Gone officially on January 8. It should be interesting to see if ATC gets used to not announcing the availability of SIGMETS on HIWAS any faster than they did when FlightWatch was abandoned.
I liked them ... better than listening to stupid morse code to ID a navaid. The Deming VOR in my area would indicate its name and then provide the local weather ... better than trying to figure out if the morse matches ...
The problem with your area is the ADSB ground stations don’t have complete coverage, my Aera would tell me when it’s missing radar data, I just flew through your area and found areas of “no data”.
Tom
Thanks for the recommendation, but the problem with KTCS is you have mountain range on west side, restricted areas on the right, so it effectively becomes a 130nm round trip detour if travel west & east I think you were eluding to. Also it doesn’t appear to have a mechanic on site and it’s 7 miles from civilization. When I am on a cross country going through your that area my stop is KDMN, has major engine/aircraft service according to airnav.com and hotels are less than a mile away. I’ll pay more for fuel to get convenience.HiWAS might be a GOOD thing to keep around a little longer
Next time fly the straight in to RWY 28 at Dona Ana (KDNA) and do a barrel roll between 4 and 5 miles out and you'll be over my house
A note to those of you flying through this area: if KTCS (Truth or Consequences) isn't too far out of your way, fuel is $1 cheaper per gallon or better at $4.01 for the entire region.
FWIW I use(d) HIWAS regularly. I also liked flightwatch. Not all of us like a lot of gadgets in the plane so having that information accessible outside of the plane was pretty nifty.
I'm not sure what the big expense at maintaining HIWAS is. Isn't it just a recording played through the VOR audio?
All the VORs are 50+ years old. How does the HIWAS recording get to the VOR? I suspect over old phone lines that totally shot.
They're not pulling the the FSS remote outlets yet. Not sure why HIWAS is a whole lot different. If the VOR is discontinued, then there's no problem with no HIWAS there, but if it's still operational, I'm not seeing the savings.All the VORs are 50+ years old. Some stations have voice, some don’t. The equipment needs up dated and updating the ones with voice will be more expensive. How does the HIWAS recording get to the VOR? I suspect over old phone lines that need repaired too.
90% of private pilots could not tell you what HIWAS is or what the H in the frequency window on the chart even means.
If copper in the ground magically degraded, you wouldn’t be taking to Center.
Except that copper some times is above ground at some point and the phone companies keep asking the public utility commissions for permission to quit maintaining it. Especially in rural areas
You LIKED trying to determine where a SIGMET or area of thunderstorms or something was by listening to a list of radials and dme from VORs you never heard of, let alone know where they are, and then plotting that information while in flight?
Rather than get the same information with a quick glance at a screen?
The technology makes things SO much easier. Embrace it!
Thanks for the recommendation, but the problem with KTCS is you have mountain range on west side, restricted areas on the right, so it effectively becomes a 130nm round trip detour if travel west & east I think you were eluding to. Also it doesn’t appear to have a mechanic on site and it’s 7 miles from civilization. When I am on a cross country going through your that area my stop is KDMN, has major engine/aircraft service according to airnav.com and hotels are less than a mile away. I’ll pay more for fuel to get convenience. Tom
Deming is nice, we go there for breakfast .... the courtesy van is a real beater
Nate where are the ZDV transmitters located out of curiosity? Would be nice to have a map, sometimes they handoff too soon to the next controller and they can’t pick me up coming in from west.
They pulled down the maps for “security” against “terrorism”. I know of two sites for the front range plus whatever they’re doing over there on the towers at the old Flight Service station near APA and hunted down a couple of the ADS-B sites since they broadcast their location... but not sure I should say about the two-way sites.
Also I think they know about that problem. If you transmit that you’re not hearing them they’ll flip transmitters.
More than once I’ve had to flip back to the previous controller. It seems not all of them are certain where the boundaries of their transmitters are, I’m sure it varies based on terrain over the front range.
Talk to some of the broadcasters that are losing copper and POTS at their transmitter sites, including shared sites (with Federal services).Never been a problem at any FAA or other transmitter site I’ve worked at.
