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#21
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The U.S.S.R. had one at one time. What happened to it? Couldn't
afford the upkeep? The Soviet Union began launching satellites for GLONASS, their GPS equivalent, back in 1982. When the country went out of business, upkeep slowed, and the original 24+3 satellite system is down to 8, making it essentially useless. You need multiple locks to use GLONASS/GPS for navigation, so... There was some discussion of a new GLONASS replacement called GLONASS-M, but it's contingent on money which is in somewhat short supply in Russia. |
#22
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G.R. Patterson III wrote:
Larry Dighera wrote: So, you're saying there are no GPS approaches whose missed approach procedures rely upon GPS? Dunno about that, but according to an article in the most recent AOPA Pilot, you can't shoot a WAAS approach without some other navigation system (like a VOR glide slope receiver) in the plane. How does one get to the next approach w/o GPS if the missed approach on the GPS approach requires a GPS? This isn't just a "GPS shutdown" question, but a more generic "dealing with failure" question. Still, one is legal with a single VOR and VOR approaches can have VOR-based missed approaches. - Andrew |
#23
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Jay Honeck wrote:
I didn't say they could shut down the internet. I said they would shut down your ACCESS to the internet. Surely you aren't so gullible as to believe that the government couldn't shut down AOL, Mediacom, Qwest, and the dozen or so other ISPs that provide 95% of Americans with internet access in time of national emergency? After dealing with numerous backbone firms: I seriously doubt that Qwest could easily/quickly shut down Qwest. THe same is true for any of the other backbones. AOL...maybe. It's a different kind of service, and one could probably "attack" it via the mechanism it uses for authentication/authorization. - Andrew |
#24
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Cockpit Colin wrote:
You haven't a clue how the Internet operates. There is no Internet central authority. Not that many border-gateway routers connecting US backbones to the rest of the country though, which becomes a different argument. Unlikely, but not overly difficult to isolate the USA from the internet if need be. You might be surprised. I'm aware of some very regional (ie. not too large) "backbones" in the NYC area that have their own connectivity to some ASN outside of the US. Now, NYC might be unusual in the intercontinental traffic it generates. But not *that* unusual. I expect many MANs now have pretty widespread peerings. - Andrew |
#25
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Dave S wrote:
When Selective Availability was disabled in the Clinton administration, regional disruption of the GPS signal was the stated "back-up"/"alternative". This is not new news in the least. I've read of this before. But I don't see how it could be done regionally w/o using something like jamming. Do the satellites have the ability to block their signal to regions? - Andrew |
#27
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![]() "Chris Gumm" wrote in message ... http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/...&w=APO&coview= I am not sure why this is news. It has been policy since before Bush was President. |
#28
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![]() "Schmoe" wrote in message ... Chris Gumm wrote: http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/...&w=APO&coview= How much would that suck during a GPS approach to minimums far away from the crisis? Would WAAS stations be shutdown to? You might be surprised at what happens if you lose RAIM inside the FAF anyway. If you lose the navigation radios on any approach (and it can and will happen with any sort of approach) then the best thing to do is climb immediately, maintaining course to the MAP as closely as possible, then flying the missed approach procedure. If the GPS system is shut down then you can expect to break off any approach and revert to radar vectors. |
#29
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Dave S wrote: When Selective Availability was disabled in the Clinton administration, regional disruption of the GPS signal was the stated "back-up"/"alternative". This is not new news in the least. I've read of this before. But I don't see how it could be done regionally w/o using something like jamming. Do the satellites have the ability to block their signal to regions? Individual satellites could be shut down, effectively blanking out large regions. |
#30
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![]() "C Kingsbury" wrote in message k.net... "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... So, you're saying there are no GPS approaches whose missed approach procedures rely upon GPS? Aren't you required to have means to execute a non-GPS approach at either your destination or alternate to be legal? Yes. However, if you are WAAS equipped then there is no such requirement. |
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