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#12
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![]() john smith wrote: but a TCAS II equipped aircraft can see you. Only if you have a Mode-S transponder. ????? |
#13
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#14
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In the current atmosphere of fear in the US regarding terrorism I do
not think it would be wise to fly VFR anywhere without Mode C in operation, regulations or not withstanding. Being right and being safe are two different things. |
#15
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![]() wrote in message ... It's not that the tube craps out in-flight... it's just that repeatedly running the transponder when you do not "need" it (read: in B.F.E., VFR, local-flights) means that you shorten its useful life when you *DO* need it (flight following, Class-[ABC], IFR). What's "B.F.E."? |
#16
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#17
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wrote:
wrote: : You must be one of the few that has ever had a tube crap out. You : will surely run out of gas before you run out of tubes. : Having it on also allows all the toy collision avoidance things to see : you. : Like TCADS. : Small price to pay for collision avoidance. Please have it on. It's : not just the rule, it's a great idea!! It's not that the tube craps out in-flight... it's just that repeatedly running the transponder when you do not "need" it (read: in B.F.E., VFR, local-flights) means that you shorten its useful life when you *DO* need it (flight following, Class-[ABC], IFR). Any time I actually *GO* anywhere where collision avoidance might be an additional feature, chances are it's a cross-country flight and I'll have it on for that reason. As I mentioned, I have personally gone through two tube-based transponders in this manner. My mechanic has also gone through two that lost transmit power due to a dying cavity tube, as has another pilot friend of mine. Granted, I'm on the low end of the avionics totem pole (ebay specials mostly)... the fact of the matter is that replacing the cavity tube has been made cost-prohibitive by the part costing $500 or more. -Cory The cavities are pretty robust, and it takes lots of hours to wear them out. Perhaps you are buying used transponders that are already close to end of life of the cavity? If you are concerned about cavity life that much, then why not bite the bullet and get a modern solid-state slide-in replacement? A new one costs no more than 3 or 4 used ones, comes with a warranty, and will last you a good long time. Plus some of them come with added features like altitude read-out, timers, single push VFR and such that you'll find handy. Leaving the transponder off makes you blind to TCAS, TCAD, and all of the low cost passive anti-collision boxes like the Monroy (granted, they won't see you if you are not in radar coverage anyway unless an active TCAS interrogates you). Also, the tube isn't dissipating any power unless it is replying to an interrogation, so it doesn't take any life off the tube by keeping the transponder on when it isn't getting interrogated. If you are in an area where it is getting interrogated, then you are invisible to whatever radar or TCAS is interrogating you if you have it off. Please turn it on unless you are on the ground. |
#18
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Bum F@#k Egypt. i.e. out in the tules
Jim "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message k.net... What's "B.F.E."? |
#19
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![]() john smith wrote: My understanding is that the Mode-S provides the communication information. Mode C may contain altitude, but there is no distance or direction information. Mode S doesn't provide any distance or direction info to another TCAS. Each TCAS figures that stuff out on its own. |
#20
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john smith wrote:
In article . com, wrote: wrote: john smith wrote: but a TCAS II equipped aircraft can see you. Only if you have a Mode-S transponder. Nope, all they need is mode C. Actually, they don't even need mode C, now that I think about it. You get different levels of service depending on what the target has. If they've got Mode A you'll get an callout. If they've got Mode C then you'll get an RA (climb / descend) If they've got Mode S and they've also got TCAS, the two TCAS's will boogie with each other to coordinate the RA. So really mode S by itself does nothing for TCAS II unless you've also got a TCAS as well. My understanding is that the Mode-S provides the communication information. Mode C may contain altitude, but there is no distance or direction information. That's correct. Mode C only transmits either the squawk code or the encoded altitude, depending on the specific interrogation. However, TCAS is an active system that sends an interrogation and listens for the reply. It uses the time delay between the interrogation it sends and the reply it recieves back to accurately measure range. Many use an antenna array and beamforming techniques to determine azimuth as well. Therefore, it can determine both distance and direction, and of course it gets the altitude directly from the reply. The passive TCAD boxes do not transmit interrogations. Instead they listen for replies to other interrogations and use some signal processing to glean rough range information from the dispersion and amplitude of the received pulse. Considering the lack of a hard measurement, they do a pretty decent job at estimating range. Strike finders work under a similar principle. In the case of a transponder reply, the job is easier because the transmit pulse shape and amplitude are pretty narrowly defined for an in-spec transponder. Most of the TCAD boxes do not provide azimuth info. The ones that do also use a phase array of antennas and signal processing to do beamforming to resolve the azimuth. |
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