.........
We never had major utility issues on a Fed site. If it needed fixed the bills were paid.
This sounds interesting. Couple questions.Talk to some of the broadcasters that are losing copper and POTS at their transmitter sites, including shared sites (with Federal services).
FAA has microwave at some, others are going to be harder. Fed specs are to move away from CU and other equipment. The old ATT/Verizon site at 21st and L in DC facility is about 1/4-1/3 of the size it used to be, and much of the old space has been turned into offices or startup co-working space. There's still a door marked "Entry Restricted", but has a glass window in it (with equipment behind). FTS2000 and it's successor started the move away from copper/POTS.
Talk to some of the broadcasters that are losing copper and POTS at their transmitter sites, including shared sites (with Federal services).
FAA has microwave at some, others are going to be harder. Fed specs are to move away from CU and other equipment. The old ATT/Verizon site at 21st and L in DC facility is about 1/4-1/3 of the size it used to be, and much of the old space has been turned into offices or startup co-working space. There's still a door marked "Entry Restricted", but has a glass window in it (with equipment behind). FTS2000 and it's successor started the move away from copper/POTS.
POTS - plain old telephone service, what we had for about 100 years before data became king. CU - copper, as in copper wire as opposed to coax or fiber or 5G. FTS2000 - a master contract for federal telecommunications services, now being modernized under other contract vehicles. FTS stood for Federal Telecommunications Service, which was essentially a private switched service set aside/reserved for the Feds. There was also AutoVON, which was the military voice telephone network. Both FTS and AutoVON had private facilities and switches but often traveled the last mile over the local phone systems. Think of them as giant PBX systems, though AutoVON had more secure services.This sounds interesting. Couple questions.
Define: POTS, “CU and other equipment”, FTS2000
Oh no doubt Cooper is being replaced with fiber. It was the “they don’t want the right of way” part that made me laugh. Those going to radio sites are worth a fortune to them.
To lay fiber and keep milking. LOL.
If the fiber has to go on a pole, because the site is all rocks, so be it. They don’t care. Commercial customers pay enough to cover converting since commercial usually isn’t oversubscribed and has SLAs...
Thank you.POTS - plain old telephone service, what we had for about 100 years before data became king. CU - copper, as in copper wire as opposed to coax or fiber or 5G. FTS2000 - a master contract for federal telecommunications services, now being modernized under other contract vehicles. FTS stood for Federal Telecommunications Service, which was essentially a private switched service set aside/reserved for the Feds. There was also AutoVON, which was the military voice telephone network. Both FTS and AutoVON had private facilities and switches but often traveled the last mile over the local phone systems. Think of them as giant PBX systems, though AutoVON had more secure services.
It's all about 5G last mile these days. The big telcos have cut down their fiber deployment intending to use 5G millimeter-wave. Let's review: the original system and long lines were copper, then microwave and satellite were deployed for long lines (radio spectrum) then it over back to fiber (no radio), and now it's moving back to radio with 5G. And that's today's though on How the Copper Turns.
It's all about 5G last mile these days. The big telcos have cut down their fiber deployment intending to use 5G millimeter-wave. Let's review: the original system and long lines were copper, then microwave and satellite were deployed for long lines (radio spectrum) then it over back to fiber (no radio), and now it's moving back to radio with 5G. And that's today's though on How the Copper Turns.
By the way, if someone wants to waste a few hours reading about the old ATT Long Lines history, this website has a lot of info. It includes some photos taken at/of some of the facilities (including Cold War stuff.
Www.long-lines.net
Nate, you'll enjoy this BSP....I have the engineering drawings for the standard Cold War era AT&T outhouse. Friends dropped a 12’ “cornucopia” microwave horn off a crane once into one. It bounced off with a small bend in the roof. LOL. Most overbuilt outhouses you’ll ever see.
Nate, you'll enjoy this BSP....
http://long-lines.net/documents/BSP-770-130-301/BSP-770-130-301-p1.html