bnt83
Final Approach
Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
Not really, should help make up for the lack of a 406 ELT in my case
Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
I like that I can now track my son's VFR flights, but I didn't know about it until today!Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
That's great!! Thanks!!Go into your account on FA, scroll down to section 6, select show "position only flights". Now you will be able to see any flight where you have a squawk.
No. The media was reporting it happened at night because that's when the search started.Wow...so this guy took off at NIGHT on pretty much a moonless night...let alone to Telluride Colorado which is swamped with mountains...and it was pretty hard IFR in Payson...with his family...WOW.
That is the strange thing about a lot of these crashes, it seems like such an obviously bad decision. It's not like the weather was OK, not perfect and he flew too far and got himself trapped. He took off into the muck.I'm just spitballing here (trying to understand the decision making that would lead to something like this) that the pilot knew that Payson was LIFR at the time of departure, but thought he could climb above the layer and proceed and then (trying to stay VFR and/or out of ice) he descended into terrain.
What I wonder is if he had any kind of iPad/ForeFlight or portable GPS with terrain warnings. It is hard to imagine anyone flying around GA cross-country these days without it. At what point does a pilot continue to proceed into the red stuff and not turn back?
Exactly. In relation to another recent thread, I've done a few VFR flights that some might call 'scud running'. Flying toward rising terrain in MVFR conditions. But, when the yellow Xs on the Garmin start turning red and I don't have a known out…..I'm out of there and have no qualms about turning around. The red X's don't lie.That is the strange thing about a lot of these crashes, it seems like such an obviously bad decision. It's not like the weather was OK, not perfect and he flew too far and got himself trapped. He took off into the muck.
No. The media was reporting it happened at night because that's when the search started.
He departed at 9 in the morning.
Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
Yep, I just looked at our 182 N735UD and my son flies it VFR or on an IFR flight plan if I am with him, but all the flights that show up were VFR some with Flight Following and some not.So are you saying that once I install the GTX345 that all of my flights will show up on FlightAware regardless if I am on FF / talking to ATC?
Apparently. I had no clue about it until this accident.So are you saying that once I install the GTX345 that all of my flights will show up on FlightAware regardless if I am on FF / talking to ATC?
I just looked up N1DC Jerry's plane and it's blocked. I think all the NFL owners block their tail numbers, I know the Atlanta owner Arthur Blank has his blocked.Apparently. I had no clue about it until this accident.
Now, it looks like you can request to have your tail number blocked from public tracking. But that is a separate process you have to go through. I looked up some dotcom callsigns I know by N# and some show up and others are blocked.
Yeah, apparently the block process is separate from obtaining a dotcom call sign.I just looked up N1DC Jerry's plane and it's blocked. I think all the NFL owners block their tail numbers, I know the Atlanta owner Arthur Blank has his blocked.
People don't get software updates from the manufacturer every other Thursday. We're still operating on Human Nature 1.0.0.Weird. Cause my phones and gadgets have been getting smarter every couple years.
I thought some ADS-B Out boxes allow the pilot to block the tail # from broadcasting. That's the one I will be getting when I equip. No tracking for me, please.Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
I think you are exactly right.
They were heading for Telluride. You can teach, you can add the greatest tech ever devised, but you cannot account for the Human Factor.
But you really cannot blame GA or flying for it. Chances are this could have happened to the same family on icy mountain highways, when the get-there-it is takes over.
Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
Yeah, apparently the block process is separate from obtaining a dotcom call sign.
I just looked up N1DC Jerry's plane and it's blocked. I think all the NFL owners block their tail numbers, I know the Atlanta owner Arthur Blank has his blocked.
was LIFR at the time of departure, but thought he could climb above the layer and proceed
Where did you get that on N1DC? It is blocked on Flightaware and that's the only source I use, not that I am stalking him, I see his plane in Destin 4 weekends or so every summer.Yup,
you didn't actually think ADSB was about "safety" did you
And equally as useless with ADSB, every plane Ive owned has had a blocked tailnumber (FAA source blocked too), and the second you hit a tower, official or some radio nerds internet connected pi box, you aint blocked no mo, at least on some less mainstream websites.
Not so much
Ask him how the weather was in Houston this morning
What I wonder is if he had any kind of iPad/ForeFlight or portable GPS with terrain warnings.
