LongRoadBob
Cleared for Takeoff
I mentioned recently in some thread or other about the northern part of Norway, the Russians were jamming GPS during their military training exercises.
Then I saw this in the newspaper Aftenposten. A story about an emergency medical helicopter (luftambulanse, literally "air ambulance") flying south recently experienced (I think this was near Bergen) GPS dropout, and if I am reading correctly also off of the ATC screen, not radar of course but maybe it is written incorrectly or ATC is using GPS as well.
Anyway, even if you can't read norwegian, the map (halfway down) shows where they lost GPS signal for about 100 seconds. Also further on down you can see the culprit.
Story is here: https://www.aftenposten.no/norge/i/...ient-Arsaken-sto-i-sigarettenneren-til-en-bil
The norwegian authorities (like the FCC here) used triangulation, and when they got near enough a hand-held device to track the jamming signal. It was the little device pictured in the guys hand, that was plugged into a car cigarette lighter. It's illegal to sell, buy, or have one of these but the story goes on to say that mainly three types of uses folks are finding, since these are available online. Mainly to cheat toll stations (some use GPS tracking to charge toll), to defeat (for trucks) the employer "watching where you are" and how often you take breaks, etc. and thirdly to defeat "device trackers" for stolen goods that the thieves suspect may have trackers on them...
Given that this one little device defeated GPS for a whole area, this sounds like a problem that is ramping up. Anyone heard about this happening in the US?
Then I saw this in the newspaper Aftenposten. A story about an emergency medical helicopter (luftambulanse, literally "air ambulance") flying south recently experienced (I think this was near Bergen) GPS dropout, and if I am reading correctly also off of the ATC screen, not radar of course but maybe it is written incorrectly or ATC is using GPS as well.
Anyway, even if you can't read norwegian, the map (halfway down) shows where they lost GPS signal for about 100 seconds. Also further on down you can see the culprit.
Story is here: https://www.aftenposten.no/norge/i/...ient-Arsaken-sto-i-sigarettenneren-til-en-bil
The norwegian authorities (like the FCC here) used triangulation, and when they got near enough a hand-held device to track the jamming signal. It was the little device pictured in the guys hand, that was plugged into a car cigarette lighter. It's illegal to sell, buy, or have one of these but the story goes on to say that mainly three types of uses folks are finding, since these are available online. Mainly to cheat toll stations (some use GPS tracking to charge toll), to defeat (for trucks) the employer "watching where you are" and how often you take breaks, etc. and thirdly to defeat "device trackers" for stolen goods that the thieves suspect may have trackers on them...
Given that this one little device defeated GPS for a whole area, this sounds like a problem that is ramping up. Anyone heard about this happening in the US?