powerflarm units for use in USA will be available later this year.
older flarm units are not for use in USA.
See: http://www.powerflarm.aero/
Hope that helps,
Best Regards, Dave "YO electric"
There is virtually no FLARM in the US. It is unlikely to take off here,
as the biggest threats for mid-airs in the US are between powered
aircraft and gliders or other aircraft.
It's a chicken and egg situation. FLARM is only interesting if everyone
equips. No one is going to equip if they don't think that everyone else
will.
With ADS-B coming out, that is the way to go in the US. If you buy an
ADS-B transceiver, not only will you see other ADS-B equipped aircraft,
but, if you are within range of an ADS-B ground station, you will also
see all Mode C/S transponder equipped aircraft that are visible to ATC.
With 80-90% of GA aircraft in the US transponder equipped, this gives
an immediate benefit to anyone investing in ADS-B (assuming that they
have a ground station deployed in their area).
--
Mike Schumann
Mike,
Your points are all well taken. I realize that FLARM has never been
accepted in the US up to now, and we all know that ADS-B is coming in
2020 (although I thought there was a "glider" exemption), but with
that being said, would it make any sense for FLARM units to be
required for gliders competing in any of our nationals (or maybe even
in regionals)?
As you are aware, we've had several mid-airs between gliders in recent
years and perhaps if gliders had been equipped with FLARM units in a
nationals or in a regionals, some of these mid-airs might have been
prevented.....Just a thought!
Thanks - Renny
This is an area of fast changing technology. It is worth looking at
link provided by dave above to become more informed.
UH
Mike and Renny,
a good discussion of the macro view of FLARM and ADS-B. Another view
is more personal, for example in my situation- I fly a lot of ridge
and mountain in a very narrow altitude band and a lot of clouds. There
is not a lot of power traffic in those conditions. I have a
transponder but I don't see the Transmit light going off very often
and I suspect I am not getting very many radar paints down in the
rocks and trees where I like to fly. My greatest risk is from the six
other gliders I share the area with, which do not have transponders
and will never get them at the current costs; in fairness my threat to
them is even higher as I am a low hour pilot. FLARM would go a long
way to reducing the risks and at a reasonable cost; PowerFlarm would
be my choice as it would also provide protection from ADS-B and
transponder equipped threats, but at twice the cost the installed base
in my situation would be very much reduced and I stand a better chance
of talking my potentially deadly friends into investing in FLARM. 2020
is not soon enough. It is not soon enough for the pilots killed on a
regular basis at contests, which we seem to simply accept as an
unavoidable risk.
With that in mind Mike's statement that FLARM isn't of use (for me)
would not be correct. In 2004 my club lost two gliders and a pilot in
a collision that would not have happens if they had had FLARM. How do
you calculate that cost?
Brian
Now that Navworx is shipping their unit, this could happen tomorrow.
I'm sure that someone could talk Navworx into working with the major
glide computer manufacturers to provide the necessary interfaces if they
knew that this would be worth their while.
--
Mike Schumann
Why not convince your fellow pilots to invest in the Navworx ADS-B
transceiver that is now shipping? FLARM in the US is a dead end. ADS-B
is the future. If you invest in a Navworx type of device, not only
would you see each other, but you will also see other ADS-B equipped GA
aircraft, and if you are flying within range of a ground station, ALL
transponder equipped aircraft.
--
Mike Schumann
> Why not require ADS-B units instead. Then you'd get the advantages of
> FLARM, but you'd also see all of the transponder equipped GA aircraft
> (assuming that there was a ground station in the area).
Perhaps because glider pilots would be overwhelmed by nuissance alerts
when contest flying? I have already experienced my PCAS becoming
close to useless as more gliders are fitted with transponders. I
don't need another system crying wolf all the time.
FLARM uses intelligent alerting based on glider flight
characteristics. It has been reported that the nuissance alerting
frequency low enough that it is still useful in high glider traffic
densities.
Andy
ADS-B transceivers typically do not include any collision warning logic.
Instead they are more like modems. They transmit and receive position
data in addition to receiving weather info, etc. This information is
passed on to some form of graphics display device so that the locations
of other aircraft can be shown on a moving map display relative to your
own aircraft.
The display device, in addition to showing the location of other
aircraft, can also be programmed to provide collision warnings.
Obviously, the typical flight trajectories of gliders are different than
most power aircraft. I suspect that most glider specific moving map
vendors will try to match FLARM's logic to minimize false alarms if they
elect to provide a collision warning function in addition to just
displaying the relative locations of other aircraft.
ADS-B is obviously just in its infancy in the US vs FLARM's development
in Europe. The encouraging news is that the potential size of the US
ADS-B market is much larger than the potential FLARM market in Europe
(when you include the GA power market), so there will undoubtedly be
lots of innovation in the display devices that will provide the
collision warning function. In VFR environments, these devices will not
require FAA approvals, so I expect that technical advancements will be
very rapid, once low cost ADS-B transceivers become widely available.
--
Mike Schumann
Mike
You are back again proposing the same NavWorx ADS-B transceiver for
glider cockpits that was discussed recently and just does not look
practical for our needs. While I'd love to see products that do meet
our needs, unfortunately there are currently no available UAT
transceivers that do appear suitable for use in gliders and none that
I am aware of that are coming in the near term that will change this.
Anybody able to share any different information?
So I'll repeat below again the issues with the NavWorx ADS600-B. Until
an ADS-B transceiver addresses these issues I don't see how it can
hope to have any wide adoption in glider cockpits.
---
1. The specified 0.8 Amp (scaled to @12V) power draw the Navworx
ADS600-B ADS-B transceiver is just too much to be interesting for most
glider cockpits. Do you have different information on the actual power
draw? This is the receiver box alone and today a display would need to
be added increasing this power consumption.
2. (A) The NavWorx does not support the FLARM serial display protocol
so is not compatible with most current PDA/PNA soaring software and
flight computers (e.g. the ClearNav) that all support the FLARM
display protocol. Navworx could implement this, and I've talked to
them about this, but it does not seem to be something they are
interested in doing now. With a current device with power consumption
that just does not fit what we need it would not seem to make business
sense for them to target delivering a glider specific display
protocol. It might make more sense combined with a future lower-power
consumption version of their devices. Given they are a small company
and just have their first transceiver going into the market I'd not
hold my breath. Their transceiver will likely be interesting for the
lower-end of the GA market who have older panels with Mode C
transponders and who do not have a Mode S transponder upgradable to
1090ES data-out, they really need TSO approval for the product to be
successful in the GA market and I kind of expect that is where their
resources are focused.
2 (B) The NavWorx and many other ADS-B receivers has no built-in
traffic warning or traffic filtering algorithms so won't itself warn
about traffic. It relies on the external display system to do this.
None of these systems available are tuned for gliders, i.e. provide
the type of threat detection and false alarm prevention required in
many glider situations, especially when thermalling in gaggles (likely
one of the contest scenarios worrying many people). And it is not just
a matter of working to connect the ADS-B box to existing gliding
software or flight computers. Those systems today support the Flarm
serial protocol - in this scheme the traffic threat processing is done
within the Flarm (or PowerFLARM) box, with a NavWorx receiver
connected that gliding software or flight computer will need to do the
threat assessment and false alarm prevention etc. itself. Having said
that I believe some of these soaring software and flight computer
vendors should be working to support basic display of ADS-B traffic
(and FIS-B weather etc.) -- this may make sense for example where ADS-
B is being used as an adjunct to a transponder in busy GA traffic
areas. I've actively tried to encourage some of those ADS-B and
soaring products vendors to play together for this reason. However I'm
just not sure those vendors would want to step up and do the FLARM
style traffic threat detection. Especially since most of their market
that cares about traffic warning is already using Flarm.
2 (C) The Flarm serial display protocol combines aircraft GPS location
and traffic data into a single serial stream so that one serial port
on a PDA or flight computer can receive both data. Other popular
display protocol used for ADS-B traffic display like the Garmin TIS
protocol does not do this and would require a separate serial port for
GPS position data and for traffic data or some external third party
hardware box to combine two serial ports. This won't be an issue for
everybody but I suspect will be a problem for a significant number of
pilots. Just adding support in the PDA or flight computer software for
one of these other display protocols does not change this problem. You
really need the ADS-B receiver product to support the Flarm serial
display protocol for the product to be easily usable in a wide range
of glider cockpits.
