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#41
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On Aug 16, 9:37 pm, Mike Schumann
wrote: On 8/16/2010 10:50 PM, kirk.stant wrote: [snip] A. "Right Now Benefits of PowerFlarm" - This product does not currently exist. Has it been submitted to the FCC for approval yet? What is the expect ship date? Late 2010/December according to their USA dealers. [snip] C. PCAS - How does PCAS tell you anything about what kind of target is aiming for you? In fact, it doesn't give you any information on where the target is, whether it's getting closer or moving away. All you know is altitude and range (NO bearing). It's not going to tell you if it's a jet, another glider, or your tow plane. And you are only going to get that much info if the transponder equipped plane is being interrogated. That's not a given if you are flying low in remote areas without radar coverage. What is your point? If the PCAS in PowerFLARM works anwhere nears as well as PCAS units like the Zaon MRX then it is a very useful tool today especially against GA threats. Yes there are restrictions on this, and they've been discussed to death already. Including PCAS capabilities in a 1090ES receiver is easy since all the hardware you need is already there for free. It is just plain and simple a really great idea to add that feature in this product. I expect other 1090ES receiver manufacturers in the portable/low-end market to do exactly the same. Of course without additional 1090MHz receiver hardware a UAT receiver cannot do this. But to caution other folks here, PCAS relies on the inverse square of distance fall of in RF power and assumptions about transponder power output to guesstimate distance, while it works OK it has limits. It is part of the reason why PCAS systems have a relatively short warning range for threats. With fast closure rates like with airliners and jets (esp. at altitude/outside airspace speed restrictions) PCAS systems are quite likely to give unusably short warning times. I see PCAS as making more sense with GA threats and when flying with a reasonably small number of gliders -- what many of us have done with it given the lack of Flarm availability in the USA. What's my agenda? Making sure that people know what they are buying and the limitations thereof. -- Mike Schumann Darryl |
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#42
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On Aug 16, 10:40*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
Again that was not what Andy was claiming. I'd actually prefer it if I made the statements as to what I was claiming. I have actually claimed nothing about what PowerFLARM will do as regard alert suppression. I have, however, expresseed the hope that PowerFLARM will have intelligent alert suppression of transponder based (PCAS) targets. And by that I did mean suppression of certain PCAS targets but not others. Certainly it is possible for Power FLARM to determine the squawk code of a received transponder. In areas where gliders are assigned a specific discrete code then PowerFLARM could be programmed to handle targets with this code in a different way from target not squawking that code. It would also be possible to track a target based on range and altitude information. When on tow the tug's transponder signal will indicate a constant range and a constant altitude difference. Any other transponder target that could be a threat will appear at the max detection range and then come progressively closer. It seems quite reasonable to assume that a well designed system would allow suppression of the tug alert but still alert for the approaching threat. It would also be possible to remove the tug transponder from the suppressed target list when tow release is detected by a significant change in altitude difference or range. Similary if I am in a gaggle with several gliders that have transponders it would be possible to suppress alerting on all those targets while they remain within a certain range but still provide alerting to the King Air that approaches from max detection range and is closing rapidly. Again the suppressed transponders could be removed for the suppression list if they show an increase in range corresponding to leaving the thermal. So my hope is that, if a transponder equipped glider joined my thermal I will be alerted. When I visually acquire the glider and decide it is the one causing the alert I select mute. I will then no longer be alerted to that transponder but will be alerted to any other transponder target that approaches me. I will then chose to to mute that alert if I wish, and still be alerted to the next on that approaches. All this assumes that the unit is smart enough to keep track of individual targets based on range (signal strength), altitude, and perhaps also squawk code. I see no reasons why this is not technically possible but again make no claim that such a feature is include in PowerFLARM Andy |
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#43
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On Aug 17, 9:42*am, Andy wrote:
