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#1
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About 11:20 am my scanner that monitors 121.5 started hearing an awful sound
of an ELT is still going its strong I called Portland tower to make sure and they said they are hearing it intermittent and week I am 5 miles to the north of PDX and I here it loud and clear. Did anyone else here it? |
#2
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Local towers, approach controls or centers will often call ELT signals into
CAP, and CAP will dispatch aircraft with radio direction finding equipment to locate the ELT transmitter. I've worked with the ATC system to find ELTs as a CAP Mission Pilot. It is good for all pilots that controllers pay attention to ELT signals and call them into CAP. Pilots should also call ELT signals into ATC. In the last year I helped find a hard landed experimental and a King Air with a low battery which set off their ELTs. Both of these ELTs had been picked up by the satellite receivers and the searches were dispatched by the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center. In this past year I also helped search for two fatal hard crashes with no ELTs broadcasting. The overdue VFR aircraft without flight plans were called in to CAP by family members. I've also heard several ELTs set off by pilots changing their own ELT batteries and mystery ELTs that were on for a while but went off the air before they could be located. Generally speaking, it is a good idea to find and shut off all ELTs as soon as possible, so their signals don't block other ELT signals. Kevin Dunlevy, Maj. CAP "NW_PILOT" wrote in message ... About 11:20 am my scanner that monitors 121.5 started hearing an awful sound of an ELT is still going its strong I called Portland tower to make sure and they said they are hearing it intermittent and week I am 5 miles to the north of PDX and I here it loud and clear. Did anyone else here it? |
#3
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ELTs go off all the time. If you hear one, report it to ATC or to the
police. They will send someone (probably the Civil Air Patrol) with direction finding equipment to investigate. It is almost always a false alarm. The most annoying one I can remember was an avionics repairman who had loaded a defective ELT into a van and was driving around all over the place -- to lunch, shopping, etc., before heading to the shop to repair it. The thing would not shut off, and the technician didn't know it was on. CAP guys were looking all over for it, "Now it is coming from over there..." |
#4
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In article ,
C J Campbell wrote: ELTs go off all the time. If you hear one, report it to ATC or to the police. They will send someone (probably the Civil Air Patrol) with direction finding equipment to investigate. It is almost always a false alarm. The most annoying one I can remember was an avionics repairman who had loaded a defective ELT into a van and was driving around all over the place -- to lunch, shopping, etc., before heading to the shop to repair it. The thing would not shut off, and the technician didn't know it was on. CAP guys were looking all over for it, "Now it is coming from over there..." The UPS truck is a frequent source of ELT signals. Not only is it moving, but the entire signal goes up (the roof is plastic, the sides of the truck are metal), so it is near impossible to track from the air or ground, but hits the satellites just fine. When I was in CAP, I stopped going out on ELT searches since they are just a waste of time and resources. Unless there is an alert notice, an ELT signal is 99+% likely to be a false alarm. John -- John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/ |
#5
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John Clear wrote:
In article , C J Campbell wrote: ELTs go off all the time. If you hear one, report it to ATC or to the police. They will send someone (probably the Civil Air Patrol) with direction finding equipment to investigate. It is almost always a false alarm. The most annoying one I can remember was an avionics repairman who had loaded a defective ELT into a van and was driving around all over the place -- to lunch, shopping, etc., before heading to the shop to repair it. The thing would not shut off, and the technician didn't know it was on. CAP guys were looking all over for it, "Now it is coming from over there..." The UPS truck is a frequent source of ELT signals. Not only is it moving, but the entire signal goes up (the roof is plastic, the sides of the truck are metal), so it is near impossible to track from the air or ground, but hits the satellites just fine. When I was in CAP, I stopped going out on ELT searches since they are just a waste of time and resources. Unless there is an alert notice, an ELT signal is 99+% likely to be a false alarm. That echoes what I heard at a Wings seminar years ago. Most ELT signals are from boats, not planes. And they are false alarms. |
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