3. Cost. At US$2,495 list the NavWorx ADS600-B ADS-B transceiver is
significantly more expensive than a PowerFlarm (~$US1,695 list) by
itself (for it's Flarm to Flarm capability). When you factor in costs
of a display for the ADS-B and other components it is in the ball park
of say a PowerFLARM + Trig TT21 which can do ADS-B data-out. The TT-21
with 1090ES data or out or a similar 1090ES transponder, or even a UAT
transmitter, is required to have the PowerFLARM ADS-B receiver work
properly in the USA. (And technically unless you want to add a
currently expensive GPS receiver the TT21 cannot meet the 2020
mandatory ADS-B data-out requirements, but neither will the currently
non-TSO ADS600-B, but lucky we don't need to meet those requirements
for gliders). I think current ADS-B prices for an actual working
system of around $3k and more price it out of most glider cockpits
even if it actually did what was needed to help with the glider-on-
glider threat. While prices may fall over time I'd not hold my breath
for a radical reduction, I suspect current vendors are meeting early
adopter needs in the GA market and there won't be a lot of movement on
pricing until we get closer to 2020.
---
The Mitre UAT transceiver prototype while it should have low power
consumption compared to the Navworx ADS600-B it is just a prototype
and AFAIK has the other problems described above. I am happy seeing an
R&D platform and prototype device being developed and hopefully used
to work on issues relevant to ADS-B in gliders but it is a long way
from that to something Mitre or others can convince a manufacture to
want to make (effectively for the USA gliding community only, yikes
that's a small market) and then to something we can buy. And I'm not
really sure Mitre or anybody else are addressing the needs or the
glider cockpit. If they were the prototype would already have things
like serial FLARM support and threat assessment etc. handled on-board.
That is just such an obvious requirement for the gilder market.
Darryl
In my view, the new PowerFlarm unit is a brilliant solution to the
problem. It allows US pilots to piggy-back the tremendous amount of
effort expended to perfect Flarm in Europe. It provides the PCAS type
function to help protect against putt-putt traffic and it also
provides the ADS-B receive technology so that it can be used as a big
chunk of the ADS-B solution as that becomes more widely adopted in the
out years.
We must adopt PowerFlarm technology for the 2011 racing season in the
US. There is no chicken and egg problem when it is a requirement for
entry in all sanctioned contests. I plead for support from every
racing pilot on this. There was a midair at the last two contests
that I attended. There has also been a midair at the last two
contests that I attended at Uvalde. The crash at Uvlade last week
was highly disconcerting to me. Chris was a great guy. Even though
I was doing well in the contest, I just went home. I was intending
not to return to the sport ever again. If we can make racing safer
with rule and procedure changes and with immediate adoption of Power
Flarm, I hope that I will be able to change my mind.
I have Flarm in my glider - have had it for 2 years plus - I fly in
Namibia
where it is mandatory - when coupled with the Butterfly and the Blue
Box it shows all transponders plus the Flarm targets - and the
Butterfly
shows multiple targets within the pilot entered radius - plus it shows
the
climb rate of the various targets - this function is outlawed in
European
competitions - only that function - the rest works as usual -
Flarm works great and is a huge safety instrument - but it only works
if everyone has it - the stray who doesn't have it is a risk -
my personal opinion is that Flarm was mandatory for all gliders in the
15m
Nationals at Uvalde there would not have been a mid-air - and if task
setters
would not set tasks with opposing traffic it would also help a lot -
in my opinion the US competition scene will eventually make it
mandatory
to have Flarm or similar - in the very near future - the Flarm is not
an
expensive instrument - and remember that funerals and estate
settlements
are very, very expensive - hospitals as well -
just my $0.02 worth
locally I use the Zaon to see the jet and power traffic that can run
you
down from behind -
Andy raises a specific good point, that there is no current answer to,
except hand waving and hoping. So to be clear, there is no ADS-B
product (besides the soon to be PowerFLARM 1090ES receiver) that is
optimized for glider threats/traffic warning. None. Nada. Zilch. And I
expect false alarms to be a significant issues with current ADS-B
systems especially in busy gaggles - one of the times that many glider
pilots worried about glider-on-glider threats may be most interested
in usable collision avoidance warnings.
Until we have an ADS-B products specifically targeted at the needs of
glider cockpits they are unlikely to successful in this market for all
the reasons I've pointed out elsewhere in this thread. Glider pilots
worrying about glider-on-glider and glider-on-towplane type collision
scenarios may not be that well served with a traffic display/warning
system developed for GA aircraft, especially in contest scenarios. It
will likely have all the false alarm issues Andy is raising. Somebody
with a focus on delivering a product to the glider community has to
develop that system, whether (ideally, for reasons pointed out
elsewhere in this thread) it is within the ADS-B transceiver/receiver
product or within an external display product. Then your claims about
market sizing and innovation just flip on their head. The potential
size of the USA market for people who want ADS-B transceivers/
receivers in their glider cockpits is smaller than the size of the
existing worldwide (not just Europe) Flarm market.
Darryl
We currently already have a Rube Goldberg ADS-B strategy in the US where
we have two competing flavors of ADS-B, no strategy to get rid of
conventional transponders, and now we've got somebody advocating adding
FLARM to the mix for a VERY small subset of aircraft population. This
is going to solve all of our problems?????
The only long term solution is to get everyone (gliders, GA, airliners,
balloons, parachutists, UAVs, etc.....) to standardize on a single
collision avoidance technology. We had the golden opportunity to do
that with ADS-B UAT, but the FAA has totally screwed that up, and now
everyone is going off into a thousand different directions.
The FLARM guys didn't help either. Years ago, when FLARM 1st came out,
they specifically prohibited the use of their equipment in the US. If
they hadn't done that, maybe FLARM would have taken off here in parallel
with Europe and become a defacto standard for the GA community.
They also could have taken their hardware platform and come out with a
US version that conformed to the ADS-B UAT frequency and protocol
standards. For whatever reason, they weren't interested in that either.
Maybe the best solution is for the SSA to buy 50 basic FLARM boxes and
rent them out to contests to use in the short term and wait for the FAA
and the market to sort things out over the next 20 years.
My suggestion is to forget about contests and use OLC if you need a fix
for your competitive urges.
--
Mike Schumann
> significantly more expensive than a PowerFlarm (~$US1,695 list) by
> itself (for it's Flarm to Flarm capability). When you factor in costs
Darryl - Where are you getting this price? The websites I see list
1500 to 1600 EUROS. By the time you add mounting hardware, shipping,
etc you're looking at $2200 - $2500 (not including installation if you
want that done by an A&P).
-----
On a separate note: Some PDA software (like the LK8000) and "glass
cockpit" displays already have some built-in support for FLARM anti-
collision display & warnings... Has there been talk about a
powerFLARM unit that is "headless" (i.e. has no display but simply
plugs into PDA or Craggy Ultimate or NK ClearNav or LX devices)?? I
would think that omitting the display would save on cost & power
consumption, as well as allowing the unit to be mounted in more places
in the aircraft (instead of cluttering up crowded instrument panels or
impacting the pilot's forward visibility).
Anyone hear any murmurs of this?
--Noel
They did not only prohibit the use of FLARM in the USA, but also in
gliders with a US citizen on board. Guess why.
Side note: Please trim the messages you're answering to to a reasonable
size!
> --Noel
Noel, you are quoting prices that include 19% VAT and this doesn't
apply to orders shipped to the US. So the quoted price of 1,499 euros
is 1,214 euros and that is $1,600 USD today. Looks easy to install so
$1,700 USD or $1,800 seem right to me.
Brian
Yo Noel
The pricing I gave is the latest I have from the US Distributor. AFAIK
resellers will include the usual bunch, Cumulus Soaring, Wings and
Wheels, Williams Soaring, Craggy Aero and others. A quick check shows
the page at Craggy Aero http://www.craggyaero.com/powerflarm.htm.
(Sorry Paul, Tim, Rex, et al. if you have this on your site I could
not find it). Those resellers may be holding off advertising the unit
until it is actually shipping. I know some of them have been taking
pre-orders.
