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Oh, Darryl - think like a lawyer? Can't - I'm a physicist, legal thinking "does not compute".
Many thanks for explaining, and then explaining even more in subsequent posts. Me and my experimental glider are going with a Trig TT22 and a TN 72... -John On Friday, September 22, 2017 at 3:01:13 PM UTC-4, Darryl Ramm wrote: John Start thinking more like a lawyer. Since gliders have broad ADS-B Out carriage exemptions in the areas those exemptions apply they remove the need for you to have ADS-B Out so by definition there is no requirements specific to *those areas* that apply. The regulatory issue is if you have a certified aircraft, regardless of where you intend to or actually fly it the install and equipment has to meet 2020 carriage mandate requirements. That brings in the requirements for a TSO-C145 GPS source (e.g. a TN70 not TN72), and other things like excludes using a Trig TT-21. Darryl |
#2
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On Friday, September 22, 2017 at 4:21:56 PM UTC-4, John Carlyle wrote:
Oh, Darryl - think like a lawyer? Can't - I'm a physicist, legal thinking "does not compute". - yeah, after all these years I still cannot make any sense of the wording "any aircraft that was not originally certificated with an electrical system, or that has not subsequently been certified with such a system installed". Had it said "nor" instead of "or", perhaps? (I do have a degree in physics.) |
#3
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I asked Trig support this question:
"Will a TT21 + TN72 transmit a non-zero quality indicator?" Here is their reply: "The TT21 is fully certified to the latest ADS-B Out cert TSO C166b – so it can output all the required data. It is true that if you wish to meet ADS-B Out compliance FAR 91.227, you should have a higher power TT22. However, there is no way for the radar to tell if you’re using a TT21 or TT22. Inspection of your aircraft would be the only way to tell. As such I believe a number of experimental pilots have opted to ignore the requirement , but of course I cannot recommend this as it would be in violation of FAR 91.227 – the requirements for 2020 compliance. The TN72 offers both a SIL =1 output, and also a SIL = 3 output. So this means that you can meet the FAA compliance check using your TN72 plus TT21. https://adsbperformance.faa.gov/PAPRRequest.aspx If you so choose, you can opt to have your TT21 upgraded to a TT22. For more information on this please contact our US service centre below; Trig Avionics Technical Support 9400 East 34th Street North Wichita KS 67226 United States Tel: Toll Free 800 821 1212 Tel: +1 316 630 0101 Email: Web: www.mcico.com " The response to my inquiry with is: "The cost to update the TT21 to the TT22 is $950.00. Turn around time is 3-4 days in house." |
#4
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Interesting that the information sent out from a 1090ES device doesn't
include enough to identify the model number. But of course an avionics shop or A&P might spot the problem. On 09/27/2017 11:24 AM, son_of_flubber wrote: I asked Trig support this question: "Will a TT21 + TN72 transmit a non-zero quality indicator?" Here is their reply: "The TT21 is fully certified to the latest ADS-B Out cert TSO C166b – so it can output all the required data. It is true that if you wish to meet ADS-B Out compliance FAR 91.227, you should have a higher power TT22. However, there is no way for the radar to tell if you’re using a TT21 or TT22. Inspection of your aircraft would be the only way to tell. As such I believe a number of experimental pilots have opted to ignore the requirement , but of course I cannot recommend this as it would be in violation of FAR 91.227 – the requirements for 2020 compliance. The TN72 offers both a SIL =1 output, and also a SIL = 3 output. So this means that you can meet the FAA compliance check using your TN72 plus TT21. https://adsbperformance.faa.gov/PAPRRequest.aspx If you so choose, you can opt to have your TT21 upgraded to a TT22. For more information on this please contact our US service centre below; Trig Avionics Technical Support 9400 East 34th Street North Wichita KS 67226 United States Tel: Toll Free 800 821 1212 Tel: +1 316 630 0101 Email: Web: www.mcico.com " The response to my inquiry with is: "The cost to update the TT21 to the TT22 is $950.00. Turn around time is 3-4 days in house." |
#5
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On Wednesday, September 27, 2017 at 10:24:48 AM UTC-7, son_of_flubber wrote:
I asked Trig support this question: "Will a TT21 + TN72 transmit a non-zero quality indicator?" Here is their reply: "The TT21 is fully certified to the latest ADS-B Out cert TSO C166b – so it can output all the required data. It is true that if you wish to meet ADS-B Out compliance FAR 91.227, you should have a higher power TT22. However, there is no way for the radar to tell if you’re using a TT21 or TT22. Inspection of your aircraft would be the only way to tell. As such I believe a number of experimental pilots have opted to ignore the requirement , but of course I cannot recommend this as it would be in violation of FAR 91.227 – the requirements for 2020 compliance. The TN72 offers both a SIL =1 output, and also a SIL = 3 output. So this means that you can meet the FAA compliance check using your TN72 plus TT21. https://adsbperformance.faa.gov/PAPRRequest.aspx If you so choose, you can opt to have your TT21 upgraded to a TT22. For more information on this please contact our US service centre below; Trig Avionics Technical Support 9400 East 34th Street North Wichita KS 67226 United States Tel: Toll Free 800 821 1212 Tel: +1 316 630 0101 Email: Web: www.mcico.com " The response to my inquiry with is: "The cost to update the TT21 to the TT22 is $950.00. Turn around time is 3-4 days in house." That is some very useful information right there. Two questions: Does the receiver (FAA) have any way to tell more information about the GPS source? If it is transmitting an SIL of 3 (required for carriage requirements), other than physical inspection can a receiver discriminate between a 70 and a 72? What does Powerflarm do with a glider having both ADSB out and Flarm? Does it deambiguize? |
#6
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Now that the TN72 is available and relatively low cost, is there a reason for those of us with TT21/TT22 in experimental gliders to wait till 2020 to install the TN72 vs installing now to become more visible to more aircrafts?