On Aug 16, 10:40*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: Again that was not what Andy was claiming. I'd actually prefer it if I made the statements as to what I was claiming. I have actually claimed nothing about what PowerFLARM will do as regard alert suppression. I have, however, expresseed the hope that PowerFLARM will have intelligent alert suppression of transponder based (PCAS) targets. And by that I did mean suppression of certain PCAS targets but not others. Certainly it is possible for Power FLARM to determine the squawk code of a received transponder. *In areas where gliders are assigned a specific discrete code then PowerFLARM could be programmed to handle targets with this code in a different way from target not squawking that code. It would also be possible to track a target based on range and altitude information. *When on tow the tug's transponder signal will indicate a constant range and a constant altitude difference. *Any other transponder target that could be a threat will appear at the max detection range and then come progressively closer. *It seems quite reasonable to assume that a well designed system would allow suppression of the tug alert but still alert for the approaching threat. *It would also be possible to remove the tug transponder from the suppressed target list when tow release is detected by a significant change in altitude difference or range. Similary if I am in a gaggle with several gliders that have transponders it would be possible to suppress alerting on all those targets while they remain within a certain range but still provide alerting to the King Air that approaches from max detection range and is closing rapidly. Again the suppressed transponders could be removed for the suppression list if they show an increase in range corresponding to leaving the thermal. So my hope is that, if a transponder equipped glider joined my thermal I will be alerted. *When I visually acquire the glider and decide it is the one causing the alert I select mute. *I will then no longer be alerted to that transponder but will be alerted to any other transponder target that approaches me. *I will then chose to to mute that alert if I wish, and still be alerted to the next on that approaches. All this assumes that the unit is smart enough to keep track of individual targets based on range (signal strength), altitude, and perhaps also squawk code. *I see no reasons why this is not technically possible but again make no claim that such a feature is include in PowerFLARM Andy will all this muting and un-muting cause a large increase in pilot work load? Thanks, Brad |
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#44
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On Aug 17, 9:47*am, Brad wrote:
will all this muting and un-muting cause a large increase in pilot work load? In my proposal there is no workload associated with "unmuting" it's automatic. In the flow - hear alert, scan for target, associate target with alert, mute alert - the action of muting the alert is an insignificant part of the workload if it requires a single press of the control knob. Certainly a single action mute of all alerts would be a lower workload but if that was the objective you could just turn it off, or not buy one in the first place. Andy |
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#45
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Darryl,
Thanks for taking the time to answer my question; It pretty much confirms what I suspected. The fact that the PowerFlarm will detect and show 1090ES traffic is a huge feature for me, as it will give me an even better heads up on fast movers at altitude. To me FLARM is a no-brainer for glider pilots - even those who don't race. Now if I could just figure out how to mount an APG-82 AESA radar in the nose of my LS6... Kirk |
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#46
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A. *"Right Now Benefits of PowerFlarm" - This product does not currently exist. *Has it been submitted to the FCC for approval yet? *What is the expect ship date? Later this year, which is fine for me. And FLARM itself is well proven - even if that was all the PowerFlarm did it would be worth it. UAT ADS-B isn't. B. *1090ES ADS-B - You aren't going to see anything on PowerFLARM unless you are also equipped with, and transmitting a properly configured ADS-B Out Signal. *That part is NOT provided by PowerFLARM. Wrong. I'll see the 1090ES mode S directly. Which is exactly what I want to see. C. *PCAS - How does PCAS tell you anything about what kind of target is aiming for you? *In fact, it doesn't give you any information on where the target is, whether it's getting closer or moving away. *All you know is altitude and range (NO bearing). *It's not going to tell you if it's a jet, another glider, or your tow plane. *And you are only going to get that much info if the transponder equipped plane is being interrogated. * That's not a given if you are flying low in remote areas without radar coverage. If I look out the window and see a dot, all I know at first is that it is something out there. I'll watch it until I determine if it's a threat and react accordingly. PCAS helps me find that dot by warning me to look level or slightly high/low, and if I already have an idea where the traffic is coming from (arrival departure routes, VOR/ Airports nearby, VFR/IFR altitudes) I can focus my search there. What else do you need, the pilot's daughter's phone number? The biggest reason pilots don't see other traffic is not that it isn't visible, but that they aren't looking for it - and PCAS/FLARM/ADS-B are all designed to make the pilot get his head out of his PDA and look for traffic. What's my agenda? *Making sure that people know what they are buying and the limitations thereof. Fair enough. Cheers, Kirk |