The XCSoar software on which LK8000 is based also supports the Flarm
serial display protocol. I'm not aware of what specifically LK8000 has
changed but I just wanted to point out it is a basic capability in
XCSoar... and most other popular soaring software and many flight
computers today... SeeYou Mobile, Winpilot, SN-10, ClearNav, LX flight
computers, etc. etc. etc.
A headless device would seem to make sense.
BTW the PowerFLARM display is pretty compact, and uses an OLED cell
phone type display so don't necessarily assume a huge reduction in
power consumption by removing the display. BTW one good way to
visualize the size of a PowerFLARM is it is basically the size of two
Zaon MRX PCAS units sitting on top of each other.
Hope that helps.
Darryl
Ah maybe becasue they draw 0.8 amps, cost $2,495 each, don't warn
about traffic threats themselves, and are not compatible with any
traffic display systems used in glider cockpits. Besides those minor
little inconveniences your suggestion to buy this specific ADS-B UAT
transceiver is wonderful.
---
Anyhow back to the factual stuff... Flarm in the USA is not a dead-
end. Flarm in the USA has been at a dead-end and that is about to
change. There has been no Flarm product in the USA, that is changing
with the import of the PowerFLARM device. The folks behind Flarm and
it's importers have specifically focused on delivering the PowerFLARM
product to the USA market that combines all the capabilities and
compatibility of FLARM with an ADS-B 1090ES traffic receiver.
PowerFLARM seems a very smart way for piltos to adopt FLARM today and
then move towards an ADS-B future.
Folks who've seen my ADS-B talks at PASCO seminars etc. will know I am
concerned about the adoption of Flarm devices. Concerned that people
invest in a Flarm protocol only device and then put off any ADS-B
future. Or that islands of Flarm adoption occur in some places, ADS-B
in others etc. and then in many years time we end up with
geographically/regionally fragmented adoption. I'm also concerned that
all these devices, especially anything ADS-B, is too complex for many
pilots to understand and I don't want to see pilots say buying an ADS-
B transceiver or a Flarm device thinking that is all they need for any
traffic scenario, or that it will make them visible to airliner TCAS,
etc. For these reasons I think the adoption of the PowerFLARM device
*with* 1090ES receiver capability and not a Flarm only device is the
correct way to go for the USA market.
Anecdotally there is really nobody I know who is seriously working on
installing pure ADS-B in gliders in the short term, however I know
several pilots who have already pre-ordered their PowerFLARM and
several clubs and FBOs thinking about fleet wide adoption. The serious
ADS-B "geeks" I know who are currently or wanting to run ADS-B data-
out with their Trig TT-21 seem to be mostly interested in doing so for
future use with a PowerFLARM ADS-B receiver.
To operate as an ADS-B traffic in the USA the glider will need an ADS-
B transmitter, as owners of a PowerFLARM want to do this they will
need to add a Mode S 1090ES transponder or upgrade their current Mode
S transponder or add a UAT transmitter or transceiver. If really low
cost GA targeted ADS-B transceivers do appear it may still make most
sense to just use the UAT transmitter part of that transceiver to send
the ADS-B location and to use the 1090ES receiver in the PowerFLARM
since it does the FLARM glider tuned traffic threat analysis, is
compatible with current glider cockpit displays etc. So to my mind
buying a PowerFLARM i the opposite to a dead-end, to me it is the
*only* viable ADS-B glider traffic receiver product on the market, and
you get a full FLARM-FLARM protocol device as well. Unless something
radical happens that I do not see, I expect PowerFLARM to be the most
common product over the next several years through which some early
adopter glider pilots will receive ADS-B traffic data in the USA. But
currently pricing for a full ADS-B system will keep those wanting to
use ADS-B down to early/bleeding edge adopters.
---
We seem to be focused here on glider-on-glider threats, I just want to
remind people that near dense airline and fast jet traffic a
transponder today is the only technology that provides both visibility
to ATC and compatibility with the TCAS systems carried by most those
airliners and jets. TCAS does not detect UAT ADS-B transmitters but
will see 1090ES transmitters (it sees the transponder). We need to be
really careful in promoting any technology as to what exact problem it
is good at solving. Remember the answer is 42, now if we could just
work out the question.
ADS-B has potential benefits such as long range tracking for SAR and
maybe contest tracking etc., precision "visibility" of/to GA aircraft
esp. outside current radar coverage, some long-range augmentation to
TCAS for visibility of gliders to airliners and fast jets etc. as
those aircraft deploy combined CDTI and TCAS systems etc. but by
itself it falls short at the two extremes of glider-on-glider
scenarios and airline-on-glider scenarios, yet these are the two
scenarios that ADS-B is often thought about for use in gliders. We
need to consider the appropriate use of Flarm, transponders (and PCAS
etc.) and ADS-B. No single one of these technologies really
effectively help addresses/minimize collisions threats through the
entire gamut of glider-on-glider through glider-on-GA to glider-on-
airliner and fast jet scenarios.
Darryl
Thanks for the corrections on pricing. Under $2k starts making it
very attractive.
Regarding the headless bit: Its not just about power, its also
installation location. DG instrument panels/pods are great for
ergonomics and bailout ability, but they don't have a lot of extra
space for stuff like this. I already have my ewMicroRecorder on top
of the instrument pod and don't want to block my forward view. A
headless unit would allow me to install it under the seat-pan or
behind my head, and a hookup to my PDA or a flight computer would
still provide visual (and hopefully audible) cues when there was a
collision risk.
Regarding XCSoar: I haven't used XCSoar in over a year and couldn't
remember for sure to what degree it supported FLARM. In LK8000 the
FLARM support has been re-written and is much more fully-featured.
Bottom-line: the more devices that support it, the better!
--Noel
Chris O'Calahan was a friend and colleague and his tragic death has me
rethinking this whole subject. I've always been a big fan of ADS-B
but now I'm not so sure. I am absolutely sure if both gliders had
PowerFLARM, Chris would be alive.
ADS-B is at least a decade away (With inevitable delays - maybe two
decades) from completion. If you read the background tech
discussions, a fair sized constituency seems to be trying for force
ADS-B to simply replicate the current radar environment in a new
technology with few real advances for the average pilot beyond what we
have now with Mode-C. In any event, ADS-B will be primarily focused
on airplane operations and its usefulness to gliders will be
incidental.
PowerFLARM is exactly what we need and it will be available in months
not decades. The developers are tightly focused on glider operations
and will no doubt improve their product in the months and years to
come based on feedback from glider pilots - something I very much
doubt will be the case with ADS-B.
Noel
I had a DG-303 and I suspect the very best place for a Flarm like
device is on top of the glareshield, for both visibility and antenna
location and I'd be trying to move your flight recorder elsewhere if
you need the space. My old DG-303 panel was so tight (I like the full
size altimeters etc.) I had problem finding space for even small
things. I had my MRX PCAS mounted on top of the glareshield and it
worked great, and I made a smal sunshade that velcros on top of the
unit that helped with the display visibility. Although it depends on
your head height vs. the glareshield height I suspect a PowerFLARM by
itself will not intrude a lot into your visibility.
Darryl
Brian & folks
Sorry to hog the thread but I want to make sure that key technical
facts are nailed down.
Brian wrote...
> PowerFlarm would be my choice as it would also provide protection from ADS-B and
> transponder equipped threats, ...
PowerFLARM or any other 1090ES receiver in the USA will "see" other
ADS-B data-out equipped traffic if and only if one or more of the
following is true
1. ADS-B Direct. That other traffic is transmitting ADS-B data-out on
the same physical link layer (i.e. a Mode S transponder with 1090ES
data-out).
or 2. ADS-R (ADS-B Relay). That other traffic is transmitting on the
other physical link layer (i.e. a UAT transmitter or transceiver)
*and* your aircraft is correctly transmitting ADS-B data-out that
describes the aircraft location and ADS-B receiver configuration (aka
the "capability code" bits)
*and* both aircraft are within range of one or more ADS-B ground
stations
*and* the aircraft are within the ADS-R "service volume" (or "threat
cylinder" in my terminology) of what I beleive is +/- 3,500' and 15
nautical miles of each other
---
If you don't meet *all* the requirments in #2 above your ADS-B
receiver may still see other traffic, especially traffic near other
ADS-B data-out equipped aircraft, but there is no gaurentee that you
will see all traffic near you. The PowerFLARM is not an ADS-B
transmitter so you will need a Mode S transponder with 1090ES data-out
or a UAT transmitter/receiver to make the ADS-B traffic part of the
PowerFLARM work properly. My expectation is given that ADS-B is a damn
confusing mess that at least for the next several years pilots in the
USA who buy a PowerFLARM will likely mostly do so for the flarm-flarm
and PCAS capability, and if they also see 1090ES data-out aircraft
(esp. airliners and fast jets) that great, but I do worry that many
pilots won't understand they will not properly see say GA UAT equipped
traffic without an ADS-B transmitter.
