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In another thread today, the issue of Spot tracking performance came
up. In particular, it was pointed out that several pilots at the ongoing Senior's contest were experiencing long periods of missed tracking reports. This is an area that I have personally investigated recently. I gave a presentation at a recent Arizona Soaring Association meeting on the subject. As Tuno pointed out in that other thread, my presentation is available for download at my Wing Rigger web site at this page: http://www.wingrigger.com/wingrigger5_005.htm Unfortunately though, that presentation does not inform well without a lot of words to go with it. With that in mind, I will summarize some of the key points here. I did a bit of analysis and a lot of long duration experiments to arrive at some conclusions which I think are pertinent to our application in sailplanes. First, I think it is useful to understand that Spot is using the Globalstar constellation of 40 satellites orbiting in low Earth orbit - like 800 miles up. At any given point on the earth's surface at any given time, there will likely be two or three satellites in view and sometimes only one. Statistically, you must expect that the satellites that you need at any given time are going to be very near to the horizon. It would actually be quite rare to have a Globalstar satellite in a 45° cone overhead for example. If you want to have really good Spot performance, you must be thinking foremost about having a good line of sight to the horizon -- the whole horizon. This is not easy to achieve in a glider cockpit. The unit should be located high in the cockpit in order to have a good view of most of the horizon. It is also useful to understand a little bit about the antenna in the Spot unit. It is a patch antenna oriented horizontally as the unit sits flat on a table. This antenna transmits preferentially into its upper hemisphere and only weakly in the downward hemisphere direction. In long duration ground-based testing on top of the gazebo in the back yard of my house, I was able to demonstrate about 99% throughput performance with the unit oriented flat, logo side up. However, with the Spot unit turned upside down, throughput performance drops to about 65%. This gives an indication of the relative performance through the back lobes of the antenna. Ideally, you would always want to keep your Spot unit perfectly horizontal. Of course, gliders don't stay horizontal -- you have to bank them a good portion of the time. If you think about a Spot unit banked at 45°, what that really means is that about half of the horizon will be visible through the main lobe of the Spot patch antenna and about half of the horizon is viewed through its back lobes. Furthermore, when banked, a good portion of that weak back lobe energy will need to be transmitted through portions of the glider structure which will attenuate the RF energy even more. Carbon structures are much worse than fiberglass in that regard. This would certainly lead one to expect that a properly oriented and well-placed Spot unit would perform much better while cruising as opposed to tharmalling. To investigate that premise I analyzed two of my recent five hour flights. I used SeeYou to examine whether or not my glider was cruising or circling at Spot track transmission time stamps (which occur every 10 minutes) as well as whether I was cruising or circling at missing transmission times. That analysis showed that for my mounting position, I am getting 98% message throughput performance in cruise and 80% throughput while banked in climb. For a typical flight of 70% cruise, my aggregate throughput performance is about 93%. My mounting location is high behind the headrest in my glider. This was the best location that I could come up with from the point of view of track mode throughput. My mounting position does not give me access to the unit during flight; but that suits me fine. My concept is to turn it on and forget it. I have better things to worry about than pushing Spot buttons while I'm flying. I realize that many users are considering that it could be important to have the Spot unit mounted on their parachutes, and it might be. However, I don't suspect that there is any good place to put the gadget on a parachute without significantly diminishing the track mode throughput performance. I say this for three reasons: it will be very hard to maintain the Spot unit horizontally while attached to a parachute; spot unit will be necessarily lower in the glider cockpit so that there will be more airplane structured to attenuate signal; and the human body is a very good absorber of RF energy at Spot's 1.6 GHz transmit frequency, so close to your body will mean that a good portion of the horizon would become blocked out. As I weigh the likelihoods and the relative benefits of having spot with me during a parachute jump as compared to the benefits of having strong tracking mode performance, the latter wins hands-down. Having reliable tracking mode performance means that I can expect a real ELT- like benefit of having a feasible area to search for my glider should the day ever come that I'm not heard from. Actual ELTs don't work most of the time in crashes whereas Spot really will work. However, if I were having 30 minute Spot gaps, then the potential search area would become hopelessly large. It is primarily for that reason that I consider it to be especially important to have good track mode performance. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
SPOT tracking test at 2009 Seniors | Frank[_1_] | Soaring | 0 | February 22nd 09 03:24 AM |
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