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#47
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On Aug 17, 9:42*am, Andy wrote:
On Aug 16, 10:40*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: Again that was not what Andy was claiming. I'd actually prefer it if I made the statements as to what I was claiming. I have actually claimed nothing about what PowerFLARM will do as regard alert suppression. I have, however, expresseed the hope that PowerFLARM will have intelligent alert suppression of transponder based (PCAS) targets. And by that I did mean suppression of certain PCAS targets but not others. Certainly it is possible for Power FLARM to determine the squawk code of a received transponder. *In areas where gliders are assigned a specific discrete code then PowerFLARM could be programmed to handle targets with this code in a different way from target not squawking that code. It would also be possible to track a target based on range and altitude information. *When on tow the tug's transponder signal will indicate a constant range and a constant altitude difference. *Any other transponder target that could be a threat will appear at the max detection range and then come progressively closer. *It seems quite reasonable to assume that a well designed system would allow suppression of the tug alert but still alert for the approaching threat. *It would also be possible to remove the tug transponder from the suppressed target list when tow release is detected by a significant change in altitude difference or range. Similary if I am in a gaggle with several gliders that have transponders it would be possible to suppress alerting on all those targets while they remain within a certain range but still provide alerting to the King Air that approaches from max detection range and is closing rapidly. Again the suppressed transponders could be removed for the suppression list if they show an increase in range corresponding to leaving the thermal. So my hope is that, if a transponder equipped glider joined my thermal I will be alerted. *When I visually acquire the glider and decide it is the one causing the alert I select mute. *I will then no longer be alerted to that transponder but will be alerted to any other transponder target that approaches me. *I will then chose to to mute that alert if I wish, and still be alerted to the next on that approaches. All this assumes that the unit is smart enough to keep track of individual targets based on range (signal strength), altitude, and perhaps also squawk code. *I see no reasons why this is not technically possible but again make no claim that such a feature is include in PowerFLARM Andy On Aug 17, 9:42 am, Andy wrote: On Aug 16, 10:40 pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: Again that was not what Andy was claiming. I'd actually prefer it if I made the statements as to what I was claiming. I have actually claimed nothing about what PowerFLARM will do as regard alert suppression. I have, however, expresseed the hope that PowerFLARM will have intelligent alert suppression of transponder based (PCAS) targets. And by that I did mean suppression of certain PCAS targets but not others. Certainly it is possible for Power FLARM to determine the squawk code of a received transponder. In areas where gliders are assigned a specific discrete code then PowerFLARM could be programmed to handle targets with this code in a different way from target not squawking that code. It would also be possible to track a target based on range and altitude information. When on tow the tug's transponder signal will indicate a constant range and a constant altitude difference. Any other transponder target that could be a threat will appear at the max detection range and then come progressively closer. It seems quite reasonable to assume that a well designed system would allow suppression of the tug alert but still alert for the approaching threat. It would also be possible to remove the tug transponder from the suppressed target list when tow release is detected by a significant change in altitude difference or range. Similary if I am in a gaggle with several gliders that have transponders it would be possible to suppress alerting on all those targets while they remain within a certain range but still provide alerting to the King Air that approaches from max detection range and is closing rapidly. Again the suppressed transponders could be removed for the suppression list if they show an increase in range corresponding to leaving the thermal. So my hope is that, if a transponder equipped glider joined