---
The PowerFLARM has PCAS capability so is the threat aircraft
transponder is being interrogated the PowerFLARM should be able to
warn you of a threat and its relative altitude but it won't have
direction information. The nice thing about this is many of us have
positive experiences with Zaon MRX units where there seems to be good
interrogation even outside of standard SSR coverage (via TCAS and TCAD
interrogators etc). However if the concern is about ridges and other
fairly obscured sites then there just may not be enough interrogations
to make a transponder useful for a PCAS (PowerFLARM or Zaon MRX etc.)
unit to detect anything. Of course if the threat aircraft has a Mode S
1090ES data-out transponder then the PowerFLARM will directly the ADS-
B data from the transponder.
PowerFLARM will also have ADS-B TIS-B support but it is not initially
shipping with this enabled. TIS-B is the relay of other aircraft SSR
position data to ADS-B equipped aircraft so they can "see" transponder
only equipped traffic.
TIS-B (ADS-B Traffic Information System) requires that the other
traffic has a Mode C or S transponder
*and* is within coverage of a traditional SSR radar (or
multilateration system). i.e. think airspace where you have ATC radar
coverage today.
*and* your aircraft is correctly transmitting ADS-B data-out that
describes the aircraft location and ADS-B receiver configuration (aka
the "capability code" bits)
*and* your aircraft is within range of an ADS-B ground station
*and* the threat aircraft is within the TIS-B "service volume" (or
"threat cylinder" in my terminology) of your aircraft - I believe that
is is +/- 3,500' and 15 nautical miles.
---
Since Brian mentioned ridges as a scenario, a potential concern there
is that you may be frequently outside of ADS-B ground coverage and
therefore ADS-R services may be unreliable or not work at all. So even
if all the gliders are properly equipped a 1090ES ADS-B equipped
glider just won't "see" a UAT equipped glider an visa versa. Although
ADS-B ground station coverage compared to traditional SSR radar is
going to be impressive, including at many locations down to very low
altitudes, ADS-B as deployed in the USA just is not designed to deal
with scenarios like ridge soaring. To deal reliably with this glider-
on-glider ridge scenario all gliders in that area would need to adopt
a single physical ADS-B link layer (UAT or 1090ES) and/or adopt
PowerFLARM (for Flarm-Flarm). This is one reason I also claim that ADS-
B alone in gliders is not practical in the USA until somebody develops
a low cost dual-link layer receiver that can receive directly on both
1090ES and UAT. The ADS-R overage is a reason that busy ridge soaring
locations might want to be looking at the ADS-B GBT (ground station)
coverage maps and getting a feel how much this will be issue in their
area. Something probably a good idea for the SSA to be pushing to have
happen/coordinate.
Sorry to ramble on but this level of detail is really unfortunately
necessary in discussing these technologies.
Darryl
I'm glad you posted this very informative item. As you point out, this
is an incredible mess. It didn't need to be that way, but that's what
you get with government engineering by political committee.
It's too bad that the FLARM guys didn't go after the US market when they
1st started their project in Europe years ago. It might have taken off
in the US GA market and created a defacto standard. No we have a huge
mess with no good answers in sight.
Certainly not a story that gets people excited about spending $$$$s to
upgrade their avionics.
--
Mike Schumann
http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john.cochrane/research/Papers/flarm.html
It's here, and it really helps with glider to glider midairs which are
the main problem at contests.
John Cochrane
Bravo John....................thanks for the link, and count me as on
of the "let's all get one" gang.
Brad
199AK
Questions For The Competition Pilots out there:
Would you pay $$ to rent a powerFLARM unit for a Regional or National-
level contest?
What would you pay for 7 - 14 days of use of a powerFLARM?
Would you pay a higher contest entry fee if the contest provided FLARM
units for competitors?
--Noel
Noel,
I've monitored Whidbey approach when flying up near Mt Vernon, I can't
tell you how many times I've heard the controller giving pilots heads
up for traffic and not one of the power guys ever saw each other. This
has happened many times.
I somewhat believe power pilots are complacent, believing that
technology will save them for a mid-air..................if you
recall, we almost got rammed by a twin while in the pattern at KAWO!
I don't like the idea of making FLARM available for rent. This is
something we should should equip our cockpits with and use ALL THE
TIME! I don't know what the learning curve is for Flarm, but if I ever
did fly a contest, I would want to know how Flarm works and not have
to "figure it out" in the cockpit during a contest.
Also, let's not stratify the use of Flarm for just contest pilots, the
airspace gets pretty busy just east KAWO too!
Is there a possibility of making Flarm simulator that we could
practice with on a PC? Perhaps some of the soaring flight simulators
have it, but I don't play with those.
On another note: If we are going to start tossing our ideas into the
hat...................please make sure LK8000 is compatible with
whatever Flarm unit is developed, pretty sure Paolo is all over that
anyways!
Brad
Brad
Yes, but you got it kind of backwards - the LK8000 is developed to be
compatible with the publicly documented (and relatively simple) serial
FLARM protocol. Flarm established that protocol for a reason and
worked to get it widely adopted by software and flight computer
vendors. Which is why any ADS-B products trying to enter the glider
market without supporting this basic protocol is just unlikely to
happen.
I agree on your point, a contest day or practice day in crowded
airspace is just not the time to start dicking around learning how to
use or interpret any traffic warning system. And a simulator on a PC/
mac just would not convince me either (and I already play around with
SilentWings), pilots need to fly with the real thing. I think
investigating mandating Flarm type devices in USA contest makes sense
but I think proposing renting/loaning those systems would not be a
good idea.
Darryl
Seems to me that another "niche" market for Flarm would be helicopters
flying around most big cities. There's usually several media outlets
with one, police and air ambulance. These aircraft have a tendency to
congregate around their own flavor of "hot spot", with similar
concerns as we have in gaggles, etc.
The more potential early adopters we can muster, the more likely this
could become a de-facto standard.
-Tom
For example, where I fly in eastern England, I believe less than 25%
of gliders have Flarm. I have the only one at my gliding club; none of
the other 12-15 gliders based there have it. I think only a few of the
gliders based at other nearby clubs are Flarm-equipped. Nevertheless,
last Sunday, I had two collision alerts. One was from my 11 o'clock.
Either the other glider had seen me first, and already taken action,
or it was not going to be close enough for an actual collision, just a
very near fly by; by the time I acquired him visually, he was already
passing me.
The other was with a glider in the same thermal as me, which I had
seen and whose presence was indicated by a green light on Flarm, until
he suddenly got behind me close enough for Flarm to alert imminent
collision (red lights and loud beeps). As it was then in my blind
spot, the only way I knew how close and how much threat he was came
from the Flarm unit, and I was able to speed up and get out of the way
before it turned into something nasty. (Last year, there was a real
collision between two UK gliders with almost exactly that geometry –
neither had Flarm working, and the one in front had no chance to see
it coming, in spite of efforts to see where the other had got to,
AIUI.)
Last time I checked with the main UK distributor, something like 25%
of UK gliders had Flarm and it was still growing.
From the correspondence I have seen, most UK pilots who have tried it
would not now be without it and really want the others to catch up.
It may be the case that a standalone Flarm unit like mine is a
temporary piece of technology which will be overtaken eventually by
ADS-B, or that plus Flarm, PowerFlarm, etc.. To my mind, it is worth
paying for even for a few years for partial assistance in collision
avoidance.
For the most common collisions in UK gliding, glider-glider, Flarm is
the only technology that can significantly help at the moment.
Transponders would do nothing for glider-glider collisions here. They
would do something for airliner (TCAS)-glider risks, but there have
been no such collisions, and the Airprox data suggest that they are
the least of our worries. Power general aviation-glider collisions
have taken place, but not nearly as many as glider-glider collisions.
