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I've followed the lengthy and somewhat heated discussion speculating
responsibility in the LEX accident, but I've not seen any thread on improvements other than a few comments about traffic lights on runways, or more people added to the system to double-check the double-checkers. I'm interested in what the industry might do to achieve a technical solution with relatively small front-end cost and very, very little operational cost. (As you suspect, I have nothing to do with the government or any of its agencies). I find myself wondering what the cost of a low-power ground radar capable of interpreting transponder codes, coupled to a small (not much horsepower) computer capable of matching the geo-coords of the txpdr to the assigned runway (or taxiway) and triggering an alarm if the variance is too great. This should all be off-the-shelf technology, shouldn't be considered a "flight critical" or "safety-of-flight" system (so if it goes down for a few hours only the local information would change), and shouldn't have to be maintained other than for hardware failures. With the low-power and digital technology even the non-critical radar could be maintained by break-fix only. Developed into an appliance type system, these could be mass produced to lower the cost even more. It seems to me that by adding traffic lights implies that we now have to add an additional duty to the ground / flight controller which introduces the human factor an additional time. Additionally, the traffic light relies on the crews on parallel runways knowing which light/runway they are really on - a seeming failure at LEX. Adding more controllers to the system doesn't yield the best return on investment either. Non-critical repetitive tasks should be automated where possible. |
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