bothered to take an interest in local affairs, that's your own lookout. Energise the demolition beams." .... "I don't know, apathetic bloody planet, I've no sympathy at all." |
#3
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Jim Logajan wrote:
Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...998&TYP E=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. The basis for banning the sale of ordinary 121.5 ELTs (one exception) is that there is no sattelite facility to listen on this frequency and (apparently) the uch better success rate of locating 406.0 406.1 ELTs. It seems evident that any ELT which can offer an emission which is listened for (on 406.0/ 406.1) will be encouraged. Brian W |
#4
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brian whatcott wrote:
Jim Logajan wrote: Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...E=47&PART=87&S ECTION=195&YEAR=1998&TYPE=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. The basis for banning the sale of ordinary 121.5 ELTs (one exception) is that there is no sattelite facility to listen on this frequency and (apparently) the uch better success rate of locating 406.0 406.1 ELTs. They didn't just ban the sale, they have also banned all "use." I quoted the regulation in its (brief) entirety. The one "exception" appears to exist as an official interpretation. (Satellites were never the only entities that listened for 121.5 ELT transmissions anyway.) It seems evident that any ELT which can offer an emission which is listened for (on 406.0/ 406.1) will be encouraged. The regulation doesn't encourage 406, it mandates it. By August 15. |
#5
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Jim Logajan wrote:
Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...998&TYP E=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. Yep, this was proposed in 2006 and nobody involved seemed to notice. What most likely will happen is the FCC will go ahead with the ban on the certification, manufacture, importation, or sale of such ELTs and delay the ban on use to some future data, which will likely be the same date the FAA eventually mandates everyone get a 406 MHz ELT. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#7
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Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...E=47&PART=87&S ECTION=195&YEAR=1998&TYPE=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. Yep, this was proposed in 2006 and nobody involved seemed to notice. It looks like the aviation alphabet groups were caught unaware - at least with the nearness of the effective date: http://www.aopa.org/advocacy/article...100621elt.html http://www.eaa.org/news/2010/2010-06-21_conflicting.asp What most likely will happen is the FCC will go ahead with the ban on the certification, manufacture, importation, or sale of such ELTs and delay the ban on use to some future data, which will likely be the same date the FAA eventually mandates everyone get a 406 MHz ELT. I'm inclined to think they'll make no change. I've already seen a distributer of ELTs say they were caught by surprise too. You'd think they would be more astute to these things. I don't know if 121.5-only ELTs are still being sold or in sales pipelines (looks like it, though,) but they would now only be useful as bricks even if "use" is still allowed. Given the brevity of the regulation and speed of implementation, the cynic in me thinks someone in the FCC has a pecuniary interest in seeing the price of 406 Mhz ELTs temporarily spike as demand outstrips available supply. Speed of implementation? There is stuff in there proposed 1998 and the ELT stuff was proposed in 2006. The bottom line is nobody in aviation was paying any attention to what the FCC has been proposing to do for the past twelve years. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#8
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#9
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Jim Logajan wrote:
wrote: Speed of implementation? There is stuff in there proposed 1998 and the ELT stuff was proposed in 2006. The time period within which a proposal is placed before the public for consideration is distinct from the grace period between when a regulation is announced and when it becomes effective. I'm not sure why you think there should be a correlation. The point is that there has been at least 4 years for people to point out the problems with the proposal and fix the final rule. Nobody did until the final rule was announced. The bottom line here is everyone in aviation, including the so called aviation news sources, dropped the ball by paying no attention what so ever to proposed FCC regulations effecting aviation. At least a few people are paying attention to what the EPA is doing which could mean the end of 100LL. Aviation is effected by the rules of more than the FAA. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#10
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On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 18:52:32 -0500, Jim Logajan
wrote: brian whatcott wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: Within 60 days of being published in the Federal Registry, use of 121.5 MHz ELTs will be forbidden by a re-write and re-title of 47 CFR section 87.195: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-10-103A1.pdf "The manufacture, importation, sale or use of 121.5 MHz ELTs is prohibited." The original text of 47 CFR section 87.195 may be read he http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-...E=47&PART=87&S ECTION=195&YEAR=1998&TYPE=PDF Two issues: 1) There are ELTs that support both 121.5 and 406 MHz, yet the one-sentence regulation doesn't acknowledge their existence, so it can be interpreted to mean their use too is prohibited. 2) There are going to be a lot of seriously annoyed and ****ed owners of "older" equipment. The basis for banning the sale of ordinary 121.5 ELTs (one exception) is that there is no sattelite facility to listen on this frequency and (apparently) the uch better success rate of locating 406.0 406.1 ELTs. They didn't just ban the sale, they have also banned all "use." I quoted the regulation in its (brief) entirety. The one "exception" appears to exist as an official interpretation. (Satellites were never the only entities that listened for 121.5 ELT transmissions anyway.) It seems evident that any ELT which can offer an emission which is listened for (on 406.0/ 406.1) will be encouraged. The regulation doesn't encourage 406, it mandates it. By August 15. Jim I dont know why you object so strongly. the new 406 machines are encoded so that the rescue people can look up who's elt has gone off. this allows a phone call to find out if the elt is in expected use or just tipped over in the hangar. the elt also sends the gps coords so the rescue effort isnt fly to an area and do a hit and miss grid search, which may take ages, it is to fly directly to the accident scene. the reason why 121.5 elt's are banned is that the receivers are still actually in place and the sar people cant tell if they are just a nuisance from a thrown out unit or someone desperately in need of help. by banning their use the signals can then be ignored as spurious. Stealth Pilot |
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