Others have estimated transponder installation in general aviation is
still very much a minority in the UK. Even for those GA that do have
transponders, having a transponder in the glider as well provides
absolutely no “interoperability” (a CAA - civil aviation authority -
expression). Only if you receive a radar service, which is very rare
here, or if you have PCAS or similar, is a transponder going to be any
help in avoiding GA-glider incidents. I have a PCAS, because I fly in
an area with a lot of overflying GA, and I don't want to become a
statistic. I don't have a transponder, because the European
regulations, and the very strict adherence to them required by our
CAA, preclude me fitting one, as there is not a sufficiently detailed
approved modification required by European legislation.
So Flarm and PCAS is all I can do at the moment unless I invest in a
completely new instrument panel and layout, extra equipment, and the
cost and inconvenience of drawing up a very detailed modification
proposal that would be required, and paying for it to be officially
approved - a burden which is prohibitively expensive and time-
consuming, requiring skills I do not have.
Chris N
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me)
I truly appreciate your comments and perspective on your own flarm
experience in the UK. However, I will note that your math is not
correct. If 25% of the gliders have flarm, then only one in 16
collisions can be averted, not 25% as you suggest. It is for
precisely that reason that it is necessary to have wide deployment of
the technology in order that it be significantly useful. I consider
that the logical mechanism to achieve wide deployment is to start by
mandating its use in sanctioned competition. I do hope that step is
taken for the 2011 US racing season.
1. FLARM units broadcast the projected flight path of the glider they
are mounted in, which greatly reduces the computation load for
each FLARM. ADS-B doesn't do this, so each display device would
have compute the projected path for every glider in the gaggle.
That might be too much to do unless it was a dedicated device, and
it might not be done as accurately, because it would have fewer
GPS positions and speeds to work with.
2. FLARM units all use the same logic, enforced by mandatory updates,
to help ensure proper operation between all units. Would display
units with different techniques work as well?
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me)
- "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl
- "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz
There is another market that is developing, but I don't know if it would
be an asset to us: the huge trucks used in open pit mining. Knowing
exactly where they are helps the mine management optimize the use of the
trucks, and helps the trucks avoid obstacles. A truck that can carry 50
tons of dirt can do serious damage to anything it hits!
Mike
The "Flarm Guys" wanted to go to the US market when they first came
out but were advised by legal counsel in the US that they would have
"severe" liability problems. They are a small company, just 2 guys at
first. I am from the US and fly in a German club and when Flarm first
came out with the "No US citizens" codicil in the OpMan it was some
concern for the club. It hasn't been a problem so far and I would not
fly without a Flarm unit period! We have 100% compliance at our club.
I don't know what the numbers are for Germany, Italy, Austria,
Switzerland and France (the countries whose pilots I meet on a typical
Alps flight) but it appears quite high. Also the hang glider/
paraglider crowd is on board.
When I come back to the States eventually I hope Flarm/Pwr Flarm has
saturated the soaring market. It is the only way I'll be able to fly.
Bob
That's not true because you having FLARM and other gliders having
FLARM are not independent random variables, unless you jump in a
different random glider every day.
If you choose to have FLARM and 25% of other gliders have FLARM then
you will be alerted to 25% of possible collisions, not 1/16.
If you choose not to have FLARM then you will be alerted to 0% of
possible collisions.
I would hate to think that I might have also had 15 times as many near
collisions with no Flarm indication in that period. It is bad enough
thinking that with average luck, I might have had as many as nine
others that I didn't see.
In fact, I suspect the numbers are so low that no trend can be
ascertained from this small sample.
What I can ascertain is that in every case, Flarm saw the threat and
raised the alert before my eyeball did. It also sees lots of green
contacts before I do. It's not that I don't look out, it is more that
I'm looking out with an imperfect tool for the job.
The same applies to powered aircraft which I detect with PCAS - there
are far more contacts than I see, but most are sufficiently far away
that they are not a threat anyway. I have only had one encounter that
led to real concern at the time.
Chris N
This topic is on the list for the 2010 pilot poll.
UH
RC Chair
Once again, ADS-B does not incorporate any collision avoidance logic.
It just identifies targets. The external display device that is
attached to the ADS-B receiver is responsible for any alerts.
Since this part of the system is not regulated by the FAA for VFR
applications, we will hopefully see some innovative solutions to this
challenge from people like See-You, Clear Nav, etc....
--
Mike Schumann
Perhaps we can lobby AOPA to push a FLARM solution that integrates
with ADS-B as the solution for "the rest of us". Now would be a
perfect time considering the tragic loss of one of their staff.
One of the "problems" with ADS-B has been the cost and the lack of
clear benefits for the VFR, low & slow community, and this looks to be
the perfect storm to get something going.
-Tom
There is something to be said for this. The peak number of planes
flying contests at one time this year (or at least registered) was on
May 15th,
when there were 37 at R9 South and 47 at R2 Mifflin. If this unit is
like
other Flarms it also works as an IGC logger (I don't see it on the
web
description however). If each unit rented out 20 times over a 5 year
span at $100 plus shipping (if it survived that long!) it would pay
for itself.
On the other hand we didn't do anything like that when we introduced
igc recorders to contest flying, even though there was a steep price
to pay for them, and even though there was a big improvement in
task calling and flight scoring available from using them. Those 50
units would represent an $80K outlay, plus the administrative cost
of keeping track of them, getting them fixed when they break, etc.
-- Matt
I think we can safely say that a collision avoidance device that takes
up no space, uses no power, gives only good information and costs no
money would be embraced by (almost) all. So the question of whether
to adopt any specific technology is largely question of benefits vs.
cost.
Speaking for myself, I have an issue with family. They trust me to
stay out of rocks and trees, and make sure the glider is put together
right. They *worry* about midairs. I do, too. This is the hazard
that
by definition catches you unaware. So I am motivated.
Several times I have reviewed flight logs from contest legs where I
flew "all alone" to discover, after the fact, that there were several
other ships within visual range that I never saw. I've used that
discovery to work hard on my scan discipline and I believe I have
improved, but I *know* I'm not getting all the traffic. So I know
that eyeballs aren't enough.
What's needed is more credible evaluation & tire kicking &
understanding of where the faults are, and how it works (or not) with
GA. Thank you to those who have posted their experiences here -- this
is very helpful. The benefit/cost ratio appears to be pleasingly
high.
-Evan Ludeman / T8
I did a back of the envelope on the rental idea a couple of weeks ago.
Depending on how many non-overlapping contests you can serve, the
price you buy the PowerFlarms at and whether you sell/replace the
units that have been in service a few years, it seems you could rent
them out at $40-70 per contest at breakeven. This year at least there
weren't many schedule conflicts on the big contests, but some are back-
to-back, so you'd need an efficient system for management and
logistics. I doubt the Flarm guys would want to donate or lease 50
units, but they might be willing to give favorable pricing to help get
the US market going and really show the value in the toughest
environment - contests.
I'm in favor of doing something. I believe the statistics show that
the biggest midair threat is glider-glider at contests and covering
contests would seed the market among many of the pilot who fly the
most.
9B
If you want to engage AOPA in this, visit the AOPA web site and see
the pilot meetings under Engage in AOPA. AOPA members in various
areas should have had an e-mail notification of these meetings and can
submit questions in advance. Of course, the meeting agendas are going
to be pretty tightly controlled as they are short and themed, but
Craig Fuller will be there with a congressman or senator. The
unfortunate irony is that Chris O'Callaghan was one of the pilots
involved in the current east coast Mitre ADS-B tests.
Frank Whiteley
"Darryl Ramm" <darry...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:045f8844-d8cc-4e9a...@i18g2000pro.googlegroups.com...
<snip>
>
> I had a DG-303 and I suspect the very best place for a Flarm like
> device is on top of the glareshield, for both visibility and antenna
> location and I'd be trying to move your flight recorder elsewhere if
> you need the space.
<snip>
Writing from the UK.
I have a Swiss Flarm, the original type, which mounts on top of my panel.
However I've realised it's not the best choice for my particular glider as
if I ever have to jump, the cover over the panel goes with the canopy. It
would have been much easier to do a safe installation (e.g. one with greatly
reduced risk of stopping the canopy ejecting) with a Red Box Flarm, which is
headless and can be fitted somewhere behind the panel or (I suspect) even
secured to the inside of the fus with Velcro.