my thermal I will be alerted. When I visually acquire the glider and decide it is the one causing the alert I select mute. I will then no longer be alerted to that transponder but will be alerted to any other transponder target that approaches me. I will then chose to to mute that alert if I wish, and still be alerted to the next on that approaches. All this assumes that the unit is smart enough to keep track of individual targets based on range (signal strength), altitude, and perhaps also squawk code. I see no reasons why this is not technically possible but again make no claim that such a feature is include in PowerFLARM Andy Andy Sorry, I misunderstood and though you were talking about. Now that I'm not confusing what you meant I appreciate the thought process you are going though but I want to try to emphasize that PCAS just cannot be pushed very far to do really advanced things, certainly not with Mode C transponders in larger gaggles. And Mode C likely starts having problems with less than what many would consider a "large gaggle". Things are a lot better if we have a Mode S environment but many gliders in the USA are going to have Mode C transponders. So I'll run though the main issues below, kind of in a jumbled up way, hope it makes sense.... In a gaggle type environment when an interrogation hits the gaggle all Mode C transponders (an actual Mode C transponder or a Mode S being interrogated as a Mode A/C) reply at the same time and their transmissions overlap. This is called synchronous garbling and it only takes a few overlapping replies for this to make the signal unreadable. Forget what might be possible, the PCAS is quite likely to just not be able to read the altitudes of any of the replies. SSR radar and TCAS systems have fancy hardware decorrelators that help them try to pull out signals from each other but they can only handle a few close overlaps. SSR radar obviously also sweeps the interrogation beam and TCAS II uses a wider quadrant interrogation (and other tricks) to interrogate as few transponders as possible at a time. But any of these systems will just fail with reasonable large number of Mode C equipped gliders in a gaggle. Synchronous garbling is the reason why there are procedures for formation flights with Mode C transponders to have everybody but the leader squawk standby. There has been research done on Mode C synchronous garbling of SSR radar in glider gaggles by European researchers and the results were bad as expected. Synchronous garbling is a really fundamental problems that will severely limit PCAS usability against Mode C threats if you are flying close to or in a gaggle type environment. Gliders in a gaggle will all be squawking 1200 or 1201 not unique squawk codes. Nobody flying those gliders is going to be on a flight plan or under flight following and the FAA with limited Mode A allocation blocks is unlikely ever to give away squawk codes for this even if it would make any difference. And here is another reason you don't want to do this (see below later). It could be that most interrogations of a glider gaggle come from TCAS systems. TCAS does not interrogate Mode A (although there is a slight qualification on that I don't want to get into). It has no idea what the squawk codes of aircraft are, all TCAS wants to know is a threat's relative altitude and direction (which it gets from phased array antennas (those two blade next to each other you see on aircraft)). So there are may be none or few Mode A replies to correlate Mode C reply altitude replies with. PCAS does do not actually listen on 1030MHz so never see the transponder interrogations (just the replies on 1090MHz), it makes no sense to bother to do this because the moment the replying transponder is any distance away the PCAS would not know if the interrogation it sees is what the transponder is actually replying to. So a PCAS unit has no idea whether a Mode C transponder (an actual Mode C transponder or a Mode S being interrogated as a Mode A/C) is replying to a Mode C or Mode A interrogation. All it sees is a series of encoded pulses. PCAS units know from the ranges of valid patterns that some reply patterns must be Mode C replies and some must be Mode A. However there is an significant overlap range where the PCAS cannot know for sure what the reply actually is. PCAS units clearly try to do some tricks to reduce this "aliasing" problem but vendors do not disclose how they do this, an obvious filter is if the code does not change over a reasonable time then it is more likely to be Mode A than Mode C. But an auto-pilot with very accurate altitude hold may break that assumption. I'm pointing this out for completeness but it is actually a non-issue for us since 1200 and 1201 (and 0440 for folks flying near Reno, and all the emergency squawk codes etc.) do not alias to valid altitude codes. It is a possible issue however with discrete allocated squawk codes and I think I've seen it in practice with my Zaon MRX. BTW this is the reason you would *not* want to try to have Mode C equipped gliders in a gaggle with discrete squawk codes. With Mode S transponders replying to Mode S interrogations things quickly get more complex, but the