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#21
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On Mar 9, 6:31*pm, "
wrote: On Mar 6, 8:46*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Mar 6, 4:32*pm, JS wrote: On Mar 6, 11:47 am, Darryl Ramm wrote: If you are in close truly close formation (which might happen in some buddy flying) ATC may prefer you to deactivate the transponder on all but one aircraft in the formation. * Correct, that is what was suggested by ATC... Especially if a glider has been issued a discrete code. If the glider is on the discrete code during tow, turn the transponder in the towplane to Standby until the glider releases. All but one glider in the thermal or group flight turns their transponder to SBY. (Think of what these standby transponders do for PCAS use.) Jim Sorry but I'm not following the last part of the comment either about "standby transponders" or at least I am not follwoing if you are thinking this is a problem or not. Once off tow both transponders would be on and the PCAS system should operate normally. While on tow a PCAS unit like theZaonMRXin the glider squawking standby might think the towplane's transponder is its own and supress the tow plane as a threat. I'd argue that is not a *problem and actually what you want--you want the PCAS to suppress the alert and while on tow you know where the tow plane is (I hope!). And that allows any other threats coming close to be warned about. Experience from people who fly with a PCAS in their glider without a transponder (or transponder in standby) with a tow plane with a transponder would be interesting. I think it is absolutely the wrong advice to say that gliders should be turning off and on their transponders without coordinating this with ATC. That seriously cannot be what ATC wants? For example in discussions of this with Reno approach, they want this only for close formation flights (i.e not typical glider flights) and only when those flights have contacted Reno approach and advised that it is a flight of multiple aircraft with leader squawking. The advice to turn off transponders when in thermals just seems impractical and dangerous, let alone a violation of FARs. You want people to do this if the other gliders are squawking 1200 or if they are assigned a discrete code? How do you know they are on a discrete code or not? Who decides who turns off a transponder and who turn one on and when. Is this radio chatter going to happen over the approach frequency? If a tow plane contacts approach for flight following then they need to let approach know it is a tow/formation flight with glider squawking standby--so the controller is not surprised when the glider pops up on his radar. Pilots also should not be trying to docuble-guess the decorrelation capability of TCAS interrogators. i.e. Even with just Mode-C equipped threats a TCAS equipped aircraft can see multiple aircraft even if their signals overlap a fair amount. You don't want to be thinking you are turning off your tranpodner might be helping ATC and then make you invisible to TCAS that could otherwise "see" you. Especially since TCAS-II issues vertical resolution advisories there is a risk a TCAS- II could issue an RA that would fly the aircraft straight into you as it tries to avoid a gilder in the thermal that is above or below you with its transponder on. (I'm not talking about the case of a thermal stacked with many tens of gliders with Mode-C transponders, there have been some studies of the problem of transponder synchronous garbling in those cases). BTW if any of those gliders have a Mode-S transponder like the Trig TT-21 then this avoids the Mode-C synchronous garbling issues and TCAS and ATC are capable of unambiguously seeing a relatively large number of individual threats in the same proximity. Bottom line. I would hope people turn on the transponder and leave it on unless they are using flight following for a formation/tow flight and if so then talk to the local ATC facility about how they want to handle the radio procedures. I know there are battery concerns, but turning off for long periods to save battery power is different (but also a violation of FARs), and I'd hope with modern transponders this is really a not a requirement. Darryl I have been only loosly following this thread. *I'm pretty confused at this point, but now have specific questions. We have a ZAON PCAS in our club glider. * We are now installing a transponder too. *I understand that the PCAS will know that the glider's own transponder is not a threat so it will filter it out. If we tow behind a towplane which also has a transponder, what will happen? *Will the PCAS see the tow plane as a threat, and display that? *But another airplane might be on a collision course... * but the PCAS will not see that because it sees the towplane as the closest threat? OR..........will the PCAS think that the towplane transponder is actually the glider's transponder since it stays at the same relative altitiude and position? *Will it filter out both the glider's transponder and the tow planes' transponder? Should we put the glider's transponder to "stand by" during tow? *If we do, will the PCAS then think the tow plane's transponder is really the glider's transponder and filter it out, allowing the PCAS to see other targets? Should we just say "screw it" and ignore the PCAS entirely during tow? Cookie Probably yes to all the above, with a big does of "it depends" like it depends on the exact pressure altitude the Zaon reads, the relative power it sees from the different transponders as to which of the transponders it locks onto (or if it sees synchronous garbling). If the Zaon thinks the tow plane is a threat it will not display other threats. Until they become more of a threat in which case you see the "NEW" message. It is also possible it thinks your own transponder is a threat at times. Remember the threat algorithm is biased towards threats at a similar altitude. What do people who tow behind a tow plane with a Zaon MRX see (with or without their own local transponder?) I often self launch my ASH-26E (with Zaon MRX and transponder) so am not the right person to answer the question. One thing I am pretty sure on is you should not be turning on and off transponders unless in touch with ATC. And if ATC does prefer that talk to them about the radio and other procedures they want followed. Darryl |
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JS wrote:
/snip/ As previously suspected, military aircraft do not use transponders /snip/ Jim ??? |
#23