However the Flarm itself works well. Mine is an IGC logger as well (and the
Red Box is available in an IGC version). I haven't flown a huge amount
since I got it, but it seems to have worked well on it's few XC outings.
The one thing that is always in my mind when I get an alert and I *think* I
see the threat is if it really is the thread. I treat the alarm as a 'lot
out even more' warning rather than a 'look at the display' warning.
I don't want to see the "first" batch of Flarms going to just contest
pilots. Contest pilots are not the only ones to run in to each other.
If you want to see a lawsuit, go ahead and prioritize who get's them.
There are way more "just for fun" flights in the US than contest
flights.................I value my life and the guys I fly with as
much as the contest guys value their lives and the guys they fly with.
As far as flying "the most", I'd like to see the statistics showing
contest hours and non-contest hours flown.
Regards,
Brad
I have the most basic Flarm, which is a very small compact unit, but
requires an external battery source. I run it from a battery I carry
on with me, stuffed behind the glider seat, and the Flarm sits on top
of the instrument panel coaming with “hook and loop” tape. I have mine
retrofitted with the IGC Logger capability. You can buy new ones with
this capability already installed, now.
The Power Flarm, as I understand it, is a much bulkier item. I don't
know how that would work out for people to rent it and use temporarily
during competitions. You would have to sort out the power
requirements. Not everybody can stuff an extra battery into the glider
in the way that I can in mine.
If you want to see a picture of my glider with its Flarm, PCAS, and
other bolt on goodies on the instrument panel, see :
http://picasaweb.google.com/cnich15000/DropBox?authkey=Gv1sRgCPDsytW03-n8WA#5502778413677251106
.
[I hope this works – I have not tried it before!]
And one other observation. "The best is the enemy of the good". I
decided to get something that would help with avoiding some collisions
now, rather than wait for the ultimate solution where everyone has
interoperability with everybody else all in one compact box that is
affordable, can be fitted under the relevant regulations, gives a
graphic display, has no disadvantages, and and and. I might not live
that long. I certainly don't think I will be gliding that long.
Chris N
--
Mike Schumann
Not true at all. Where we fly our XC routes is back in the mountains.
As far as I know there isn't much GA traffic or station coverage back
there. But, there can be several gliders and I would like to have
something besides my visual scan to alert me to their presence. It
seems Flarm in "our" cockpits would do that?
We are also not "weekend only" flyers, we fly several days out of the
week during the summer and for that matter during the flying season.
Now, on the other hand.............I would imagine due to work, family
and financial obligations the flights made by contest pilots happen 2
or maybe 3 times a year, or at least as many contests their other
obligations allow them to fly.
So, perhaps the contest pilot who "only" gets to fly a few contest
pilots a year perhaps isn't so up on his skills as a pilot who flies
year round?
Not to get in to a pissing contest here, but anything that excludes
one group of pilots over another is not a viable solution, in my
opinion.
Flarm should be made available to ALL glider pilots. Didn't I just
read "the best is the enemy of the good"?
Brad
Unless, I'm misreading the specifications, there's no need for Cessna
drivers to buy PowerFLARM units. PowerFLARM can detect Mode C and ADS-
B if the glider and Cessna are in range of an interrogating radar in
the same manner as current "transponder detectors".
ADS-B, unless the camel designing committees in the FAA screw it up,
will be a nice solution but it's a LONG way off. Further off than the
replacement cycle life of most glider avionics. Buy PowerFLARM now
and by the time ADS-B is truly useful, the PF unit will need
replacement anyway.
Finally, It's entirely possible by the time ADS-B is here, the
PowerFLARM folks will have full ADS-B functionality built into their
units.
> If you choose to have FLARM and 25% of other gliders have FLARM then
> you will be alerted to 25% of possible collisions, not 1/16.
>
> If you choose not to have FLARM then you will be alerted to 0% of
> possible collisions.
I'm not going to argue with either person's math but I think different
assumptions are being made. In one case the total number of avoided
collisions is being considered. In the other case the avoided
collisions are only those involving one of the FLARM equipped gliders.
Andy
If you are flying in a remote area, with a couple of other glider pilots
and you all buy FLARM, you have protection from each other, but not the
stray GA pilot who may wander thru the area. That may be good enough
for you and if you have a small enough group, you may be able to
convince everyone to buy a unit.
If you are flying near a major metro area, there is absolutely no way
you are going to get everyone in the area to invest in FLARM. In that
environment, you will also probably be flying within range of an ADS-B
ground station, so investing in ADS-B is definitely the way to go. Not
only will you see other ADS-B equipped aircraft, but you also will see
all other Mode C/S transponder equipped aircraft that show up on ATC radar.
--
Mike Schumann
If you are flying in a remote area, outside of radar coverage, there is
a very good chance that a transponder equipped aircraft will not be
interrogated on a regular basis, and, as a result, will NOT show up on
PowerFlarm or other PCAS type units.
--
Mike Schumann
1) I still think the rental idea has merit. If people are unconvinced
about buying one, letting them use it for 1 week in a crowded
environment (i.e. a contest or busy flying-site) for only $100 - $150
would be a good way to introduce them to the unit and convince them
that its worthy of purchasing. The hope is that they would go home
after the contest is over and buy one. A "try before you buy" type
program, if you will. If I had the capital to purchase 30 of these, I
would start this business tomorrow (sadly I only have the $$ to buy
about 10 - 15, without getting external investors involved).
2) The powerFLARM unit uses AA batteries, no need for external
wiring.
3) The powerFLARM only has 1 rotary knob for control, and a pretty
self-explanatory display system. Not sure how much fiddling would be
required by a renter to get comfortable with it. Mounting might be a
hassle, but velco on the glareshield is the easy solution (like people
do with Zaon systems now). If rented at a contest, the idea would be
to get used to it on the Practice Day.
4) The powerFLARM is already ADS-B compliant. Yes, it does not have
a transmitter; but I don't think you're going to see that. ADS-B
transmit requirements are far more stringent than FLARM. It would be
a bigger power-drain and more antennas would be needed. I think
there's a good argument for separating your ADS-B "In" (i.e. collision
alert & display systems) from your ADS-B "Out" (i.e. transponder-like
functions) equipment, due to the big differences in antennas and power
requirements that each component needs.
5) Brad, its not about STOPPING non-contest pilots from adopting the
FLARM. But contest pilots tend to be early-adopters of new
technology, and tend to be the people who are more willing to spend $$
to upgrade their glider. The idea is to use this crowd to establish a
"beachhead" in the USA. Get a certain minimum % of the pilots using
FLARM and then it'll spread from there. Pilots already spend several
hundred $$ for contest entries and hotels/meals while at a contest -
so many of them wouldn't balk too much about an additional $100 for
the FLARM rental. Asking casual pilots to fork out an additional $50
- $100 for a weekend of flying with one is a much different issue!
Contests are just the starting point, to try to springboard the system
into widespread acceptance.
6) If the powerFLARM can replace a Volkslogger or ewMicroRecorder or
similar device, that would make it even more attractive, for sure!
Its got the GPS capability, so the security features and data output
(to SD card or something similar) is the only missing piece.
--Noel
(who also still likes the idea of a headless unit for purchase, to aid
in mounting and integration with other displays/flight-computers).
> If you are flying in a remote area, outside of radar coverage, there is
> a very good chance that a transponder equipped aircraft will not be
> interrogated on a regular basis, and, as a result, will NOT show up on
> PowerFlarm or other PCAS type units.
Mike - that's why powerFLARM includes FLARM and ADS-B detection, in
addition to Mode C/S Transponder interrogation replies. So powerFLARM
gives you the ability to detect any aircraft equipped with any of
these systems.
And note that until the entire GA fleet is equipped with ADS-B (in
2020 or beyond), the ONLY system that is actively transmitting all the
time is the FLARM protocol! Its the best guarantee among aircraft in
close proximity, no matter where they're flying or what radar coverage
they do/don't have.
ADS-B holds the same "always on" promise of FLARM, but the difference
is that FLARM is a developed product whereas ADS-B is still 5 - 15
years away.
--Noel
http://www.craggyaero.com/powerflarm.htm
--Noel
Details, please, if anyone has them. It seems unlikely that it would
include an aneroid altimeter or engine run monitor... perhaps it is
good enough to be a backup logger for comp use? How does one extract
the logs?
