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#41
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message ... We will be going to a GPS based system. Alaska has tried this system under the Capstone name. Basically you will broadcast to ATC your position and ATC will use that information just as they use the radar information today. It looks like Capstone was a aircraft via satellite to ATC position reporting system. http://www.faa.gov/news/news_story.c...02&date=040102 Its not clear if Capstone is intended to also let other aircraft in your vacinity receive your position reports and use that information for collision avoidance. The beauty of a broadcast location reporting system is that you are telling everyone where you are not just ATC and the equipment needed for every other pilot to recieve your broadcast and display your position on his GPS display is cheap. Soon the Aviation GPS devices will be able show other aircraft near your airspace on your moving map in addition to showing your own location. The maritime communications industry is developing the Universal Shipborne Automatic Identification System to do the same job for ships at sea. http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/marcomms/ais.htm |
#42
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![]() "john smith" wrote in message ... Does LSA require and electrical system? No. I have yet to see a handheld transponder for GA. And you won't. The new system eliminates transponders. There has to be a transmitter of some type installed to broadcast. From: http://www.gisdevelopment.net/techno...s/ma04082c.htm 4.1 Automatic Dependent Surveillance (ADS) In this, the aircraft automatically transmits, via data links, its identification and 3-D position to the ATC unit. It allows controllers to observe on a pseudo-radar display, the position of aircraft and possible deviations from the assigned flight paths. The design of the ADS should allow the implementation without disrupting ATS. It should also be sufficiently flexible to adaptability to local requirement and ATS special requirements, expandability, integration with new technology, provide sufficient safety and switch over to other forms of ATS in case of failure or degradation. It should also have the capability to provide a minimum service to all duly equipped aircraft and become finally part of ATS infrastructure that derives full advantage of the ADS. 4.1.a Automatic Dependent Surveillance ADS-A (Addressed) This system operates only in the air-ground mode and at the request of the ATC unit. It is the controller who determines which reports are necessary for controlling each aircraft. The basic principle is given as: Communication contracts must first be established between airborne equipment and ground systems before being able to receive any ADS report. The controller determines which report is necessary to control each aircraft in the flight segments under the control of a given ATC unit. The issuance of basic ADS report at periodic intervals is defined by the ground system with one or more blocks of additional data containing specific information. ADS report may contain geographically defined points, such as waypoints and intermediate points, in addition to reports triggered by specific occurrence. Certain types of airborne equipments have the capability to maintain contracts with four or five ATC unit simultaneously. These aircraft will also send automatic position reports, in keeping with ADS contracts made by ground system. At given time or distance before reaching the boundaries of the FIR, which can vary depending on the ground system. The latter will immediately prepare and transmit ADS reports addressed to the grounds system in keeping with the pre-established contracts. In some system, the controller has the capability to replace the ADS contracts if necessary. The ground system will issue the appropriate message to start the modification of exiting contracts. Automated ground systems can use the ADS position reports and other data groups from the ADS message to provide automated flight tracking in accordance with flight plan. Most automated ground system compares the aircraft position reported by the ADS with the position foreseen by the ground system, taken from the flight plan. The ground system will prepare and show the controller the appropriate message in the event that the ADS report does not match the position foresee by the ground system. This monitoring capability makes it possible to verify whether the flight is proceeding according to flight plan. Further more, aircrafts are equipped with FAN-1A capable of doing their own monitoring and of making an automatic report in case of significant flight variations, when so required by an appropriate occurrence contract. The ground system will include, together with the request for an ADS occurrence contract, the value that triggered these reports. 4.1.b Automatic Dependent Surveillance Contracts ( ADS-C) : There are three types of contract, each of them operating independently of the others. They are periodic contract, occurrence contracts & demand contracts. A request for a periodic contract defines the contract requirements to be included in the reports and reporting frequency. Through an uplink, an ATS unit initiates the periodic report request. This request allows an ATS unit to include the optional data groups in the basic ADS reports, also specifying the frequency of inclusion. The controller can modify the periodic reporting average up and down in order to accommodate special situations, such as traffic density. Information about the minimum reporting averages recommended for each type of aircraft can be obtained from the manufacturer's manual. Only one periodic contract can be established. if another is to be established , then the previous contract will be replaced . This periodic contract will remain in force until modified or cancelled. The occurrence contract specify a report request to be sent by the aircraft if certain occurrence takes place e.g. variation in ascent or decent regime, lateral deviation in flight path, change in altitude, change in reporting point. Only one occurrence contract may be established each time between the aircraft and the ground system even so, the contract may contemplate different type of the occurrence. The demand contracts request is a single request from the ground system for the airborne equipment to send an ADS report containing the data specified in the request. A demand contact may be requested by the ground system at any time. A request for such contract will not affect any other that exists. The emergency mode is activated or cancelled by the pilot only. Once activated, the emergency mode connects the aircraft with all ground systems that have established periodic or occurrence contracts with it. When pilot cancels the emergency mode, the on board equipment will send a cancellation message to each ground station that received this message. 