ADS-B tracking worries...
You do know that there is nothing preventing you from keeping an old mode C transponder AND having some form of ADS-B out.
Don't wanna be tracked, just turn off the new ADS-B and turn on the old dumb box squawking 1200.
Or just turn all transponders off.
I don't have space for two panel mount so something would have to be a remote box.
That works, but will pizz the overlords off, they say if you have a working transponder it needs to be on.
Luckily for me, I'm remote enough, and normally low enough, the local towers and armatures don't often pick me up. Now if I stretch my legs or go up and play IFR, no privacy.
Reason #2942 why we need a ADSB solution which sets the N number and hex to a unassigned code when set to 1200.
He did. He had absolutely everything in that airplane, it was the nicest and best equipped 210 I have ever seen. I camped out at Payson, and they were the only other people camping there. It was Skylar's 12th birthday, she'd chosen to fly there for camping, and the next day they were going indoor skydiving as a surprise for the girls.
He showed me around the airplane, it was beautiful. The latest version of absolutely everything; GTNs, glass flight displays, new paint, interior. He was, quite rightly, very proud of it.
Oh, it was never about safety.Yup,
you didn't actually think ADSB was about "safety" did you
So now this family, and the one that went down over the Smokey Mts. Both non-instrument rated pilots flying into IMC over mountainous terrain. I just don't get it. The most well equipped plane money can buy won't help you a bit if you don't have some situational awareness, and frankly, common sense. RIP.
I don't get it either. I just can't fathom how a pilot with that kind of modern tech could literally fly into a mountain in those conditions. I mean, how can you not realize you are descending into terrain? This isn't the 1940s.So now this family, and the one that went down over the Smokey Mts. Both non-instrument rated pilots flying into IMC over mountainous terrain. I just don't get it. The most well equipped plane money can buy won't help you a bit if you don't have some situational awareness, and frankly, common sense. RIP.
I don't get it either. I just can't fathom how a pilot with that kind of modern tech could literally fly into a mountain in those conditions. I mean, how can you not realize you are descending into terrain? This isn't the 1940s.
Oh, it was never about safety.
All along, it was really just a cheap way of dealing with future airline volume in the national airspace. The cost of modernizing the surface based radar air traffic control system to handle the projected volume was too much to handle. So, someone sold the government a cheaper satellite-based solution.
I don't get it either. I just can't fathom how a pilot with that kind of modern tech could literally fly into a mountain in those conditions. I mean, how can you not realize you are descending into terrain? This isn't the 1940s.
Either way it is bad.I hope you're right, but that ain't what my money's on.
Unexpected downdraft?
Looking at the FlightAware track, he could have been finished off by a downdraft, but he clearly made an intentional descent from 7800' and leveled off for a bit before the end.Unexpected downdraft?
I noticed that my certificate shows issued in 2010 too. That is when I turned in the paper to plastic and changed the number (I think from SS# to another or vice versa). Why did they change the issue date?Database shows Eric as a non instrument PPL as of 2010.
As far as the dangers of flying, if you're overweight, or smoke cigarettes, just slap yourself now
Anytime you make a change (like address) or even request a replacement certificate, the date in the database gets updated.I noticed that my certificate shows issued in 2010 too. That is when I turned in the paper to plastic and changed the number (I think from SS# to another or vice versa). Why did they change the issue date?
In some ways, but the mountains of AZ and other western states are full of wrecked airplanes that flew into them in IMC back during WWII. There was even a DC-3 that left 1/4 of its wing on a mountain south of Prescott flying in MVFR. Those guys didn't have the benefit of display screens flashing red and screaming about terrain ahead.I'd fathom to think we were better in the 40s IN SOME RESPECTS, I think having all this fancy tech, as it sounds like his 210 had, build these mental steroids in people and they push things further than they would in a super basic panel with only a paper sectional.
I wouldn't limit it to "ads-b alone" - I don't have ADS-B and just pulled up the last 7 flights for my plane, with no flight plan.Is anyone else bothered by the idea that you can be openly tracked on FlightAware by your ADS-B signal alone?
Were you using Flight Following or otherwise talking to an Approach facility?I wouldn't limit it to "ads-b alone" - I don't have ADS-B and just pulled up the last 7 flights for my plane, with no flight plan.