lolachampcar
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2013
- Messages
- 106
- Display Name
Display name:
lolachampcar
I've gotten swallowed up by the ADSB-Out Mandate Monster and did a little therapeutic writing to ease the pain.
I'd be curious for feedback from the community. Should I go looking for a "letters to the editor" forum for this?
Thanks,
Bill
Can GA Turn the 2020 ADSB-Out Mandate Around?
I fly both Experimental and Certified aircraft. My experimental aircraft has full ADSB in and out capabilities which leads me to feel that NexGen and ADSB is one of the most important things the FAA has done in forty years. However, my experience with my certified aircraft has me concerned that GA may never see the benefits of NextGen or ADSB.
A friend sent me a quick news clipping on Michael Whitaker’s testimony before the committee headed by Senators Ayotte and Cantwell. I went online to view the testimony as sometimes news outlets can provide a less than accurate account. In short, Mr. Whitaker was brought before the committee to represent the FAA’s view of a an inspector’s general report detailing failings in the implementation of NextGen and the ADSB component of NextGen. Mr. Whitaker’s response was simply that the FAA was doing its part, there were 140,000 N number aircraft subject to the 2020 ADSB-Out mandate and that “industry” needed to step up to the plate and do its’ part and get equipment installed in these aircraft. He went on to say something like 140 aircraft a day need to be done but only 100 per month were having ADSB-Out installed. To paraphrase a line from one of my favorite movies, it was obvious to me that what we have here is a failure to lead. Mr. Whitaker also emphatically stated that the mandate would not slip.
I’m an old operations guy so my take on running a project is that management’s job is to remove the obstacles that prevent people from doing their jobs. It is management’s job to identify obstacles. It seems clear to me that tossing a mandate over the wall to “industry” and expecting them to deal with it will have one of two outcomes. The first and most likely for me is that GA will slowly become aware of the need to spend well over $5K per aircraft to equip them with ADSB-Out to meet the mandate. Someone will start promoting that the only benefit will be to let big brother know exactly where you are along with your tail number. This will lead to a ground swell of complaints to our representatives followed by a push of the mandate or even its demise as currently envisioned. The second less likely alternative is that 2020 comes and a vast majority of GA is grounded. Neither of these options should be acceptable, especially when we have five years to work on the issue.
There is a lot going on with ADSB-Out and a lot of good reasons for all the caution in how the systems are designed and installed. I’ll focus here only on the core goal of fulfilling the ADSB-Out mandate in a sensible way and one that is in the public’s best interest.
If I were responsible for implementing the Mandate, I would recognize that pricing is the single largest barrier to my getting GA to go along with this whole idea. Given that price will stop me dead in my tracks I would make solving that problem my top priority.
ADSB is a good idea for GA, industry, ATC and the population as a whole so this is what I would do to get GA to move (remembering that GA is a vast majority of the aircraft flying around and that, without them, NextGen does not work)-
(1)
Work with industry to generate a general transponder specification that meets all the functional requirements of ADSB-out. This device would include Mode S-ES, GPS position in a separate inclusive antenna/receiver, dual pressure transducers for both pitot/static lines (automated ground/air determination) OR GPS based Ground/Air determination as used by Garmin, UAT receiver for ADSB-In and WiFi server for support of external equipment.
(2)
Work with Congress to provide a liability shield for manufacturers such that their liability for compliant equipment is limited to the cost of the equipment.
(3)
Allocate a portion of the FAA funding to establishing a compliance testing facility staffed by FAA employees whose task is to aid manufacturers in producing compliant product. This would be offered as a no charge service to any manufacturer.
(4)
Produce a working group within the compliance division of the FAA to generate generalized installation guidelines such that any A&P can install this equipment. This group would also produce test procedures for both ATC and the A&P such that installed system performance can be verified and monitored on an ongoing basis for continued airworthiness (akin to the current 24 month transponder test but without the need for a certified avionics shop). Given the automated nature of NextGen, this could likely be done by the A&P or IA logging onto a FAA server to enable a test flight then documenting the results of that test flight in surveilled airspace. If it is easy enough, it could be included in annual and 100 hour inspections effectively halving the current time between transponder checks.
The above would result in sub thousand dollar installs of fully ADSB-in/out compliant equipment with the added benefits that anyone with an IPad or similar device will have access to in cockpit accurate moving map position, weather reports, composite Nexrad radar and, what I find most important, accurate traffic. AOPA and EAA would get behind this in an instant actually helping the FAA meet the Mandate as opposed to what I believe they will eventually end up doing and that is fighting it.