good news is easy to correlate a squawk code, and what is an altitude for a Mode S transponder replying to a Mode S interrogation. But even better you don't need to worry, you can mostly forget about the squawk code and instead use the transponder's ICAO ID itself is the unique marker that differentiates replies from different transponders. Mode S transponders are a lot more advanced than Mode C transponders, it's impressive that Trig can make the TT21 and get it to market at what we used to pay for Mode C transponders (let alone that it also does 1090ES data-out). There is no end-of life for Mode C in the USA and Mode C transponders continue to give good visibility of gliders to ATC and TCAS systems so I'd not hold my breath for lots of glider owners to replace Mode C with Mode S transponders. Over time they may do so to gain 1090ES data-out capability. But this stuff all starts adding up in cost fairly quickly. With a Mode C transponders (either an actual Mode C transponder or a Mode S transponder being interrogated as a Mode A or CC) the is no way in high density environments to really correlate an aircraft's transponder Mode A interrogation reply (containing the squawk code) and the same transponders separate Mode C interrogation reply (containing altitude). The only thing that (unidirectionl) PCAS has to go on is the strength of the RF signals and trying to guess that the strength of a Mode A reply matches a Mode C reply. If the PCAS unit like the XRX has directional ability that can help as well, it might be able to help but it is likely to get very confused when the threats are moving around relative to the antenna. This problem crops up in general in transponder in multiple other situations and is sometimes called "code swapping". There were was at least one early PCAS systems that did display threat aircraft squawk codes and that was kind of handy (gave a clue if a threat was on flight following/plan for example). They seemed to do that that pretty well in typical GA environments, but that would fail in dense gaggles for the reasons described above. If interrogators are coming from a single approach radar then interrogations will occur every 5 seconds. If from an area radar every 12 seconds. These radars will interleave multiple Mode A/C/S interrogations across the gaggle in each rotation. But the PCAS even if it can decode the replies (ie. is not killed by synchronous garbling) will start having problems trying to "track" Mode C targets by comparing RF power strengths at these relatively large time intervals given how sensitive the RF power received will be to obscuration and relative antenna orientation. If it can decode the replies it will have accurate altitude (+/- 100' for Mode C) for them. And luckily in many places you'll get more frequent interrogation from airborne interrogators or have overlapping SSR radar interrogations (but most of those then won't be Mode A interrogations). With Mode S transponders being interrogated by a Mode S system (most radars and all TCAS systems, but there are still Mode C interrogators out there) a PCAS system could use the Mode S ICAO ID to "keep track" of separate aircraft. I have no idea if the PowerFLARM or other PCAS do this. Once the Mode S transponders have done their initial handshake with the interrogator they will be selectively interrogated and so their replies will not suffer the same rapid synchronous garbling problem that Mode C transponders do. Right now most transponders in gliders are Mode C so synchronous garbling is likely a very large issue. Also in very large gaggles like big contests you will likely run into congestion problems with selective interrogation. I'm not able to model that in my head and/or guess what the limit really is. It depends on the mix of interrogations. In a gaggle or dense glider type environment the received RF power of another transponder depends on slant distance and also relative orientation of both aircraft (especially with blanking effects) and antennas. This is very different from PCAS working in a much more stable type state environment with a few nearby powered aircraft cruising along. I expect the distance guesstimates and filtering the PCAS systems used to have lots of problems getting range accurately, but then PCAS systems alarm mostly on altitude conflicts for this reason. (Getting off topic but..) For the glider on tow situation with two Mode C transponders in a glider and tow plane you may get synchronous garbling and see occasional strange jumps in the signals seen. Where for for example at one point in time the PCAS might think it sees one threat, (two Mode C transponders squawking the same altitude bit pattern and mistaken for one transponder) then the as you climb a bit later it sees a garbled reply (two transponders synchronous garbling with slightly different bit patterns as one of the encoders rolls over the next 100' mark). I suspect this is a cause of some of the interestign things we see with Zaon MRX at times when on tow. And it just varies a lot as to the relative strength of the towplane transponder signal and the leakage of the local transponder seen by the PCAS. Again with Mode S in both aircraft it would be