Cruzinchris
Pre-takeoff checklist
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Cruzinchris
.....and ADS-B is the law of the land, will Mode C transponders still have usefulness?
I very much so enjoy Mode C aircraft with the MRX. Layers of awareness......
ADS-B can't be relied on to work - radar is still required for traffic separation.
I think the mode C transponder that came out of my aircraft will become a hangar decoration (along with the busted ADF). I can't imagine anyone in the US having any use for them. Perhaps someone might need them overseas, I don't know.
Because that is what the FAA has determined and written into the FARs. Anywhere you need ADS-B, you still need mode-C.Curious why you state that.
Tim
If you are asking me, the answer is yes. And the rules have not changed, you can fly IFR with no transponder Mode-C or ADS-B in large portions of the country. Without Mode-C, you will likely have to follow airways (even if GPS/WAAS equipped) and do reporting points. I had a transponder fail going to TN, so I flew around there for a bit going "old school" technique before radar.You know after 2020 there still is a boat load of land where you don't need ADSB right?
While ADS-B requirements in §91.225 become effective January 2, 2020, §91.215 has not been amended so Mode C transponders will still need to work and be used as they are today. Remember that TCAS uses Mode C interrogations and is the last line of defense from collisions in equipped aircraft......and ADS-B is the law of the land, will Mode C transponders still have usefulness?
I've had ATC pick me up as a primary target without a transponder.And as for stealth mode, that has always existed regardless of transponder.
I've had ATC pick me up as a primary target without a transponder.
I seriously doubt that I could sneak across the Class B without them noticing.
Outside the 1% (pulling a number out of my butt) of the continental US where ADS-B is mandated (not counting class A), the FAA is still going to have to rely on radar / mode-C. Plus, You don't get primary returns from ADS-B so there is no way to detect gliders, or non-electric aircraft, so radar does not go away. Also, without radar, you could just pull the plug on the ADS-B and go stealth mode - that would be convenient for someone at an airport like where I am - just take a shortcut through the Class B and no one is the wiser. Or in the case of a "bad person" you could go anywhere, do anything and not be detected. Also, on the other other hand ADS-B is easy to spoof.
I'll tell you this much.....
I have a 345 and still have the MRX PCaS. By far the MRX talks to me much more than the Garmin boxing valid alerts. I don't trust the Garmin ADSB algorithms one bit. I had the MRX light up last Friday 4 miles 400 feet above and descending. The Garmin box splashed the alert 1 mile same altitude. I was 155 kts and it was a Mooney. We passed him to my left and wave at each other. He was not talking to approach, I was.
Do the math....... by the time the OODA loop figures it out, it's already trading paint with another bird.
I very much so enjoy Mode C aircraft with the MRX. Layers of awareness......
I believe the Garmin alert range is adjustable... I'll have to check though. Or you can.
It's not adjustable. The algorithm is set by Garmin Engineers. In fact, I went around with them with my GDL88 on the matter and even THEY could not explain exactly how it chooses to alert. What I do believe is it gives a terrible sense of security and make flying more dangerous because operators will believe the box will alert sooner than it actually does.
It has never let be down sans one time from a Cub.
I think ads-b is a good tool.
It's a lovely tool, when it works. It has absolutely no engineering design work done on it to even check to see if it's failing.
Relying on luck for packet reception is not how one builds a safety system.
.....and ADS-B is the law of the land, will Mode C transponders still have usefulness?
LMAO, who said it was a safety system? ADS-B was designed for two things only.
Allow ATC to pack in more planes in congested airspace and reduce FAA costs by shifting the financial burden to airplane owner.
Weather and safety were after thoughts to try and make the price more palatable to small airplane owner. And you will notice that the airlines do NOT have to comply with ADS-B?
Tim
LMAO, who said it was a safety system? ADS-B was designed for two things only.
Allow ATC to pack in more planes in congested airspace and reduce FAA costs by shifting the financial burden to airplane owner.
Weather and safety were after thoughts to try and make the price more palatable to small airplane owner. And you will notice that the airlines do NOT have to comply with ADS-B?
Tim
What information is out there showing the airlines don't have to comply? I understand they have a 5 year grace period to update the gps source, but I thought they still had to be compliant with the rest of the mandate by 2020.
LMAO, who said it was a safety system? ADS-B was designed for two things only.
Allow ATC to pack in more planes in congested airspace and reduce FAA costs by shifting the financial burden to airplane owner.
It was not designed for that, either. FAA has made it clear from the start that ADS-B could not and can not replace radar as primary. There was a limited test of whether it could assist with closer spacing at MEM for FedEx which has now been cancelled.
It’s a surveillance system to fill a surveillance database with. That’s all it was ever truly designed to be.
The rest of the stuff was bolted on haphazardly to make paying for it more palatable, as you point out.
The safety commentary comes from how it was marketed. Not what it actually is.
Oh it’s been advertised to reduce separation by the FAA:
The improved accuracy, integrity and reliability of satellite signals over radar means controllers eventually will be able to safely reduce the minimum separation distance between aircraft and increase capacity in the nation's skies.