4.2 Automatic Dependence Surveillance- Broadcast (ADS-B) ADS-B is a new aeronautical surveillance concept by virtue of which the aircraft transmits its position through data link. The position information is received by near-by aircraft, which enables all users to be informed about their own position and the position of all other nearby traffic. The position information may be displayed in the cockpit of aircraft thus equipped to allow for new possibility of detecting traffic. Ground vehicle and facilities can also be equipped to receive and transmit position data, making it possible to monitor all types of traffic through two-way data links. In addition to position data, other data like aircraft identification and speed (obtained from GNSS receiver) may be also transmitted. ADS-B will play important role in the cockpit environment, and it will keep the pilot informed about all the traffic vicinity of the airports. The cockpit display is used to show the position and intentions of all aircrafts within a 200-NM radius. This equipment is called cockpit display of traffic position (CDTI) or traffic situation display (TSD). However ADS-B allows keeping a visual display of all surrounding traffic. On the ground, the ADS-B will offer ATC new surveillance capabilities at a fraction of the cost of a conventional SSR. An ADS-B ground station is a transmitter / receiver station without the complex and costly rotary antenna radar systems. An ADS-B ground station does not need to make high-precision measurements of the aircraft position, thus reducing the cost of the ground equipment considerably. The ADS-B concept is independent of the type of link used for data transmission. The information can be relayed by VHF or satellites or SSR mode-S. Therefore ADS-B will be an advanced and relatively low cost-system that will provide high quality flight surveillance information, Low cost, flexibility in surveillance reporting, more precise data capability to support new application,, identical surveillance information to the all users, surveillance available for all phases of flight. The ADS-B will also send a message to ground control unit within a radius of 95 NM around the transmitting aircraft. ADS messages contain the data like position, time, track, ground speed , vertical situation, magnetic heading, Mac number ( speed of the aircraft), next route reporting point, estimated altitude at next reporting point, second to the next reporting point, upper wind direction, upper wind velocity and temperature. Moreover ATC using ADS information must have the capability to automate the function like flight data validation, automatic tracking, and direction of potential conflict, conflict resolution and display of relevant processed data. |
#43
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#44
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Does LSA require and electrical system?
No. I have yet to see a handheld transponder for GA. And you won't. The new system eliminates transponders. There has to be a transmitter of some type installed to broadcast. From: http://www.gisdevelopment.net/techno...s/ma04082c.htm You still will not see it available as a handheld system. It will have to be installed and certified in an aircraft with an approved electrical system. |
#45
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#46
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G Farris wrote:
I am aware of that, and I'm certainly not pretending to be "inventing" something here. Just seems to me that before we went whole-hog GPS we were seeing smart loran and RNAV boxes that could integrate a number of source signals. Then we threw it all away to go GPS. I think we could develop a smart interim solution using a mix of GPS, eLoran (which has come a ong way since we all turned our backs on it) and traditional graound-based nav aids. Get rid of the VOR's? Sure. Do it hastily and without forethought? That would be foolish, in my opinion. GF You should forward your views to AOPA. Presently, they are in accord with the concept being work by the FAA and industry to move to a performance-based RNAV system where RNP is a requirement. AOPA is also a proponend of WAAAS to enhance the vertical guidance on RNAV appoaches since, presently, most light aircraft can't afford the heavy lifting required for IFR-capable Baro VNAV. LORAN and Rho-Theta RNAV simply won't provide the accuracy required for terminal and approach phase RNP. |
#47
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![]() john smith wrote: Does LSA require and electrical system? No. I have yet to see a handheld transponder for GA. And you won't. The new system eliminates transponders. There has to be a transmitter of some type installed to broadcast. From: http://www.gisdevelopment.net/techno...s/ma04082c.htm You still will not see it available as a handheld system. It will have to be installed and certified in an aircraft with an approved electrical system. No, ADS-B will be available as a handheld device. |
#48
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John,
And you cannot do that with a map and compass? Yes, you can. You can also ride into town on a horse. Do you? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#49
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The FAA, and the rest of the world as well, want to eventually shut-down
the VORs. The only remaining ground-based systems will be ILSes. Uhm, not quite. The JAA is all hot about DME-DME area navigation. They thing GPS is not reliable enough. Go figure... -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#50
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Roy,
but I'm enough of a realist to understand that the people intent on blowing things up are probably smart enough to turn their transponders off. And radar sites manned by the FAA can do exactly WHAT about that? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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