Harfwit wastes yet more money on ADS-B myth-busting - FDS!
Via ASA Steve Creepy (propaganda spin doctor) controlled website:
MTF...P2
Via ASA Steve Creepy (propaganda spin doctor) controlled website:
Quote:MythsbustedUDB? IMHO the best 'real' comeback to that bureaucratic PR spin'n'bollocks comes from Lead Balloon via the UP:
Only months remain before all Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) aircraft and helicopters must be fitted with ADS-B to continue flying in Australian airspace.
To help owners, operators and pilots, we have compiled, and busted, some myths that have been circulating about fitment requirements and regulations.
Once 2 February 2017 comes I won’t be able to fly my aircraft at all
BUSTED – if you decide not to install ADS-B that does not mean you will be grounded. It means you will no longer be permitted to fly IFR. ADS-B gives you priority in the air and the freedom to continue flying IFR with optimal efficiency and safety benefits after 2 February 2017. If you have not installed ADS-B, you will still be able to fly, but only under VFR.
I hear there will be a number of IFR aircraft that will drop back to VFR status from 2 February 2017
Plausible – some operators and owners have said that, after a cost-benefit analysis, they will not be fitting ADS-B because they realised they only fly a small percentage of IFR hours, or they can reorganise their fleet into IFR-only and VFR-only or they have new ADS-B equipped aircraft on order and can hold out until then.
The industry at large is not in support of the introduction of ADS-B
BUSTED – quite a number of airlines, operators and pilots have expressed their full support in the benefits ADS-B offers. These include, amongst many others, Virgin, Qantas, the Royal Flying Doctor Service – Queensland Section, Alliance Airlines, CHC Helicopters, Wings4Kidz plus a number of GA IFR operators.
Read some their testimonials on our website – www.airservicesaustralia.com/projects/ads-b/testimonials
The reason we have a mandate is because ASTRA – a representative industry group, which includes ASAC, RAAA, AOPA, AAA and others – asked CASA for an ADS-B mandate to be applicable in February 2017.
ADS-B is going to cost me many thousands of dollars to install – more than the entire cost of my aircraft
BUSTED – there are a number of avionics products available that will meet required standards with some that cost less than A$4000. Available products include those that have an integrated GPS inside a transponder (like Garmin, L3, and Appareo) or transponders that connect to an existing GPS engine (like Garmin, Trig, Bendix King, Honeywell, Rockwell and Dynon).
Whilst installed price depends on numerous factors, the Aircraft Electronics Association (AEA) has indicated that simple installations can be as low as $6500.
Some avionics products also enable ADS-B IN through the use of tablet devices for added benefits.
Email the AEA, info@aea.net, to locate a LAME in your area who can quote to fit your aircraft with ADS-B. Don’t forget to shop around to ensure you are getting value for money.
I own/fly a small GA IFR aircraft. The airlines and operators of larger aircraft are the only ones who will benefit
BUSTED – ADS-B offers a number of benefits for smaller GA aircraft.
All aircraft and helicopters, large and small, will be visible accurately on our controller’s screens when they are flying within surveillance coverage. Our ADS-B coverage at lower levels is quite extensive.
If your aircraft is fitted with ADS-B IN capability, then you too will have increased situational awareness of traffic in your vicinity, which is particularly helpful when outside of controlled airspace.
Even if you are not fitted with ADS-B IN, airlines, operators of larger aircraft and anyone else who has fitted it will have much greater situational awareness leading to less reliance on see and avoid and ATC-provided traffic information.
Additionally, if you experience an emergency situation, our controllers can pass on accurate location information to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority for a swifter response.
You are forcing the ADS-B mandate on GA in Australia – you should have waited until 2020 like in the US
BUSTED – according to the FAA’s Chief Scientist (Surveillance) Doug Arbuckle, waiting until the US mandate will not provide a significant reduction in the cost for ADS-B equipment as some had hoped for due to the demand for the fitment of more than 250 000 aircraft in the US.
“From our point of view, all the products are that are going to be on the market are now on the market and we don’t see any forces that will drive the costs down any further,” said Mr Arbuckle. “Pricing is very aggressive. We have talked to several vendors who have said they have made mass buys of hardware to keep the costs as low as they are now, so we really don’t see anything that would cause prices to go up or down in the near future.”
