Termination of 121.5 MHz Beacons for Satellite Alerting

Tristar

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Tristar
Now I'm pretty sure most of you got this:

On 1 February 2009, the International Cospas-Sarsat [FONT='Times New Roman','serif'] [1] [/FONT] Organization (U.S. included) will terminate processing of distress signals emitted by 121.5 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELTs). This means that pilots flying aircraft equipped with 121.5 MHz ELTs after that date will have to depend on pilots of over flying aircraft and or ground stations monitoring 121.5 to hear and report distress alert signals, transmitted from a possible crash site.

Why is this happening?

Although lives have been saved by 121.5 MHz ELTs, the downside has been their propensity to generate false alerts (approximately 98 percent of all 121.5 MHz alerts are false), and their failure to provide rescue forces with timely and accurate crash location data. Both of which actually delay rescue efforts and have a direct effect on an individual's chance for survival. Rescue forces have to respond to all 121.5 MHz alerts to determine if they are real distress alerts or if they are being generated by an interferer, an inadvertent activation (by the owner) or equipment failure.

Is there an alternative?

Yes, the Cospas-Sarsat System (U.S. included) has been and will continue processing emergency signals transmitted by 406 MHz ELTs. These 5 Watt digital beacons transmit a much stronger signal, are more accurate, verifiable and traceable to the registered beacon owner (406 MHz ELTs must be registered by the owner in accordance with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation). Registration allows the search and rescue authorities to contact the beacon owner, or his or her designated alternate by telephone to determine if a real emergency exists. Therefore, a simple telephone call often solves a 406 MHz alerts without launching costly and limited search and rescue resources, which would have to be done for a 121.5 MHz alert. For these reasons, the search and rescue community is encouraging aircraft owners to consider retrofit of 406 MHz ELTs or at a minimum, consider the purchase of a handheld 406 MHz Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) which can be carried in the cockpit while continuing to maintain a fixed 121.5 MHz ELT mounted in the aircraft's tail.

Remember, after February 1, 2009, the world-wide Cospas-Sarsat satellite system will no longer process 121.5 MHz alert signals. Pilots involved in aircraft accidents in remote areas will have to depend on pilots of over flying aircraft and or ground stations to hear emergency ELT distress signals. For further information concerning the termination of 121.5 MHz data processing visit www.sarsat.noaa.gov



Now I know it stinks that 98 percent are false alarms, but how would you like to be part of that other 2 percent? I love how they say, "although lives have been saved...." To me they're loosing lives because I doubt everyone will change over and the standard ELT is what everyone is used to.




As far as the upside, I guess if its true that they have a stronger, more accurate signal, that would be nice but I think they're putting an awefull lot of responsibility on people to change or "buy handhelds." I imagine its going to put a lot of stress on aircraft owners since most aircraft are required to have an ELT, a functioning one at that.


My opinion is that I like the idea of the 406 Mhz but I still don't think its a good idea to decommission the old one. How many people are monitoring the 406 verses 121.5 anyways?
 
The new tech ELT devices are orders of magnitude better, and folks on the ground (other pilots, CAP, etc.) will still be able to hear and track 121.5 beacons. I think the benefit vs. the cost of continuing the sat monitoring of the 121.5 justifies terminating (everything that touches SatOps costs big).
 
The 121.5 sats will go OTS. With the sats IN service they may (top of my head) pick up an ELT in 4-8 hours, verify in 24 hours, and zero the location in to something like 300 sq miles, with all kinds of signals going and 97% being false alarms.

Putting an end to a service with that kind of performance is not much of a loss.

We need to get 406MHz PLBs immediately and eventually move to 406MHz ELTs in planes when we can afford it. I think the cost of the 406 ELTs should come down but there's gotta be an aviation lawsuit tax of $1000-$2000 in there.

What would help is a US law like the GA revitalization act to help indemnify the ELT manufacturers.
 
I think the cost of the 406 ELTs should come down but there's gotta be an aviation lawsuit tax of $1000-$2000 in there.

What would help is a US law like the GA revitalization act to help indemnify the ELT manufacturers.
Why should 406 manufacturers be treated any differently than existing ELT manufacturers? Are you looking at potential failure rate on a new technology or what?
 
Why should 406 manufacturers be treated any differently than existing ELT manufacturers? Are you looking at potential failure rate on a new technology or what?

Who says it should be different? You should be able to sell a safety device without being on the hook for every accident that occurs with your customers.
 
Who says it should be different? You should be able to sell a safety device without being on the hook for every accident that occurs with your customers.
Ahhhh.... ok. I mistook your statement. I thought you were stating the opposite and making the manufacturer more liable. Oops!
 
The 121.5 sats will go OTS. With the sats IN service they may (top of my head) pick up an ELT in 4-8 hours, verify in 24 hours, and zero the location in to something like 300 sq miles, with all kinds of signals going and 97% being false alarms.

Putting an end to a service with that kind of performance is not much of a loss.

We need to get 406MHz PLBs immediately and eventually move to 406MHz ELTs in planes when we can afford it. I think the cost of the 406 ELTs should come down but there's gotta be an aviation lawsuit tax of $1000-$2000 in there.

What would help is a US law like the GA revitalization act to help indemnify the ELT manufacturers.