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![]() I have been only loosly following this thread. *I'm pretty confused at this point, but now have specific questions. We have a ZAON PCAS in our club glider. * We are now installing a transponder too. *I understand that the PCAS will know that the glider's own transponder is not a threat so it will filter it out. If we tow behind a towplane which also has a transponder, what will happen? *Will the PCAS see the tow plane as a threat, and display that? *But another airplane might be on a collision course... * but the PCAS will not see that because it sees the towplane as the closest threat? OR..........will the PCAS think that the towplane transponder is actually the glider's transponder since it stays at the same relative altitiude and position? *Will it filter out both the glider's transponder and the tow planes' transponder? Should we put the glider's transponder to "stand by" during tow? *If we do, will the PCAS then think the tow plane's transponder is really the glider's transponder and filter it out, allowing the PCAS to see other targets? Should we just say "screw it" and ignore the PCAS entirely during tow? Cookie Probably yes to all the above, with a big does of "it depends" like it depends on the exact pressure altitude the Zaon reads, the relative power it sees from the different transponders as to which of the transponders it locks onto (or if it sees synchronous garbling). If the Zaon thinks the tow plane is a threat it will not display other threats. Until they become more of a threat in which case you see the "NEW" message. It is also possible it thinks your own transponder is a threat at times. Remember the threat algorithm is biased towards threats at a similar altitude. What do people who tow behind a tow plane with a Zaon MRX see (with or without their own local transponder?) I often self launch my ASH-26E (with Zaon MRX and transponder) so am not the right person to answer the question. One thing I am pretty sure on is you should not be turning on and off transponders unless in touch with ATC. And if ATC does prefer that talk to them about the radio and other procedures they want followed. Darryl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Darryl, I guess in a practical sense we should just leave the transponder on altitude and squawk 1200 during tow and the entire flight too. Whatever the PCAS says....it says.........probably no useful PCAS during tow........we should just ignore. Perhaps in the future there may be some procecure agreed upon by ATC. Cookie |
#24
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Kirk, I was at the same tour that Jim was. The scenario was in
relationship to how a controller sees aircraft on his screen and what alarms go off when two aircraft are near each other. Here's how I understood it. In general, two aircraft squawking 1200 are on VFR, not talking to the controller, and if they get close to each other, as say a towplane and glider might, or two gliders in the same thermal or wave might be, no alarm goes off and the controller won't (and really can't) do anything. He's not talking to either plane and they might not even be on his frequency. However, if a plane is assigned a discrete code, anytime that plane goes near another plane, including those squawking 1200, an alarm will go off on the controllers screen about potential collisions. Now, with gliders, this isn't going to happen all that much. Unless another GA plane on flight following comes nearby or a glider asks for clearance in a wave window, I don't think that we end up with discrete squawk codes all that often. In Cal City, there are two possible wave window clearance dictates, and with one of them, discrete codes are not necessarily assigned. However, in the other one, they are, and there is the possibility that two gliders on discrete clearance codes can (and may want to) fly near each other. This obviously will drive controllers nuts, so it may simply be courteous to mention to the controller than you are going to fly near each other as a flight, and switch your transponder to standby if the controller agrees. Of course, if you break away, notify the controller again such that he still knows where you are. This has nothing to do with standard VFR 1200 traffic. Nor anything to do with the special 0440 code used in the Reno area (and which is specially programmed into the Reno area controller's screens to behave like a 1200 squawk). In the MOA's around Cal City, in one of the wave window clearance, all non-1200 traffic is diverted around the window, so the only potential conflicts are other gliders. In the other, military traffic may use the same area as the wave window, and the military planes may or may have the transponder data from gliders with discrete codes (we didn't really talk about that). But military pilots probably will end up staying away from the wave window area if they're smart once the controller mentions that the window is active and there are gliders in the area. I think that summed up the brief talk had with the controller supervisor at Joshua. Maybe someone else who was there can correct me. Jason Kramb On 3/7/2010 1:22 PM, kirk.stant wrote: On Mar 7, 10:57 am, wrote: I must have been hallucinating during the briefing at Joshua approach. Time to give up. Jim Jim, I'd be really interested to hear what what is being said in the Joshua approach briefing. It could be a misunderstanding, or an actual lack of knowledge between agencies and users on each other's capabilities - not the first time that has happened. Has there been a reciprocal briefing of glider operations and capabilities to Center and AF personnel? I know when I've worked with the AF on similar issues in the Luke area (coordinating for regional contest, which would be transiting hot MOAs during the week), there were often misconceptions (!!) that had to be cleared up, on both sides. Cheers, Kirk 66 |
#25
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Jason,
Thanks for the explanation; that all makes sense. It would seem that if the discrete code becomes a problem in a wave window, then a common code (like the Reno 0440 code) would be one way for ATC to handle it - that would still give TCAS protection for airliners, bizjets, etc. It looks like there was some confusion about military aircraft transponder use - bottom line: in common use (civilian and military) airspace, military aircraft are handled just like civilian aircraft with transponders - if IFR they are talking to center and get normal IFR handling, if VFR (say in a MOA running low altitude intercepts) then they are like other VFR traffic with transponders (and many with TCAS and interrogators): They may not be talking to center (they will be on their own freq) so having a TPAS in a glider will definitely help, and a transponder in the glider may help the military aircraft detect and avoid the glider. Good conversation, all in all, IMHO. Cheers, KIrk 66 |
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