![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
This is the relevant paragraph from the link Casey offered:
When ELTs were mandated in 1973, most GA aircraft were equipped with an ELT that transmits on the 121.5 MHz frequency, the designated international distress frequency. The original ELTs were manufactured to the specifications of an FAA technical standard order (TSO-C91A) and have an activation rate of less than 25 percent in actual crashes and a 97 percent false-alarm rate. In 1985, a new TSO-C91A ELT was developed, which substantially reduces or eliminates many problems with the earlier model. The TSO-C91A provides improved performance and reliability (with an activation rate of 73 percent in actual crashes) at a reasonable cost to users ($200-$500 including installation). Since then, an even more advanced model of ELT has been developed - the C126 ELT (406 MHz). This newest model activates 81-83 percent of the time, but the current cost is $1,500 or more per unit, not including installation. Please note that these are AOPA rendered statistics. AOPA has a very strong position against mandatory use of the 406 MHz units based on member financial impact. (In fact, little of AOPA writes should be accepted at face value. They are an advocacy group, and not always in the best interests of the majority of pilots.) Therefore, they have painted a picture that shows little value in moving from the older technology to the new and have omitted some important facts regarding time to acquisiton of signal, ability to verify whether the signal is an actual emergency, accuracy of first pass position resolution, reduction in false alerts, and time to arrival of emergency personnel on scene. They do, however, acknowledge that as of 2009, satellites will no longer monitor the old bandwidths. This means no repsonse unless someone watched you go in. The rhetoric used by the AOPA is interesting. Note the lack of parallelism between the first two examples. A false alarm rate in C91A models is not cited. This is always a sign of a potentially flawed argument, typically presented intentionally to drive the reader to specific conclusion. In response to Casey's point, I'll repeat my earlier concerns that put me on the unpopular side of this discussion: the units aren't for our safety but for the safety of those who might one day have to come looking for us. Search and rescue is a dangerous business. Consider Utah skiers killed in avalanches this past weekend. NONE wore beacons while skiing off piste. That has put many dozens of searchers in harms way for much longer than was necessary. Finally, recognize that we are talking about racing. Pilots typically fly more aggressively, cover larger distances at high speeds, often traversing unlandable terrain. Organizers are asking racers to make their jobs a little easier. For the cost-conscious, they can satisfy the requrest for under $300. For the value-concscious, $1K will provide an even greater degree of assurance. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Third Military-Civil MAC Jan. 18, 2005 | Larry Dighera | Piloting | 37 | February 14th 05 03:21 PM |
millionaire on the Internet... in weeks! | Malcolm Austin | Soaring | 0 | November 5th 04 11:14 PM |
The Internet public meeting on National Air Tour Standards begins Feb. 23 at 9 a.m. | Larry Dighera | Piloting | 0 | February 22nd 04 03:58 PM |
FLASH! U.S.A. Rules Committee to Address Rules Complexity? | SoarPoint | Soaring | 1 | February 3rd 04 02:36 AM |
New SRA Site - New 2003 Rules Minutes and 2004 Rules Summary | Ken Kochanski | Soaring | 0 | December 17th 03 03:38 AM |