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#1
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Unnerveing thing happen to me today.
I have TIS displayed on the Garmin 430. I was 15 or 20 miles north of Moraine (I73) in southern Ohio and talking to Dayton Controller under Flight Following. I'm at 4500 ft and landing at Moraine. I request (I'm in his air space) the controller that I would like to start my decent and he says cleared to decend. Shortly, the display squacks and says "traffic" and I see a traffic indicated at 500 ft below. I tell controller that I have traffic on my display 500 ft below and he says "Yes, it is a 172 going into Moraine also." So now we have a low wing (my Archer) above a high wing (172) and I have been cleared to decend. I tell the controller that I am stopping my decent and turning left 30 deg (and speeding up). He did not respond. The 430 display over the next minute shows seperation and I turn back to course and see the 172. I continue to keep my speed greater that his and we both land without further problem. I think TIS may have saved my ( and others) life today and the FAA is decomissioning the sites with the explination that ADS-B is going to be better when they get it implemented in the next few years and an an inexpensive plane electronic becomes available. God, I wish I knew how to stop this decomissioning of TIS before ADS-B is widely available. My life (and maybe yours) may depend on it. Chuck |
#2
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Chuck wrote:
God, I wish I knew how to stop this decomissioning of TIS before ADS-B is widely available. My life (and maybe yours) may depend on it. According to the most recent AOPA magazine, TIS in this form will be a distant memory as of 2012, when the last of the radar sites is upgraded to the latest technology. I guess I'll toss my Garmin Mode-S transponder into the same heap of garbage as my WSI weather receiver since they both represent good technology that became obsolete. ![]() -- Peter If I wanted to lose $10Gs that fast, I would have invested it in the stock market. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#3
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I guess I'll toss my Garmin Mode-S transponder into the same heap of
garbage as my WSI weather receiver since they both represent good technology that became obsolete. ![]() More and more we buy devices, not for ourselves, but for the benefit of other companies who support (or don't support) them. Jose -- Money: what you need when you run out of brains. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#4
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![]() Chuck wrote: So now we have a low wing (my Archer) above a high wing (172) and I have been cleared to decend. You were never restricted from descending in the first place. I think TIS may have saved my ( and others) life today and the FAA is decomissioning the sites with the explination that ADS-B is going to be better when they get it implemented in the next few years and an an inexpensive plane electronic becomes available. That's correct. TIS was obsolete before it was even commissioned. |
#5
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![]() Newps wrote: That's correct. TIS was obsolete before it was even commissioned. Not to mention impractical. |
#6
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![]() "Chuck" wrote in message oups.com... Unnerveing thing happen to me today. I have TIS displayed on the Garmin 430. I was 15 or 20 miles north of Moraine (I73) in southern Ohio and talking to Dayton Controller under Flight Following. I'm at 4500 ft and landing at Moraine. I request (I'm in his air space) the controller that I would like to start my decent and he says cleared to decend. Shortly, the display squacks and says "traffic" and I see a traffic indicated at 500 ft below. I tell controller that I have traffic on my display 500 ft below and he says "Yes, it is a 172 going into Moraine also." So now we have a low wing (my Archer) above a high wing (172) and I have been cleared to decend. I tell the controller that I am stopping my decent and turning left 30 deg (and speeding up). He did not respond. The 430 display over the next minute shows seperation and I turn back to course and see the 172. I continue to keep my speed greater that his and we both land without further problem. Had you been assigned any altitude restriction prior to your descent request? If not, then you were free to descend at any time. But it seems odd that you weren't assigned an altitude restriction as you'd be pretty much right over DAY. |
#7
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I assume you were VFR when all this happened?
"Chuck" wrote in message oups.com... Unnerveing thing happen to me today. I have TIS displayed on the Garmin 430. I was 15 or 20 miles north of Moraine (I73) in southern Ohio and talking to Dayton Controller under Flight Following. I'm at 4500 ft and landing at Moraine. I request (I'm in his air space) the controller that I would like to start my decent and he says cleared to decend. Shortly, the display squacks and says "traffic" and I see a traffic indicated at 500 ft below. I tell controller that I have traffic on my display 500 ft below and he says "Yes, it is a 172 going into Moraine also." So now we have a low wing (my Archer) above a high wing (172) and I have been cleared to decend. I tell the controller that I am stopping my decent and turning left 30 deg (and speeding up). He did not respond. The 430 display over the next minute shows seperation and I turn back to course and see the 172. I continue to keep my speed greater that his and we both land without further problem. I think TIS may have saved my ( and others) life today and the FAA is decomissioning the sites with the explination that ADS-B is going to be better when they get it implemented in the next few years and an an inexpensive plane electronic becomes available. God, I wish I knew how to stop this decomissioning of TIS before ADS-B is widely available. My life (and maybe yours) may depend on it. Chuck |
#8
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![]() "Chuck" wrote in message oups.com... Unnerveing thing happen to me today. I have TIS displayed on the Garmin 430. I was 15 or 20 miles north of Moraine (I73) in southern Ohio and talking to Dayton Controller under Flight Following. I'm at 4500 ft and landing at Moraine. I request (I'm in his air space) the controller that I would like to start my decent and he says cleared to decend. Shortly, the display squacks and says "traffic" and I see a traffic indicated at 500 ft below. I tell controller that I have traffic on my display 500 ft below and he says "Yes, it is a 172 going into Moraine also." So you were overtaking the 172? Did you not see him prior to descending? |
#9
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"John Doe" wrote:
So you were overtaking the 172? Did you not see him prior to descending? I assume that you see every aircraft near you. I wish I were that good. Even when given aircraft advisories I often never see the aircraft. Ron Lee |
#10
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"Chuck" wrote in message
oups.com... Unnerveing thing happen to me today. I have TIS displayed on the Garmin 430. I was 15 or 20 miles north of Moraine (I73) in southern Ohio and talking to Dayton Controller under Flight Following. I'm at 4500 ft and landing at Moraine. I request (I'm in his air space) the controller that I would like to start my decent and he says cleared to decend. Shortly, the display squacks and says "traffic" and I see a traffic indicated at 500 ft below. I tell controller that I have traffic on my display 500 ft below and he says "Yes, it is a 172 going into Moraine also." No offence, but wasn't this a VFR flight? If so, the primary way to find out about traffic is to look out of the window. I agree that the circumstances were such that the task of spotting the other guy was made harder (your low wings and his high wings, for example) but there are ways (e.g. weaving descents) to improve your chances. While I agree that electronic assistance can be a very useful secondary device for picking up the odd bit of traffic you've not eyeballed, it's essential to remember that looking out of the window is rule number one, and if you'd descended onto the top of this other aircraft, it'd have been your fault. The other thing to remember, of course, is that TIS relies on the other aircraft giving a correct altitude - which in the aircraft I fly relies on the the pilot having the correct altimiter setting. D. |
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