So now that the alphabet orgs are reporting the difficulties the airlines are having meeting the ADS-B mandate. What do you think will happen?
So now that the alphabet orgs are reporting the difficulties the airlines are having meeting the ADS-B mandate. What do you think will happen?
Temporary waivers if they have TCAS?
GA is getting by just fine considering that we are talking here a few hundred thousand people ( plane owners and pilots ) vs an industry serving 10s of millions of people.They'll be given extensions. GA will not. Different spanks for different ranks. What else is new?
GA is getting by just fine considering that we are talking here a few hundred thousand people ( plane owners and pilots ) vs an industry serving 10s of millions of people.
If there is ever an existential argument between commercial/airline industry and GA, it will the end of GA if airline operators play it right - all they need to do is present this as an argument between few rich plane owners and 100s of millions of people whose convenience of commercial travel if being threatened.
It will be Meigs field debacle on the national scale.
yup. the FCC kept extending a deadline for our comm center to move to 12.5 kHz separation...I retired 13-yrs ago and that "mandate" is still not in ink.The extension that I always believed would happen.
ThisThe extension that I always believed would happen.
The extension that I always believed would happen.
The landings were real.So you're saying the Moon landing wasn't real?
Most airliners are tracked pretty closely already. In the big scheme of things I don’t see them as benefitting from ADS-B as much as other airpace users.
Here is a sobering statistic: there are currently 59,000 aircraft with ADS-B installs, and 219,000 registered aircraft in the US. The rate of installs is currently dead linear at about 1800 per month. At this rate will take 90 years to complete installs for the entire fleet. Even if you assume only half of registered aircraft intend or need to comply, that would take "only" 45 years. The major airlines look like they are making good progress, e.g. Delta has almost 500 aircraft equipped, which is around half its mainline fleet.
In addition, apparently only 88% of installs are "good". Here's hoping my install is in the 88% considering what it costs.
Data from the FAA.
Not sure about your math. 1800 per month equals 21,600 per year. 219,000 registered aircraft, minus the 59,000 already installed leaves 160,000 to go. 160,000 divided by 21,600 per year comes out to just less than 8 years, not 90.
Must have punched in an extra zero somewhere! So 8 years, yes.
The extension that I always believed would happen.
No worries, did the same thing myself on a different post.
It's actually 88 MONTHS, not years. Units conversion issue. So it's a 2026 or 2022 mandate depending on equipage percentage goals.
Here is a sobering statistic: there are currently 59,000 aircraft with ADS-B installs, and 219,000 registered aircraft in the US. The rate of installs is currently dead linear at about 1800 per month. At this rate will take 90 years to complete installs for the entire fleet. Even if you assume only half of registered aircraft intend or need to comply, that would take "only" 45 years. The major airlines look like they are making good progress, e.g. Delta has almost 500 aircraft equipped, which is around half its mainline fleet.
In addition, apparently only 88% of installs are "good". Here's hoping my install is in the 88% considering what it costs.
Data from the FAA.
Besides your math error which has been corrected, I have a question about your raw data. Does the 219,000 registered aircraft number include aircraft that do not have electrical systems and are therefore exempt? Does it include aircraft whose owners have no intent to equip because they do not operate in the airspace that requires it? In other words, are you analyzing the correct data set?
So now that the alphabet orgs are reporting the difficulties the airlines are having meeting the ADS-B mandate. What do you think will happen?
The military has already said they won't be compliant in time, so I imagine that the FAA will just apply whatever plan they have to deal with the military after the deadline.
Rger roger; I don't intend to fly above 1,000 AGL. NORDO, no XPDR.Electrical system or not, if you don't intend to fly in Class B or C airspace, or above 10,000 feet, you don't have to install ADS-B. I know some that won't out of principal. I know my co-owners and I discussed it, as our one airplane rarely goes anywhere.
If I buy an airplane that was "originally certified without an electrical system", but had one added post-certification, can I just yank the transponder out and keep the rest of the electrons? My other option is to remove the electrical system and Velcro an iPad to the panel . . .
add the 30 nm mode C ring that surrounds an awful lot of urban areas to your no-fly zone.Electrical system or not, if you don't intend to fly in Class B or C airspace, or above 10,000 feet, you don't have to install ADS-B.
Transponders: 91 215 (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2) of this section, any aircraft which was not originally certificated with an engine-driven electrical system...A wind driven gen/alternator is exempt however. Or a system with no charging capability, but with starter, battery, radios, et al.