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If you thought that the user fee issue was important, this proposal is
far more onerous to the GA community. You can access the 100 page NPRM from this AOPA website: http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news..._196268-1.html This NPRM to mandate ADS-B Out avionics on aircraft by 2020 as best I can determine from available information will be costly (as high as ~$18,000 per aircraft) just to transmit position info. This does NOT get you free weather, free traffic info or other data transmitted by the ADS system. It will require ADS-B Out equipage to fly above 10,000 feet MSL, into Class C airspace, by all aircraft at airports within current Class B Mode C rings (30 NM), etc. My analysis shows ZERO to INSIGNIFICANT benefit to most GA users but potentially onerously high costs. My current draft response to this NPRM is at the link below. It is a Word document and is still very draft. I will be updating it as I more fully develop it. http://tinyurl.com/2wem8j This NPRM needs massive and overwhelming GA pilot community input to fight it. Details are in the NPRM and we must also ensure that AOPA, EAA , etc are on board. Previous AOPA statements that 75% of GA pilots are in favor of ADS-B if they get free weather fail to prperly cover the costs to the pilot for avionics. Once you read the NPRM and my review, an objectively worded poll would probably show less than 5% of GA pilots willing to equip with all the ADS-B avionics needed to get free weather. More to follow soon. Ron Lee |
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If ADS-B technology costs $18,000 today, that will be $1800 or even $180 in
2020. I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. Lee McGee (yet another Lee) "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... If you thought that the user fee issue was important, this proposal is far more onerous to the GA community. You can access the 100 page NPRM from this AOPA website: http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news..._196268-1.html This NPRM to mandate ADS-B Out avionics on aircraft by 2020 as best I can determine from available information will be costly (as high as ~$18,000 per aircraft) just to transmit position info. This does NOT get you free weather, free traffic info or other data transmitted by the ADS system. It will require ADS-B Out equipage to fly above 10,000 feet MSL, into Class C airspace, by all aircraft at airports within current Class B Mode C rings (30 NM), etc. My analysis shows ZERO to INSIGNIFICANT benefit to most GA users but potentially onerously high costs. My current draft response to this NPRM is at the link below. It is a Word document and is still very draft. I will be updating it as I more fully develop it. http://tinyurl.com/2wem8j This NPRM needs massive and overwhelming GA pilot community input to fight it. Details are in the NPRM and we must also ensure that AOPA, EAA , etc are on board. Previous AOPA statements that 75% of GA pilots are in favor of ADS-B if they get free weather fail to prperly cover the costs to the pilot for avionics. Once you read the NPRM and my review, an objectively worded poll would probably show less than 5% of GA pilots willing to equip with all the ADS-B avionics needed to get free weather. More to follow soon. Ron Lee |
#3
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Lee McGee wrote:
If ADS-B technology costs $18,000 today, that will be $1800 or even $180 in 2020. I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. Lee McGee (yet another Lee) Very unfortunately the prices for certified aviation electronics hasn't done the same and there is no reason to think it will in the future. |
#4
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In article ,
"Lee McGee" wrote: If ADS-B technology costs $18,000 today, that will be $1800 or even $180 in 2020. How much did a KX-155 cost in 1987? How much did it cost in 2006? Did the installation cost for insert avionics box go up or down in the past 20 years? I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. high tech computer industry is not the same animal as avionics. -- Bob Noel (goodness, please trim replies!!!) |
#5
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![]() "Lee McGee" wrote I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. I just saw a terabyte external drive for under 300 bucks. Wow! -- Jim in NC |
#6
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
Lee McGee wrote: If ADS-B technology costs $18,000 today, that will be $1800 or even $180 in 2020. I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. Lee McGee (yet another Lee) Very unfortunately the prices for certified aviation electronics hasn't done the same and there is no reason to think it will in the future. From what I can tell, ADS-B requires a mode-s transponder, a high performance GPS, a 1030 Mhz receiver which may or may not be part of the transponder, a fast computer and a display. There's no way to predict what that would cost in 2020 except that it will be more than $180. |
#7
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Lee McGee wrote:
If ADS-B technology costs $18,000 today, that will be $1800 or even $180 in 2020. I work in the high tech computer industry. 5 terabytes of disk storage cost nearly $1,000,000 in the year 2000. Today, in summer 2007, we just bought 7 terabytes for $11,000. This is not a typo. The technology is similar. Lee McGee (yet another Lee) The avionics market place has neither the size nor the freedom of the consumer market place. The price of cutting edge avionics will come down over time, but not hardly at the same rate as consumer stuff. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#8
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Very unfortunately the prices for certified aviation electronics hasn't done
the same and there is no reason to think it will in the future. From what I can tell, ADS-B requires a mode-s transponder, a high performance GPS, a 1030 Mhz receiver which may or may not be part of the transponder, a fast computer and a display. There's no way to predict what that would cost in 2020 except that it will be more than $180. I believe that UAT is 978 MHz but the frequency is trivial. Ron Lee |
#9
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![]() "Jim Stewart" wrote From what I can tell, ADS-B requires a mode-s transponder, a high performance GPS, a 1030 Mhz receiver which may or may not be part of the transponder, a fast computer and a display. There's no way to predict what that would cost in 2020 except that it will be more than $180. The word "aviation" in the title of the device automatically multiplies the price by 100! I thought everyone knew that principle of pricing aviation equipment, of any kind. -- Jim in NC |
#10
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On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 18:56:04 GMT, (Ron Lee)
wrote in : .... Previous AOPA statements that 75% of GA pilots are in favor of ADS-B if they get free weather fail to prperly cover the costs to the pilot for avionics. Once you read the NPRM and my review, an objectively worded poll would probably show less than 5% of GA pilots willing to equip with all the ADS-B avionics needed to get free weather. AOPA FINDS ADS-B PROPOSAL NEEDS WORK (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196330) AOPA has taken a first look at the FAA's complex new ADS-B proposal (http://www.aopa.org/advocacy/article...1003ads-b.html) (http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news...196268-1.html), and found plenty of technical and cost issues that will affect general aviation pilots. Randy Kenagy, AOPA senior director of strategic planning, said an initial review of the 100-page Notice of Proposed Rulemaking showed that "much more work needs to be done before the FAA publishes its final rule." The proposal would require all aircraft operators to install ADS-B equipment by 2020 if they want to fly in controlled airspace. The new avionics would provide cockpit weather and traffic information to pilots, replacing services such as flight following or en route vectoring. AOPA President Phil Boyer tied the FAA proposal to the current fight over user fees. "If they [the FAA] want GA pilots to spend thousands of dollars on new avionics, we need to make sure that the expenditures are considered as we assess what GA should pay in fuel taxes in the future FAA budget," he said. It would appear that AOPA is revising it's stance on the mandatory ADS-B issue, but given the fact that AOPA feels it would only cost each aircraft owner "thousands of dollars," not tens of thousands of dollars, it is doubtful they yet fully appreciate the ramifications of the issue. While mandatory ADS-B equipment might be a step forward for GA pilot operations, it would seem to me, that it is FAA (and avionics manufacturers) who stand to receive the most benefit from this proposal. And if mandatory ADS-B installation were to result in the decommissioning of ATC radar installations, that would be a step backward, because there would be no backup system in the event of an outage in ADS-B operation. But more importantly, the validity of aircraft positional information, upon which ATC currently relies, would switch from an empirical to reported. That coupled with the change from terrestrial based communications to satellite based communications would seem to provide reduced system integrity, IMO. |
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