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#41
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message news:9S1Vi.131$MW.53@trndny05... Ian wrote: On 27 Oct, 17:08, pascal wrote: It's always a shock when you pass a glider coming from the front without having the warning (because it is not equipped with flarm); and despite looking out you surprise yourself not having noticed that particular glider. I wonder how well you look (ie one looks) out when a little part of the brain assumes that flarm would have reacted to anything that mattered? There is always the problem of adverse compensation when a safety device is introduced. Monitoring of the situation should continue after the introduction to ensure the desired increase in safety occurrs. I believe this is the case with FLARM. What puzzles me is how skeptical you are about a widely accepted device you have not used. FLARM has sold 9000 units. 9000! When 9000 pilots voluntarily equip their aircraft with an $800 device, I am inclined to think there may be something quite useful there and to look forward to an opportunity to use one. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org It's just human nature. It's called the "Negative Expert" syndrome. Every technological advance in soaring has met the same negative initial response. Later, when everybody is using the technology, the same people will defend it against the NEXT advance. The basic concept of real-time position exchange and conflict determination is an outstanding idea. It's one that, properly implemented, will increase safety and reduce cockpit workload. The only real thing to discuss is how to best implement it. All indications are that FLARM is extremely well executed. It's true that glider traffic densities are far higher in Europe than in the US which is why FLARM was developed there first. However, there are some locations in the US where glider traffic is dense enough to justify FLARM. There are also benefits beyond mid-air avoidance. For example, knowing where your soaring buddy is without jamming 123.3. Absent some wholley unexpected blooming of FAA technological leadership, ADS-B is far enough in the future for several development cycles of FLARM to pass before we can afford ADS-B. If FLARM can be adopted to the US legal and regulatory environment today, I say "bring it on". Bill Daniels |
#42
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On 28 Oct, 13:55, Bruce wrote:
Ian wrote: On 28 Oct, 07:18, " wrote: On Oct 27, 11:40 pm, Ian wrote: On 26 Oct, 18:18, Ramy wrote: On Oct 26, 9:07 am, Ian wrote: SNIP Anyway, my human eyes have successfully detected /all/ threats in time to avoid them so far. How common are midair glider collisions? How do you know what you have detected *all* threats in time. Because nobody has ever hit me. Therefore I and/or the other pilots have /always/ managed to detect and deal with threats successfully. What margin of safety is that down to? Can you define "margin of safety" in this case, please? How do you know other aircraft (and/ or ATC) did not take action to avoid you and you were never aware of them? It doesn't really matter to me whether I successfully avoided them or they successfully avoided me (that will almost certainly have happened a lot, as I fly wood) - but I can say that "looking out" has always worked for me. That's not to get complacent, of course, but I would feel a lot happier if I knew that other pilots were not, to some inevitable extent, relying on a magic gadget to lookout for them. I personally do not use logic like "my past landing attempt did not kill me so my landings are great" but I look at what you are saying as "I've not run into anything sofar therefore my visual lookouts are perfectly adequate" How about "unless you buy a radio altimeter you will never be able to plan an outlanding properly?" Lots of non believers until one or two glider pilots start using them and then start reporting they really work, especially all the traffic they otherwise would not notice... This is where I am sceptical. Yes, I am sure these things will give lots of extra alerts - they'd hardly be worth buying if they didn't. But we are not exactly plagued, world wide, by glider-glider collisions, are we? So what this means is that pilots will spend a lot more time reacting to false alarms (they must be false, because if they weren't they'd end in a collision without the magic gadgets). Don't let the fact that you have not had or realised that you have had a near miss to date blind you to the risks. Even when everyone is being careful things can, and do, go wrong. It is generally not the aircraft we saw that represent the highest risk we have encountered. It is the ones we failed to observe. I agree with everything you say. I only have three concerns: 1) flarm (and the like) alarms must divert the pilot's attention from something else. 2) pilots will inevitably, and with the best will in the world, start relying on flarm to tell them when something's approaching - "I'll just reprogramme the GPS with a better turning point - the magic machine will keep me safe" 3) the laws of the air very carefully specify who has right of way and whose duty is to make to change to their course. Information on impending conflict only, without right-of-way/stand-on responsibility, will potentially be very difficult to interpret. I can see some places where it could be very useful. Ian |
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On 28 Oct, 14:53, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Ian wrote: The pilots of these gliders should be able to see me - if they are not busy concentrating on yet another electronic gadget in the cockpit. You haven't flown with a FLARM, yet you keep saying this. Why do you think they are "concentrating" on FLARM? From what I've read about it, and from what users say, there is no "concentrating": you go about your flying until it alerts you. .... at which point, if I interpret the pictures at www.flarm.com correctly, you have to look at the thing to get an idea of where it thinks trouble is coming from, then work out of its real or not, then work out what to do? Ian |
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On Oct 28, 8:23 pm, Ian wrote:
I agree with everything you say. I only have three concerns: Those are quite common ones, but I don't think they hold much water. Flarm's beep is quite distinctive and no pilot would ever have a problem discerning it from his vario. The display is a bit small from the units I've looked at, but clear. It uses the o'clock system - it lights up to let you know another Flarm equipped glider is about, and only beeps if it thinks there's a problem. There's no need to touch the unit in flight. I've not heard of a pilot who has fitted Flarm and stopped looking out - pilots aren't _that_ stupid. If your Flarm is beeping at you, paying attention to it should be your top priority - then searching for the conflict, and figuring out what to do as per normal when you've sighted it. Dan |
#45
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On Oct 28, 6:40 am, Ian wrote:
How common are midair glider collisions? http://glidemet.co.uk/?p=414 Dan |
#46
