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WTF??



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 18th 07, 12:59 AM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
NoneYa
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 34
Default WTF??

CINCINNATI – For the second time in six months, a primary
radar failure Sunday morning at Cincinnati Tower (CVG) and
Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) and lack of
appropriate secondary radar feeds severely delayed scores of
flights into and out of the nation’s 14th-busiest airport at
the beginning of a morning rush hour period. It also exposed
again the lack of Federal Aviation Administration action to
give local CVG management the radar feeds necessary to keep
the airport running efficiently in the event of power
interruptions. The outage began at 7:36 a.m. EDT Sunday and
by the time it ended at 10:30, 29 departing flights were
delayed between 28 and 39 minutes each. Controllers
instituted a first-tier ground stop, meaning Cleveland Air
Route Traffic Control Center (ARTCC, or “center”) and
Indianapolis Center put flights to CVG into holding
patterns.There are only two long-range radar feeds into CVG,
meaning that when controllers have to rely on secondary
radar, they cannot “see” planes on their radar scopes that
are below 5,000 feet. In those situations, such as on
Sunday, Cincinnati air traffic controllers were forced to
use non-radar procedures, which are based on time and
distance measurements and result in 10-mile gaps between
departing flights. The normal arrival rate into CVG is 108
aircraft per hour. During Sunday’s outage, that was cut to
32.“We need other radar feeds,” said Jason Hubbard, the CVG
facility representative for the National Air Traffic
Controllers Association. “The FAA has the ability to bring
others in, but it appears to be a cost problem.”

Simply put, local FAA management officials’ calls to senior
FAA officials to fix the problem have been ignored. Hubbard
said the FAA termed a similar radar outage in January
“unprecedented” and the likelihood of one happening again
was “rare.”
  #2  
Old August 18th 07, 01:09 AM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
Paul Tomblin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 690
Default WTF??

In a previous article, NoneYa said:
CINCINNATI
For the second time in six months, a primary
radar failure Sunday morning at Cincinnati Tower (CVG) and
Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) and lack of
appropriate secondary radar feeds severely delayed scores of
flights into and out of the nation's 14th-busiest airport at
the beginning of a morning rush hour period. It also exposed
again the lack of Federal Aviation Administration action to


But don't worry, because the airlines will still blame GA.


--
Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/
``Furthermore, [your wishlist item] would end up being the sort of system
feature that we in software engineering call an "SPR generator".''
- Paul S. Winalski
  #3  
Old August 18th 07, 04:40 AM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 684
Default WTF??

On Aug 17, 6:09 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
In a previous article, NoneYa said:

CINCINNATI
For the second time in six months, a primary
radar failure Sunday morning at Cincinnati Tower (CVG) and
Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) and lack of
appropriate secondary radar feeds severely delayed scores of
flights into and out of the nation's 14th-busiest airport at
the beginning of a morning rush hour period. It also exposed
again the lack of Federal Aviation Administration action to


But don't worry, because the airlines will still blame GA.

--
Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/
``Furthermore, [your wishlist item] would end up being the sort of system
feature that we in software engineering call an "SPR generator".''
- Paul S. Winalski


Of course it was GA's fault... all those spam cans reflect a lot of
radar energy and overloaded the primary radar system causing it to go
down. Then all those 1200 transponder codes overflowed the input
buffer on the secondary system, causing the feed to lock up. This
would be easily solved by implementing user fees. With high enough
user fees, all those transponders would be turned off instead of
broadcasting 1200, and the spam cans would be flying at tree top level
to avoid detection, which would prevent the primary radar from going
down.

See, simple cause and effect...

Dean W
AeroLEDs LLC
www.aeroleds.com

  #5  
Old August 18th 07, 04:14 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 684
Default WTF??

On Aug 18, 8:02 am, john smith wrote:
In article . com,

wrote:
With high enough
user fees, all those transponders would be turned off instead of
broadcasting 1200, and the spam cans would be flying at tree top level
to avoid detection, which would prevent the primary radar from going
down.


Dean, that was our (GA) secret. Now that you have exposed us, we will
have to alter our tactics. Is that jammer you have been working on ready
yet?

:-)


Shhhhh, its still in development, so don't tell the competition! :-)

  #6  
Old August 18th 07, 04:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
NoneYa
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 34
Default WTF??

wrote:
On Aug 17, 6:09 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
In a previous article, NoneYa said:

CINCINNATI
For the second time in six months, a primary
radar failure Sunday morning at Cincinnati Tower (CVG) and
Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) and lack of
appropriate secondary radar feeds severely delayed scores of
flights into and out of the nation's 14th-busiest airport at
the beginning of a morning rush hour period. It also exposed
again the lack of Federal Aviation Administration action to

But don't worry, because the airlines will still blame GA.

--
Paul Tomblin
http://blog.xcski.com/
``Furthermore, [your wishlist item] would end up being the sort of system
feature that we in software engineering call an "SPR generator".''
- Paul S. Winalski


Of course it was GA's fault... all those spam cans reflect a lot of
radar energy and overloaded the primary radar system causing it to go
down. Then all those 1200 transponder codes overflowed the input
buffer on the secondary system, causing the feed to lock up. This
would be easily solved by implementing user fees. With high enough
user fees, all those transponders would be turned off instead of
broadcasting 1200, and the spam cans would be flying at tree top level
to avoid detection, which would prevent the primary radar from going
down.

See, simple cause and effect...

Dean W
AeroLEDs LLC
www.aeroleds.com

When you use ancient technology like the FAA the comment
about system overload is real and not a joke. The FAA ground
DME stations routinely overload at major airports(Atlanta is
real bad) because the ancient ITT equipment in the FAA
facilities was only designed to simultaneously interrogate
about 150 aircraft at a time.

After that threshold is reached the system begins to
throttle back and drop targets at the outer range of the DME
equipment. In technical terms the "reply efficiency" drops.

So the sarcasm does have some validity. The FAA and their
outdated equipment is overloaded. However, under the
umbrella of political correctness the FAA now is filled with
unqualified people satisfying politically correct goals and
the result is a Government organization that was once like
NASA more like HUD.

If not for the technical innovations in the cockpit our Air
Traffic system in America would be more like Africa.

So, the sarcasm is valid


  #7  
Old August 19th 07, 01:39 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 46
Default WTF??

On Sat, 18 Aug 2007 11:50:00 -0400, NoneYa
wrote:


When you use ancient technology like the FAA the comment
about system overload is real and not a joke. The FAA ground
DME stations routinely overload at major airports(Atlanta is
real bad) because the ancient ITT equipment in the FAA
facilities was only designed to simultaneously interrogate
about 150 aircraft at a time.

After that threshold is reached the system begins to
throttle back and drop targets at the outer range of the DME
equipment. In technical terms the "reply efficiency" drops.

How does the system know which are the outer dme "targets"? Is it
just the weaker dme transmissions that are received by the ground
station that are dropped? Stan
  #8  
Old August 19th 07, 03:23 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
Paul Tomblin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 690
Default WTF??

In a previous article, said:
How does the system know which are the outer dme "targets"? Is it
just the weaker dme transmissions that are received by the ground
station that are dropped? Stan


By response time. It sends out a signal, and the first N to respond are
tracked.

--
Paul Tomblin
http://blog.xcski.com/
"Whoah, whoah! A fat sarcastic Star Trek fan? You must be a devil with the
ladies!" - Simpsons
 




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