-T8
I'm unable to load the FLARM web page to investigate, but I'm curious
about "intelligent alerting based on glider flight characteristics."
Can you (or anyone) confirm that PowerFLARMs would have detected (and
warned) last week's head-on in Uvalde?
What glider flight characteristics in particular play into FLARM's
algorithms?
~ted/2NO
http://af-design.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/hammer_and_screwdriver-300x225.jpg
...or I hear Bob K. has a sawzall in case that doesn't work ;)
Seriously though, great discussion, carry on.
...ultimate log extractor: http://www.techfresh.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/logging-spider.jpg
FWIW I think the contest rental idea sounds like a great plan, and I'm
sure the FLARM guys would come down in price for bulk reasons as well
as the promotional factor.
Beyond discounted units for contest rentals, I think it would be in
FLARM's interests as well to sell the first hundred or two units in
USA for a significant discount to get the ball rolling towards
critical mass.
-Paul
If you opt for the engine sensing function on the logger, I presume it
uses a microphone, though I don't know for sure.
If you can't get into the Flarm website, you could try accessing the
UK agents website at:
http://www.lxavionics.co.uk/traffic-monitor.htm
for PowerFlarm, and there is a link on that page to the other Flarm
options.
I should mention that I have no commercial interest in this at all,
except as a satisfied customer.
Chris N
The specification indicates that it includes a baro sensor and has a
micro SD card slot.
I saw nothing that indicates it is intended to be an IGC approved
recorder but, as far as I know, the product is still in development
and the web site may not be current. The specs are certainly quite
sparse.
Andy
But do include "integrated microphone" so ENL looks possible.
As far as ADS-B being 5-15 years out, that is a complete misconception.
Navworx is currently shipping their ADS-B transceiver, which includes
ADS-B In and Out. The entire east coast already has ADS-B ground
station coverage. The ground station rollout for the entire country
should be completed by the end of 2012.
--
Mike Schumann
> The problem with PowerFlarm is that it does not include ADS-B Out. As a
> result, it doesn't reliably receive any ADS-B in traffic data from a
> ground station. If this was a true ADS-B In and Out solution, it would
Mike - Weren't you just debating about flying out of range of ground
stations, when talking about transponders? ADS-B from ground stations
falls into the same category.
In close proximity, I would expect ADS-B Out from another aircraft to
trigger my powerFLARM (ADS-B In) solution directly; no need for a
ground station relay!
--Noel
The first 50 (I believe) units are offered at a discount of $1,495 and
I believe the ball is well and truly rolling. I am not sure if there
are any left or not for this discount pre-order, contact a dealer. I
suspect Butterfly/Flarm has pent-up demand worldwide for the
PowerFLARM from people who have been deferring purchase of the
traditional Flarm and other third party Flarm devices. So I'm a bit
dubious of focusing on trying to get discounts etc. I'd much rather
see the primary focus begin on making a contest rules decision ASAP.
Want to really "get the ball rolling", just mandate the damn things.
I think FLARM is a good idea in contests and other situations with
high glider densities, and the SSA and IGC need to seriously look at
mandating them in contests. However for the USA I am worried we don't
get into making this decision more complex than it need be. And I
worry that many of the posts here are heading in that direction. For
example the SSA should not twist itself in knots worrying about rental
units, schemes to offset costs, etc. I hope the SSA rules committee
focus on the safety issue and trying to solve a safety problem we
obviously have and make sure the cost is roughly bearable to most
contest pilots. The "market" can solve the other cases, either though
people or clubs sharing units or maybe somebody buying a handful of
units and renting them. Please don't get stuck trying to solve bigger
more complex problems that distract from the core issue. Focus now on
making the right decision for safety and making it ASAP so pilots
going into next year know what is happening. A quick decision will let
product ordering, and those other "market" forces happen more
smoothly. And the SSA does not worry about renting etc. of required
items like flight recorders or parachutes and most contest pilots own
their own but others certainly rent, borrow, use club equipment etc.
those to get by.
For similar sentiments of trying to keep things simple and focus in
making the right decision. I don't think it really helps our needs to
be thinking about involving AOPA or finding other creative markets for
Flarm. Involve AOPA? Why? We don't need advocates or other things
outside our own sport right now. We need to make adoption/rule
decisions asap and let pilots know what is happening. AOPA's position
on technology in this area related to ADS-B is also unfortunately
confused enough already but I don't want to get sidetracked on that
here. At the core of the mess with ADS-B is that it is a technology
that means so many different things to different potential users and
suffers from being this flying kitchen sink. Here we have a technology
developed for and likely the only realistic option for greatly
reducing the glider-on-glider contest collision risk. Run forward with
it, not sideways.
Darryl
The PowerFlarm specs specify that they transmit on 868 MHz. Is this
frequency permitted in the US?
--
Mike Schumann
Hmmm, the PowerFLARM website does not mention this feature.
What you think FLARM have not thought of that?
Be a bit careful readying the PowerFLARM web site, it's clearly
focused on the European market.
PowerFLARM will operate on a different frequency in the USA than
Europe. Flarm already operates on a different frequencies in
Australia, New Zealand and the rest of the world. Flarm has had a 915
Mhz frequency planned for use the USA for quite a while, although I
don't know if that is the final decision or not. And current units
have neat automatic frequency section based on location. I don't know
for sure if PowerFLARM will do the automatically location based
frequency change but I've been told by the US distributor that units
purchased here will definitely run overseas (for example for traveling
contest pilots).
Darryl
If the other traffic is equipped with ADS-B UAT (the FAA recommendation
for GA), and you our not within range of a ground station, PowerFLARM
will not see him.
--
Mike Schumann
Noel.
Read my earlier post in this thread that describes things needed for
ADS-R and TIS-B to work. The ADS-B dual-link design in the USA should
be a concern for us. The scary scenario is say running a ridge where
fully equipped UAT and ADS-B 1090ES just will not "see" each other
outside of GBT (ground station coverage). The GBT coverage will be
pretty impressive compared to say current SSR coverage but is just not
necessarily intended to say provide low level or close to terrain
coverage in places we might care about. This is one reason I don't
believe ADS-B technology alone in the USA can meet our needs until
somebody develops a dual-link layer receiver. Alternately different
locations might adopt UAT or 1090ES technology. I suspect what will
really happen shorter term is people will adopt PowerFLARM and rely
mostly on the flarm-flarm protocol to provide help with that type of
ridge running scenario and use the ADS-B stuff more for visibility of
GA and airline traffic (i.e. think of the ADS-B receiver stuff more as
a fancy enhancement of current PCAS capabilities).
The dual-link issue also affects the ability to track other gliders
over long ranges, that will work fairly well (and an interesting/
useful capability of ADS-B in general) if both gliders are on the same
link layer, but if one is a UAT and the other is on 1090ES the ground
infrastructure won't perform ADS-R unless the gliders are within each
other's service volume or the service volumes of similarly equipped
aircraft (I believe +/- 3,500' and 15 nm range). So your glider
buddies may appear and disappear off the traffic display at times.
Darryl
(Mike - before you reply and push the Navworx box yet again, please
prepare an explanation of how the Navworx unit gets around the very
same UAT versus 1090ES issue that you described moments ago. If UAT
and 1090ES don't talk to each other from aircraft-to-aircraft, then it
doesn't matter whether you run a powerFLARM or Navworx box - you're
going to miss out on some of the ADS-B traffic either way.)
--Noel
I am very careful in reading the PowerFlarm web site. No where is there
any indication that the information provided is European only and that
US models are different.
My whole message here is that people need to VERY carefully research
everything, as all of the options available, now or in the future, have
their own quirks and limitations. No one should assume anything that
isn't clearly documented.
--
Mike Schumann
The UAT vs 1090ES situation is a huge mess that the FAA has created.
Adding FLARM into the mix doesn't make it any easier (we now have 3
different systems that can't see each other).
It's frustrating that the FLARM guys can't just adapt their box to be
ADS-B UAT compliant (both in Frequency and Protocol) when deployed in
the US. That would eliminate 1/2 (or 1/3rd) of the problem and give
them a blockbuster product they could sell to the entire GA community,
not just the glider market.