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On Oct 26, 4:07 pm, Ian wrote:
I have never used it myself [1] but I was chatting about it just a few days ago with an instructor at a busy ridge site here. His view was that it's a menace: it generates far too many false alarms, and pilots who try to evade non-existent hazards may thereby cause significant danger. What are you supposed to do, he asked, if you get a six-second- t-death warning about a glider which is supposedly dead ahead but which you can't see? He reckoned the main problem was that the system only believes in "cruising" and "thermalling" and gets hopelessly confused by the turn at the end of a beat on the ridge. Sounds like you're talking about the SGU trial at Portmoak (or at least, that's the same as the opinion of one vocal instructor there - whether or not those are the conclusions the SGU arrive at themselves remains to be seen). They fly a rather short ridge (only a few km) which is not representative of normal glider operations - not sure that their findings, when published, can be extrapolated beyond their own circumstances. Lasham, by contrast, did find that Flarm met their needs (no doubt partly motivated by the fatal collision there in 2004). They're a flat- land thermal site - probably the busiest in the UK. I think the fact that their entire fleet (some thirty gliders and tugs) has been fitted with Flarm, and that many more units are being fitted to the private fleet there, is a strong endorsement. Dan |
#47
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I don't think that people in the US are against FLARM or a similar type of
device. I think that the risk environment in the US is different than in Europe due to the much larger amount of power VFR traffic, which poses at least as much of a threat to gliders as other gliders. My concern is with introducing another technology that doesn't address the entire problem, which then diverts everyone from implementing the technology (ADS-B) which really could solve this for everyone. The only negatives that I can see with an ADS-B based approach is the cost, and the very slow FAA rollout schedule. I don't understand why inherently ADS-B technology needs to be more expensive than FLARM. If it's a certification issue, I would suspect that the FAA would be willing to be flexible if the options are certified units that are unaffordable, vs. cheap units that are self certified (like Light Sport Aircraft) which would be widely deployed by gliders, ultralights, LSAs and UAVs which otherwise couldn't afford the technology. The FAA rollout schedule is also not necessarily a show stopper. Without FAA ground stations, ADS-B equipped gliders won't be visible to air traffic control or TCAS equipped planes. However, ADS-B equipped aircraft are fully visible to each other, just like FLARM equipped planes are in Europe. The bonus, once the FAA catches up with everybody else, is that ADS-B users will then be fully integrated into the air traffic control system (plus be able to receive Nexrad weather, etc.). Mike Schumann "Robert Danewid" wrote in message ... There are ca 9 000 FLARM units in use in Europe, and all who use them seems to be in favour of it. There seems to be no FLARMs in the US, but a lot of people who is against it. When I bought my ASW 28-18E last winter it was already equipped with a FLARM. I used to be against FLARM for all the reasons listed in this thread, now that I have flown with it I am in favour of it. Robert Danewid ASW 28-18E RD -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#48
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![]() The discussion of using FLARM in the USA is just so much self flagulation. I have flown in France and used FLARM. A very nice, compact, and simple system that is easy to understand while flying. The primary problem is exactly the same as gliders having a transponder in the USA. There are many, many gliders flying around the Alps that do not have FLARM. You get comfortable with responding to the signals from FLARM and then WHAM...there is a glider headed right at your nose and no FLARM ! I feel that for the USA it would be a much better course to encourage the installation of transponders and development of systems that use transponder technology to do the work of FLARM. These chat groups seem dominated by people constantly arguing that they won't buy a transponder because a new system is just over the horizon whether it is ADS-B or Mode S. The reality that we all see is that the existing system is going to be it for some time. By working with the existing system you get gliders to become full fledged members of the aviation community that exists today. You become better friends with other traffic because they can see you on their collision avoidance systems. Having FLARM means you are still invisable to commercial traffic and the air traffic controllers. It means that instead of having just two groups of gliders in the USA (with or without transponders) you create a microscopic group that have FLARM and are still invisable to the air traffic control system. Flying around Reno became DRAMATICALLY better after installing a transponder. AIr traffic control sees you and directs all of their traffic away from you without any effort on the glider pilot's part. Commercial traffic and others with "fish finders" happily see you and avoid without any sweat being shed. Work should be put into small, modestly expensive collision avoidance systems that use the existing transponders. Guy Acheson "DDS" |
#49
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wrote:
Work should be put into small, modestly expensive collision avoidance systems that use the existing transponders. Do you mean something like the Zaon XRX (modestly expensive at a list price of $1800) or the Zaon MRX ($550)? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#50
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Hi,
there is no "concentrating": you go about your flying until it alerts you. ... at which point, if I interpret the pictures at www.flarm.com correctly, you have to look at the thing to get an idea of where it thinks trouble is coming from, then work out of its real or not, then work out what to do? It then does indeed divert your attention away from whatever your are currently doing so you can check for the incoming. If you didn't spot them yet that diversion is a useful change of priorities I'd say. If you did spot them before it's time to think of something to do NOW anyway. About the "work out what to do": Yes. You will definitely have to work that out. Quickly. Without FLARM you would have to do it more quickly when you notice the traffic (or just the conflict, if you had seen them before) without electronic aid a few moments later. I prefer to have more time. Note that if you noticed the potential problem before the alarm as in the vast majority of cases you will likely have manoevered long before so there won't be an alarm at all. Ciao, MM -- Marian Aldenhövel, Rosenhain 23, 53123 Bonn http://www.marian-aldenhoevel.de "Success is the happy feeling you get between the time you do something and the time you tell a woman what you did." |
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