I am curious to hear from folks who already done that. Ramy |
#7
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On Thursday, September 28, 2017 at 9:51:13 AM UTC-7, Ramy wrote:
Now that the TN72 is available and relatively low cost, is there a reason for those of us with TT21/TT22 in experimental gliders to wait till 2020 to install the TN72 vs installing now to become more visible to more aircrafts? None at all. And there is nothing magic about 2020 that should affect your decision here. Please get started and go do it. We are talking the incremental costs of a few long aerotows. (since I know you fly near SFO Class B at times) keep in mind doing that will not give you access to those areas where the glider exemption does not remove ADS-B Out requirements after 2020 (Class B and C and related, read the regs for details). For that you would need a TN70 based install. I am curious to hear from folks who already done that. Ramy |
#8
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On Thursday, September 28, 2017 at 9:12:56 AM UTC-7, jfitch wrote:
On Wednesday, September 27, 2017 at 10:24:48 AM UTC-7, son_of_flubber wrote: I asked Trig support this question: "Will a TT21 + TN72 transmit a non-zero quality indicator?" Here is their reply: "The TT21 is fully certified to the latest ADS-B Out cert TSO C166b – so it can output all the required data. It is true that if you wish to meet ADS-B Out compliance FAR 91.227, you should have a higher power TT22. However, there is no way for the radar to tell if you’re using a TT21 or TT22. Inspection of your aircraft would be the only way to tell. As such I believe a number of experimental pilots have opted to ignore the requirement , but of course I cannot recommend this as it would be in violation of FAR 91.227 – the requirements for 2020 compliance. The TN72 offers both a SIL =1 output, and also a SIL = 3 output. So this means that you can meet the FAA compliance check using your TN72 plus TT21. https://adsbperformance.faa.gov/PAPRRequest.aspx If you so choose, you can opt to have your TT21 upgraded to a TT22. For more information on this please contact our US service centre below; Trig Avionics Technical Support 9400 East 34th Street North Wichita KS 67226 United States Tel: Toll Free 800 821 1212 Tel: +1 316 630 0101 Email: Web: www.mcico.com " The response to my inquiry with is: "The cost to update the TT21 to the TT22 is $950.00. Turn around time is 3-4 days in house." That is some very useful information right there. Two questions: Does the receiver (FAA) have any way to tell more information about the GPS source? If it is transmitting an SIL of 3 (required for carriage requirements), other than physical inspection can a receiver discriminate between a 70 and a 72? There is no GPS Source vendor ID. No Mode-S transponder or UAT Out vendor ID, no serial numbers, no encryption signature, etc. allowed for in the design of ADS-B. The lack of signature is a much more serious shortcoming IMNSHO that any of the others. ADS-B Out systems do transmit SIL, NIC and NAC GPS quality parameters and interestingly CC (capability code) that describe if the aircraft has 1090ES In and/or UAT In. What does Powerflarm do with a glider having both ADSB out and Flarm? Does it deambiguize? Yes it deduplicates them, based in aircraft ICAO address. Presumably PowerFLARM gives priority to the FLARM signal but somebody like Dave would have to confirm that. I believe FLARM also deduplicates Mode S PCAS alerts based on ICAO ID. It can't do that to Mode C PCAS alerts because there is no ICAO address broadcast on Mode C. |
#9
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How does this offer fit into our discussion? For experimental gliders, and from the price point of view?
http://grtavionics.com/home/ads-b-so...ionix-echouat/ |
#10
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On Thursday, September 28, 2017 at 11:20:23 AM UTC-7, Tom BravoMike wrote:
How does this offer fit into our discussion? For experimental gliders, and from the price point of view? http://grtavionics.com/home/ads-b-so...ionix-echouat/ It does not fit anywhere. As discussed on r.a.s. many times in the past. It is a UAT Out device. Invisible to PowerFLARM, invisible to TCAS. And most importantly, It's not a transponder.... which the bulk of this conversation should be focused on. |
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