I'd be curious for feedback from the community. Should I go looking for a "letters to the editor" forum for this?
Thanks,
Bill
Can GA Turn the 2020 ADSB-Out Mandate Around?
I fly both Experimental and Certified aircraft. My experimental aircraft has full ADSB in and out capabilities which leads me to feel that NexGen and ADSB is one of the most important things the FAA has done in forty years. However, my experience with my certified aircraft has me concerned that GA may never see the benefits of NextGen or ADSB.
A friend sent me a quick news clipping on Michael Whitaker’s testimony before the committee headed by Senators Ayotte and Cantwell. I went online to view the testimony as sometimes news outlets can provide a less than accurate account. In short, Mr. Whitaker was brought before the committee to represent the FAA’s view of a an inspector’s general report detailing failings in the implementation of NextGen and the ADSB component of NextGen. Mr. Whitaker’s response was simply that the FAA was doing its part, there were 140,000 N number aircraft subject to the 2020 ADSB-Out mandate and that “industry” needed to step up to the plate and do its’ part and get equipment installed in these aircraft. He went on to say something like 140 aircraft a day need to be done but only 100 per month were having ADSB-Out installed. To paraphrase a line from one of my favorite movies, it was obvious to me that what we have here is a failure to lead. Mr. Whitaker also emphatically stated that the mandate would not slip.
I’m an old operations guy so my take on running a project is that management’s job is to remove the obstacles that prevent people from doing their jobs. It is management’s job to identify obstacles. It seems clear to me that tossing a mandate over the wall to “industry” and expecting them to deal with it will have one of two outcomes. The first and most likely for me is that GA will slowly become aware of the need to spend well over $5K per aircraft to equip them with ADSB-Out to meet the mandate. Someone will start promoting that the only benefit will be to let big brother know exactly where you are along with your tail number. This will lead to a ground swell of complaints to our representatives followed by a push of the mandate or even its demise as currently envisioned. The second less likely alternative is that 2020 comes and a vast majority of GA is grounded. Neither of these options should be acceptable, especially when we have five years to work on the issue.
There is a lot going on with ADSB-Out and a lot of good reasons for all the caution in how the systems are designed and installed. I’ll focus here only on the core goal of fulfilling the ADSB-Out mandate in a sensible way and one that is in the public’s best interest.
If I were responsible for implementing the Mandate, I would recognize that pricing is the single largest barrier to my getting GA to go along with this whole idea. Given that price will stop me dead in my tracks I would make solving that problem my top priority.
ADSB is a good idea for GA, industry, ATC and the population as a whole so this is what I would do to get GA to move (remembering that GA is a vast majority of the aircraft flying around and that, without them, NextGen does not work)-
(1)
Work with industry to generate a general transponder specification that meets all the functional requirements of ADSB-out. This device would include Mode S-ES, GPS position in a separate inclusive antenna/receiver, dual pressure transducers for both pitot/static lines (automated ground/air determination) OR GPS based Ground/Air determination as used by Garmin, UAT receiver for ADSB-In and WiFi server for support of external equipment.
(2)
Work with Congress to provide a liability shield for manufacturers such that their liability for compliant equipment is limited to the cost of the equipment.
(3)
Allocate a portion of the FAA funding to establishing a compliance testing facility staffed by FAA employees whose task is to aid manufacturers in producing compliant product. This would be offered as a no charge service to any manufacturer.
(4)
Produce a working group within the compliance division of the FAA to generate generalized installation guidelines such that any A&P can install this equipment. This group would also produce test procedures for both ATC and the A&P such that installed system performance can be verified and monitored on an ongoing basis for continued airworthiness (akin to the current 24 month transponder test but without the need for a certified avionics shop). Given the automated nature of NextGen, this could likely be done by the A&P or IA logging onto a FAA server to enable a test flight then documenting the results of that test flight in surveilled airspace. If it is easy enough, it could be included in annual and 100 hour inspections effectively halving the current time between transponder checks.
The above would result in sub thousand dollar installs of fully ADSB-in/out compliant equipment with the added benefits that anyone with an IPad or similar device will have access to in cockpit accurate moving map position, weather reports, composite Nexrad radar and, what I find most important, accurate traffic. AOPA and EAA would get behind this in an instant actually helping the FAA meet the Mandate as opposed to what I believe they will eventually end up doing and that is fighting it.