relatively trivial to disambiguate aircraft and deduplicate/suppress threats. In a PowerFLARM environment with lots of gliders also with transponders what you want to do is correlate the Flarm ID of a glider with it's transponder signal (and also extend that to ADS-B as well) and suppress the PCAS warning for that glider. This in principle is be easy to do for Mode S. You just have have the Flarm transmitter also transmit the aircraft's Mode S ICAO ID). With Mode C you are pretty much out of luck. The Flarm box is only going to be able to guess at best. And there is the trade off between suppression a duplicate alert and suppressing a real alert. It is so insurmountable that personally I'd not bother trying if I was developing the box. And to be clear, I have no idea what Flarm does inside their PCAS system in PowerFLARM. Hope that helps explain some of the issues. Darryl |
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#48
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On 8/17/2010 11:42 AM, Andy wrote:
On Aug 16, 10:40 pm, Darryl wrote: Again that was not what Andy was claiming. I'd actually prefer it if I made the statements as to what I was claiming. I have actually claimed nothing about what PowerFLARM will do as regard alert suppression. I have, however, expresseed the hope that PowerFLARM will have intelligent alert suppression of transponder based (PCAS) targets. And by that I did mean suppression of certain PCAS targets but not others. Certainly it is possible for Power FLARM to determine the squawk code of a received transponder. In areas where gliders are assigned a specific discrete code then PowerFLARM could be programmed to handle targets with this code in a different way from target not squawking that code. It would also be possible to track a target based on range and altitude information. When on tow the tug's transponder signal will indicate a constant range and a constant altitude difference. Any other transponder target that could be a threat will appear at the max detection range and then come progressively closer. It seems quite reasonable to assume that a well designed system would allow suppression of the tug alert but still alert for the approaching threat. It would also be possible to remove the tug transponder from the suppressed target list when tow release is detected by a significant change in altitude difference or range. Similary if I am in a gaggle with several gliders that have transponders it would be possible to suppress alerting on all those targets while they remain within a certain range but still provide alerting to the King Air that approaches from max detection range and is closing rapidly. Again the suppressed transponders could be removed for the suppression list if they show an increase in range corresponding to leaving the thermal. So my hope is that, if a transponder equipped glider joined my thermal I will be alerted. When I visually acquire the glider and decide it is the one causing the alert I select mute. I will then no longer be alerted to that transponder but will be alerted to any other transponder target that approaches me. I will then chose to to mute that alert if I wish, and still be alerted to the next on that approaches. All this assumes that the unit is smart enough to keep track of individual targets based on range (signal strength), altitude, and perhaps also squawk code. I see no reasons why this is not technically possible but again make no claim that such a feature is include in PowerFLARM Andy My gut feeling is that an algorithm like what you describe would be much harder to implement than you envision. In busy areas, where transponders are constantly being interrogated, you might be able to track an isolated aircraft using just altitude and range. Once you have multiple targets at similar altitude and ranges in the same time periods, it would be very difficult to keep track of which target is which without also knowing the bearing. In remote ares the problem is much worse, as transponder interrogations might not be happening with any regular frequency. As a result you may see targets suddenly pop up and then disappear. The only real solution is ADS-B or FLARM, which transmit the actual position every second. The problem we face is getting everyone (including power aircraft) to standardize on a single format, so everyone can see everyone else. The FAA has told us that should be ADS-B in the US (unfortunately they gave us the option for two flavors). Hopefully we will see the price of this equipment drop in the next couple of years to the point where everyone starts jumping on board. -- Mike Schumann |
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#49
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On 8/17/2010 1:55 PM, kirk.stant wrote:
A. "Right Now Benefits of PowerFlarm" - This product does not currently exist. Has it been submitted to the FCC for approval yet? What is the expect ship date? Later this year, which is fine for me. And FLARM itself is well proven - even if that was all the PowerFlarm did it would be worth it. UAT ADS-B isn't. B. 1090ES ADS-B - You aren't going to see anything on PowerFLARM unless you are also equipped with, and transmitting a properly configured ADS-B Out Signal. That part is NOT provided by PowerFLARM. Wrong. I'll see the 1090ES mode S directly. Which is exactly what I want to see. C. PCAS - How does PCAS tell you anything about what kind of target is aiming for you? In fact, it doesn't give you any information on where the target is, whether it's getting closer or moving away. All you know is altitude and range (NO bearing). It's not going to tell you if it's a jet, another glider, or your tow plane. And you are only going to get that much info if the transponder equipped plane is being interrogated. That's not a given if you are flying low in remote areas without radar coverage. If I look out the window and see a dot, all I know at first is that it is something out there. I'll watch it until I determine if it's a threat and react accordingly. PCAS helps me find that dot by warning me to look level or slightly high/low, and if I already have an idea where the traffic is coming from (arrival departure routes, VOR/ Airports nearby, VFR/IFR altitudes) I can focus my search there. What else do you need, the pilot's daughter's phone number? The biggest reason pilots don't see other traffic is not that it isn't visible, but that they aren't looking for it - and PCAS/FLARM/ADS-B are all designed to make the pilot get his head out of his PDA and look for traffic. What's my agenda? Making sure that people know what they are buying and the limitations thereof. Fair enough. Cheers, Kirk When you get a PCAS alarm, the aircraft could easily be coming from behind you or another blind spot. Or you could have two aircraft at the same range coming from opposite directions. All PCAS (and PowerFLARM) gives you is an alert to start looking. It doesn't come close to giving you all the information you need to avoid disaster in certain situations. A classic example of this was a couple of years ago when I was flying a K-8 south of Mpls. Earlier in the day, we saw a couple of C-130s heading south. About an hour later, I heard them coming up behind me (low tech audio PCAS+). What do I do? If they saw me and were avoiding me, a sudden turn could put me in their path. With ADS-B, I could have seen exactly where they were and reacted accordingly. With PCAS, I wouldn't be any better off than with my basic hearing. -- Mike Schumann |
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#50
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On Aug 17, 3:56 pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
Hope that helps explain some of the issues. Yes it does, thanks. You present a number of cases where the target specific muting I would like to see could not be made to work. However I still don't see that in some less severe scenarios it would not be useful. Right now I mute my MRX if I'm in a gaggle with one other glider that remains inside my alert volume. I also mute my MRX if I'm in cruise with one other glider that remains inside my alert volume. In many cases I may forget to turn alerting back on after I separate from the other glider. In either of those scenarios a target specific muting with automatic removal from mute when leaving the alert volume would be a huge improvement. The system would only need to track one target and to recognize a new one for that to be effective. The ZAON MRX manual indicates that multiple targets are tracked and prioritized. Within all the other constraints you have detailed it would not seem to be difficult to have mute defeated when a new target of greater threat is detected. "MRX tracks the most significant threat to your course of travel (the primary aircraft). Should MRX determine that a new aircraft has become a greater threat than the one currently being displayed, the unit will beep once and NEW will be displayed for two seconds, followed by the new aircraft information." If NEW then MUTE OFF (obviously simplified). It appears that the MRX would not alert for the case where a gaggle of gliders gave synchoronously garbled replies. ("MRX boasts the unique ability to filter out any erroneous signals and only display verified transponder-equipped aircraft. Incoming signals must be completely decoded, the Mode A/C must correctly correspond to a valid altitude code, and MRX must be able to do this twice with the same aircraft. This process, among others, virtually guarantees that, if an aircraft information is being displayed, it can only be from a valid transponder-equipped aircraft.") Why wouldn't it be possible to alert to a new target that was not synchronously garbled? (The King Air about drive through the gaggle.) And there is the trade off between suppression a duplicate alert and suppressing a real alert. It is so insurmountable that personally I'd not bother trying if I was developing the box. Isn't the trade off between suppressing all (PCAS) alerts with a blanket mute function, or having the opportunity to alert to some, but perhaps not all, higher threat (PCAS) targets. Andy p.s. The MRX manual is an interesting read for anyone that has no experience with this unit. Click on the newsflash item at http://www.zaon.aero/component/optio...man/Itemid,33/ |
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