Furthermore, from a business perspective, operators can currently borrow money at historical low interest rates and at a relatively favourable exchange rate. There could be a significant change in the purchase price of ADS-B equipment if either of those things change in the future.
The Australian aviation industry including AOPA, RAAA and the ASTRA Council agreed and asked CASA, in writing, to proceed with the ADS-B mandatory roll out for all IFR aircraft in 2017. The consultation process was well accepted and AOPA (and others) congratulated CASA on the consultation process at that time.
Unlike the FAA, Australia has not required fitment of ADS-B into VFR aircraft. The FAA rule captures all VFR aircraft operating into ADS-B airspace, or within 30 miles of major city airports.
Unlike the US and other countries, Australia did not have much electronic surveillance coverage before ADS-B with only around 18 per cent of its continental airspace covered by radar.
With ADS-B, we have continent wide surveillance coverage above FL290 which is more accurate, more reliable and cheaper than radar. Extensive coverage exists at FL200; and since Airservices is funded entirely by airspace users, those savings are reflected in your airspace charges.
ADS-B coverage is available to the ground level at many locations across the country and this coverage will improve in the future as more ground stations are rolled out.
For more than 11 years, ADS-B has been used to provide ATC separation services and has provided operators with safety and efficiency benefits which they otherwise not have had access to.
When you say “with ADS-B you will get increased access to airspace”, surely you mean for the larger aircraft
BUSTED – with increased surveillance coverage and ADS-B equipage comes reduced separation standards that allows for the increased likelihood of clearance to preferred flight levels, and unrestricted climbs or descents, for all aircraft.
Delaying the mandate to align us with the US mandate won’t hurt anyone
BUSTED – ADS-B has been introduced gradually since 2007 ensuring pilots and operators of IFR aircraft have had sufficient time to prepare. The ADS-B fitment rate is now extremely high. The more than 1,800 Australian registered IFR aircraft which are already fitted , plus a further 350 non-IFR aircraft which have also voluntarily fitted, will be disadvantaged by a delay to the mandate.
There are now fewer than 880 aircraft remaining to be fitted, of which a vast majority have indicated they are intending to fit before the mandate.
Airservices has also made investment decisions around not replacing radars based on the ADS-B mandates. Any delay would mean that radars need to be maintained longer or replaced which impacts on the costs back to airspace users.
Deployment of ADS-B is just a transfer of costs from Airservices to the industry
BUSTED – Airservices gets it funding from its customers via airways charges and not from the government. To provide equivalent surveillance across the continent would involve installing and maintaining radars and recovering the hundreds of millions of dollars from our customers through increased airways charges.
The total cost of ADS-B ground stations and having operators install ADS-B in their aircraft is significantly lower and provides better long term functionality including the option of ADS-B IN. This option also has synergy with the GNSS program and the recent removal of 179 conventional navaids.
If you have an ADS-B myth that you would like busted you can complete and submit an online form and one of our ADS-B fitment team will take a look.
If you require information about fitting ADS-B, call our ADS-B hotline: 1800 844 487
Quote:Lead Balloon: If they are myths, why bother wasting time (and the ANC/TNC payers' money) busting them?
Some of the points made don't address the "myth". What does the agreement of a bunch of alphabet soup organisations have to do with the costs of equipment and installation or the objective benefits of the mandate? Nothing. (And have the representations that were made to those organisations in order to obtain their agreement been delivered upon?)
Citing opinions of the ANSP in the US as authority for propositions about ASD-B is a joke. Here's what the independent Office of the Inspector General of the US Department of Transportation had to say about ADS-B: https://www.oig.dot.gov/sites/defaul...%5E9-11-14.pdf
Just imagine how many very expensive lessons will be learnt and improvements made by the FAA leading up to and post-mandate, which costs could be avoided and improvements 'borrowed' by Australia if Australia waited.
When the highly-paid execs in Airservices can manage to build an organisation with around 900 excess staff out of around 4,000 and not make money out of a monopoly, just imagine what they'll do with ADS-B implementation. (And don't get me started on OneSKY....)
MTF...P2