I started carrying a PLB in my flight bag about a year ago. Robinson Helicopter really ticked me off by only offering a 121.5 ELT when we took delivery of our R44 about a year ago. How brain dead is that?

At least with the PLB, I can take it with me no matter what I'm flying. The cost, BTW, was around $700 if I recall correctly. The caveat is that it has to be manually activated.
 
I started carrying a PLB in my flight bag about a year ago.

I just bought one at OSH this year too. Show special, $600.

At least with the PLB, I can take it with me no matter what I'm flying.

Bingo... Exactly why I've been wanting one for a while now. Plus, it makes rescues much quicker which is very important when flying in the winter in the cold climate up here.
 
Wow, the whole "manualy activated" thing is a serious limfac
 
Termination of 121.5 MHz Beacons for Satellite Alerting is Coming Soon

Termination of 121.5 MHz Beacons for Satellite Alerting is Coming Soon

Notice Number: NOTC0981

On 1 February 2009, the International Cospas-Sarsat [1] Organization (U.S. included) will terminate processing of distress signals emitted by 121.5 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELTs). This means that pilots flying aircraft equipped with 121.5 MHz ELTs after that date will have to depend on pilots of over flying aircraft and or ground stations monitoring 121.5 to hear and report distress alert signals, transmitted from a possible crash site.

Why is this happening?
Although lives have been saved by 121.5 MHz ELTs, the downside has been their propensity to generate false alerts (approximately 98 percent of all 121.5 MHz alerts are false), and their failure to provide rescue forces with timely and accurate crash location data. Both of which actually delay rescue efforts and have a direct effect on an individual's chance for survival. Rescue forces have to respond to all 121.5 MHz alerts to determine if they are real distress alerts or if they are being generated by an interferer, an inadvertent activation (by the owner) or equipment failure.

Is there an alternative?
Yes, the Cospas-Sarsat System (U.S. included) has been and will continue processing emergency signals transmitted by 406 MHz ELTs. These 5 Watt digital beacons transmit a much stronger signal, are more accurate, verifiable and traceable to the registered beacon owner (406 MHz ELTs must be registered by the owner in accordance with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation). Registration allows the search and rescue authorities to contact the beacon owner, or his or her designated alternate by telephone to determine if a real emergency exists. Therefore, a simple telephone call often solves a 406 MHz alerts without launching costly and limited search and rescue resources, which would have to be done for a 121.5 MHz alert. For these reasons, the search and rescue community is encouraging aircraft owners to consider retrofit of 406 MHz ELTs or at a minimum, consider the purchase of a handheld 406 MHz Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) which can be carried in the cockpit while continuing to maintain a fixed 121.5 MHz ELT mounted in the aircraft's tail.

Remember, after February 1, 2009, the world-wide Cospas-Sarsat satellite system will no longer process 121.5 MHz alert signals. Pilots involved in aircraft accidents in remote areas will have to depend on pilots of over flying aircraft and or ground stations to hear emergency ELT distress signals. For further information concerning the termination of 121.5 MHz data processing visit www.sarsat.noaa.gov

[1] The Cospas-Sarsat Organization provides a satellite based world-wide monitoring system that detects and locates distress signals transmitted by Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELTs), Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRBs) and Personal Locator Beacons (PLBs). The system includes space and ground segments which process the signals received from the beacon source and forwards the distress alert data to the appropriate RescueCoordinationCenter for action.

Address SARSAT inquiries to:
NOAA SARSAT
NSOF. E/SP3
4231 SuitlandRoad
Suitland, MD 20746
Phone: 301.817.4515
Toll free: 888.212.7283
Fax: 301.817.4565
 
Wow, the whole "manualy activated" thing is a serious limfac

True, but you can activate it *before* you go down and it will continue updating the satellites as to your position for something like 48 hours afterwards.
 
That still does no good in a CFIT incident. If one doensn't know they are going to crash, then one will not activate the beacon.
 
How many people are monitoring the 406 verses 121.5 anyways?

I don't know of any airplanes with the capability to monitor 406... The good news is that the 406 MHz beacons also still transmit on 121.5 so passing airplanes will still hear ya.

That still does no good in a CFIT incident. If one doensn't know they are going to crash, then one will not activate the beacon.

If one didn't know they were going to crash, one probably wouldn't be alive to care about a silly beacon anyway. :(
 
My ELT needed a new battery this last annual. I looked at the prices of the 406MHz to upgrade and decided that considering where I fly and that I have access to a 406MHZ PRB that I would wait until the prices come down. If I lived where there was a not a farm house every 2-5 miles I may not wait and upgrade now. My real fear is that the feds will mandate and upgrade and the prices will stay very high.
 
Although lives have been saved by 121.5 MHz ELTs, the downside has been their propensity to generate false alerts (approximately 98 percent of all 121.5 MHz alerts are false), and their failure to provide rescue forces with timely and accurate crash location data.

There is more to this story: Tom Rogers of Avionics West started testing the TSO-C91 121.5MHz ELT's as they came into his shop. (There is no requirement to do so and very few people do the test.) He found that in 60% of the units the G-Switch didn't work. More likely than not that ELT you're carrying around in back is a useless brick. The 406MHz units have a different G-Switch which is supposed to actually work.

Regards,
Joe
 
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