I think that all you can hope to do is find them on the ground afterward.In all seriousness, though, how do you get someone to unstick their mic? Does anything actually work?
If they are listening on 121.5 on a second radio, you can transmit there to tell them.
That’s why you’re supposed to say “stuck mic” on the stuck mic freq.Works .05% of the time.
I’ve heard that call on 121.5 but in my plane (Warrior) if one radio is transmitting the other is blocked out by a relay, so I’m not sure the person can always receive even on a second radio/frequency.If they are listening on 121.5 on a second radio, you can transmit there to tell them.
I’ve heard that call on 121.5 but in my plane (Warrior) if one radio is transmitting the other is blocked out by a relay, so I’m not sure the person can always receive even on a second radio/frequency.
The “test”, I think, is to have the second radio go to the overhead speaker and then set that radio to the same frequency as the first (if your audio panel allows this). If you can’t hear your voice in the speaker when you broadcast you have the relay. Don’t be fooled by side tone in your ear from the first radio.
Haven’t tried it but I suspect having ALL radios go to the speaker would offer the same test, since I’m not sure a side tone is produced when using the speaker. Could be wrong about that part.
Maybe this is true for GA but airliners/big planes have completely independent radios. Then again, if they did, they’d probably know of the stick mic issue on the frequency.
Xmit 122.1, listen over the VOR.Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
Anyone else remember an attempt (50 years ago or more) to get aircraft communications split to two separate frequencies? One for transmit, one for receive.
It obviously had problems with the technology that was available at the time, but it certainly would be doable now.
Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
Anyone else remember an attempt (50 years ago or more) to get aircraft communications split to two separate frequencies? One for transmit, one for receive.
It obviously had problems with the technology that was available at the time, but it certainly would be doable now.
With all of the hoops required to be authorized for PRM approaches at an air carrier I can’t imagine just how ****ed up the implementation of that would be if it was anything other than setting one channel/frequency and using the radio same as we do now.Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
Anyone else remember an attempt (50 years ago or more) to get aircraft communications split to two separate frequencies? One for transmit, one for receive.
It obviously had problems with the technology that was available at the time, but it certainly would be doable now.
With all of the hoops required to be authorized for PRM approaches at an air carrier I can’t imagine just how ****ed up the implementation of that would be if it was anything other than setting one channel/frequency and using the radio same as we do now.
So if everyone is listening on a different frequency than they are transmitting on, how is anyone going to hear anything? I think I missed something.Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
Anyone else remember an attempt (50 years ago or more) to get aircraft communications split to two separate frequencies? One for transmit, one for receive.
It obviously had problems with the technology that was available at the time, but it certainly would be doable now.
So if everyone is listening on a different frequency than they are transmitting on, how is anyone going to hear anything? I think I missed something.
That happened right over our airpark, except the "CFI" giving "instruction" was a student pilot instructing a non pilot.
I see. ThanksIt's a long time ago. But an airport would get a pair of frequencies as a channel. You would select that channel and some magic happened in the little box and you would talk and it would transmit on one frequency and they would receive it on another.
The problem was the wizard couldn't get the magic in the box to work. It's so long ago I don't remember the details.
I see. Thanks
I thought cell phones were FHSS and CDMA these days?The "magic" that @Shepherd references, though, is present in your cell phone and its network. Essentially, duplex (or multiplex) tower comms would work similarly to a cell phone conference call. Rather than selecting a frequency, you'd select a "channel" that would be on at least two (possibly more) frequencies assigned by a network controller, just like you now dial into a conference call.
Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
If they are listening on 121.5 on a second radio, you can transmit there to tell them.
I thought cell phones were FHSS and CDMA these days?
I thought the advantage of AM is that even though someone has a stuck mic, you can still receive a transmission from another station..with the annoying heterodyne squeal included.
Not on the planes I fly, but I haven't flown a GA plane in about ten years.Nope...when you key your transmitter, it mutes your receive audio on both coms wired to your audio panel.
SSB is still a form of amplitude modulation however, the reason that you don't get the squeal when two stations transmit is because SSB does not transmit the carrier (SC). The carrier is "inserted" at the receiver by a BFO (beat frequency oscillator).Works with SCSSB, too, but I seem to recall that you don't get the squeal for some reason. Been a while since I was on the air, though, so I could be misremembering.
SSB is still a form of amplitude modulation however, the reason that you don't get the squeal when two stations transmit is because SSB does not transmit the carrier (SC). The carrier is "inserted" at the receiver by a BFO (beat frequency oscillator).
If you think that switching to the other sideband is going to be a cure to someone close by stuck on the channel, you're in for a bit of a surprise.
This is true but as are many things in aviation, it's inertia. They are not going to switch to SSB for general comms because it would mandate that everyone buy new radios. Also, tuning with SSB is less forgiving than AM. Since the receiver is inserting the carrier for demodulation of an SSB signal, the tuning requirements are more critical.No, I just think SSB would be a better use of spectrum, provide better range on the same power, and not squeal like a banshee when two people transmit on top of each other.
Why half-do it? With good enough TCAS, we can all just go NORDO.If you're going to obsolete everything, why replace a 90 year old technology with a 70 year old one. Just go digital.
Just another down side of asynchronous communications.
Anyone else remember an attempt (50 years ago or more) to get aircraft communications split to two separate frequencies? One for transmit, one for receive.
It obviously had problems with the technology that was available at the time, but it certainly would be doable now.
There is a sequencing aspect of ATC beyond just collision avoidance.Why half-do it? With good enough TCAS, we can all just go NORDO.