Ultimately, the only likely solution to the low level collision
avoidance problem is that all ADS-B transceivers are going to have to
receive both UAT and 1090ES, or UAT is going to have to disappear from
the equation.
--
Mike Schumann
FLARM on the ridge is a very good idea, but how many pilots will put a
unit in for FLARM to be effective as a system.
I like the idea of renting FLARM at contests where they are needed the
most, but I would be totally against a FLARM unit that does not have a
voice synthesizer. Looking at the darn display while in a thermal is
asking for trouble.
I would like to try the unit, but I am not ready to buy unless I see
it working in a real situation.
Be careful "big" means something different to lots of people. And I
personally think the photos of the device look huge on the Butterfly/
PowerFLARM web site. They seem to look much smaller in real life, at
least to me.
The specs are
Height: 46mm / 1.8"
Width: 96mm / 3.8"
Length: 94mm / 3.7"
As I mentioned before one way to visualize this is very roughly two
Zaon MRX stacked on top of each other. The device is looks intended to
be most often installed on top of an instrument panel.
Personally I'd still like it a bit smaller and trade off the internal
space for needed for AA batteries.
Flarm's approach to displays is to display a clear warning pointing to
where the threat is, not having people look at a display of moving map
symbols trying to work out what is going on. So its supposed to be a
glance and then eyes outside. To me that's no different to my PCAS
firing and glancing at the display quickly to see the threat aircraft
altitude difference. I have had some feedback from instructors using
more advanced Flarm displays however where they report some students
do fixate on the displays too much. Something that is harder to do
with a simple Flarm unit.
Their web site says voice warnings are is coming as an upgrade.
I'd be scared to death thinking I'm in a big gaggle with other gliders
where many of the pilots are using Flarm for the first time. Working
out what different tones and displays etc. mean.
Darryl
The website pics are closeups. The SD card slot you see is a Micro-SD
card.
It is 1.8" thick, and about 3.8" in its other dimensions.
For a size reference: the long edge of a deck of playing cards is
about 3.5" long.
--Noel
>Andy --
>
>I'm unable to load the FLARM web page to investigate, but I'm curious
>about "intelligent alerting based on glider flight characteristics."
>Can you (or anyone) confirm that PowerFLARMs would have detected (and
>warned) last week's head-on in Uvalde?
Definitely.
>What glider flight characteristics in particular play into FLARM's
>algorithms?
Flarm predicts the flightpath, therefore even allowing a
collision-.probability-analysis of two gliders who are flying slightly
different turns in the same thermal.
Works amazingly well in real life.
Andreas
>FLARM does you no good, if the aircraft that you are about to hit
>doesn't have FLARM installed. No one is suggesting that you not be able
>to buy FLARM. It's just not going to do you any good if the other
>aircraft flying in your area are also not FLARM equipped.
>
>If you are flying in a remote area, with a couple of other glider pilots
>and you all buy FLARM, you have protection from each other, but not the
>stray GA pilot who may wander thru the area. That may be good enough
>for you and if you have a small enough group, you may be able to
>convince everyone to buy a unit.
>
>If you are flying near a major metro area, there is absolutely no way
>you are going to get everyone in the area to invest in FLARM. In that
>environment, you will also probably be flying within range of an ADS-B
>ground station, so investing in ADS-B is definitely the way to go. Not
>only will you see other ADS-B equipped aircraft, but you also will see
>all other Mode C/S transponder equipped aircraft that show up on ATC radar.
Well Mike,
your parachute only helps in very few accident scenarios.
Why do you carry one? Why don't you simply fly withoput one and wait
until you get the glider zero/zero ejection seat that will save you
from a spin half a second before impact?
Noone doubts that Flarm is not the final solution to the US market
(althout Power Flarm comes close) - but with Flarm Chris would still
be alive, and the other midair that might have cost the lives of two
other pilots wouldn't have happened either.
Provocatively spoken:
Isn't it better to save a few lifes than not even trying to?
Andreas
Paul, believe me:
Anyone who has ever flown with Flarm in glider-crowded airspace (read:
competition) is going to buy one. There is absolutely no need to sell
the first units for a discount price.
People in Europe were very sceptical in the beginning, too. Nowadays
coverage is very close to 100 percent.
Experiencing Flarm in action is very, very convincing.
Andreas
That is incorrect.
The flarm collision avoidance system uses GPS
for both position and altitude.
Best Regards, Dave
Powerflarm for USA will include:
IGC logging (but not world record level).
uSD card.
optional engine noise sensor for guys like me.
So how much would it cost to build a transponder "interrogator"?
Probably a pittance.
I'm sure someone could have a product ready to ship within a few
months and it would just work in our current system.
Of course, the FAA and FCC would have to get involved, then the
lawyers, etc, etc.... So it would probably be approved for use
sometime around 2025 and cost $5000. Sigh.....
-Tom
So how much would it cost to build a transponder "interrogator"?
Probably a pittance.
I'm sure someone could have a product ready to ship within a few
months and it would just work in our current system.
Of course, the FAA and FCC would have to get involved, then the
lawyers, etc, etc.... So it would probably be approved for use
sometime around 2025 and cost $5000. Sigh.....
)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
I have wondered that same thing.
I suppose a club could get together and place one on a hilltop or two. to
cover blank areas. If everyone had one in their craft, I suppose it might
get a bit congested with two many interrigations on top of each other at a
busy contest. Would that be a problem or not, I don't know?
So what would be required to get, as far as permission, technical
specifications for a unit, and other things I didn't think of? Any FAA or
other guru's that know about such things out there lurking?
--
Jim in NC
Tom - Airborne interrogators start at about $10k or so now, they are
called TAS or TCAD systems (although some vendors used to confuse TCAD
and PCAS systems). The Garmin GTS 800 series and L3 Skywatch are
leading systems used in GA aircraft. The high-end version of these
systems are effectively TCAS I (but not II) systems. And these systems
are all adding ADS-B 1090ES data-in capability to complement the
active interrogation. You could pull the engine out of your 26E and
make it an avionics bay...
One challenge with these system is the interrogator consuming power A
low power system for just pinging really nearby glider transponders
could reduce that but then you would start running into how complex
these systems really are. Even not wanting directional data the system
may need to do some form of the sophisticated whisper-shout scheme
developed originally in TCAS systems to minimize overlapping
transponder replies. The real reason it won't happen is it is a lot of
complexity and certification costs with no real future benefit to most
people - and by the time you tried to develop this at huge cost most
everybody with a transponder would have gone ADS-B.And even though
that has lots of holes in its story its going to do the job good
enough for most people.
--
Jim - As for fixed interrogators I hope you are joking right? The
cheapest available ground based systems are multilateration systems.
These things are not consumer electronics and you don't get to slap
something together and start transmitting on 1030MHz. How many $M
budget do you have?
---
To the original statement, we need to be careful what is meant by "a
remote area". For those of use who fly with PCAS we know that
transponders in threat aircraft can get interrogated in lots of places
including areas that seem very remote. Interrogators include civil and
military approach and area radars, airborne TCAS and TCAD/TAS systems
and presumably in a few places ground based multilateration systems. I
was pretty surprised in how many places you do get interrogated. But
its often when you get low or in the shadow of a mountain or down in a
valley that this cuts out. And its really important for pilots why fly
with PCAS systems to know its dependent on external interrogators and
get a feel for where it does and does not work where they fly.
Darryl
The same statement applies to ADS-B. If Chris had been the only glider
there with FLARM installed, nothing would have changed.
--
Mike Schumann
Over the eight years I've had my transponder, I've flown in many
different areas, most of them in the western half of the USA, but a few
on the eastern side, and I can't remember any area were the transponder
didn't get interrogated. In some places, it was infrequent (every 10 to
20 seconds, say) at times, particularly close to a mountain and below
the top.
So, I'm willing to take my chances with a solution that doesn't work
where no interrogations occur.
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me)
- "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl
- "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz
I bought a PowerFlarm today.............now it's up to my flying
buddies to do the same thing.
Brad
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me)
- "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl
Good for you, Brad! I placed my order back in January. Still
wondering what the rest of you guys are waiting for? And I don't want
to hear the excuse of "I won't buy one until after I have seen one and
gotten to use it." How many of you have plunked down TONS more money
than that before the prototype of your new LS-23 had even flown?
Thanks for the suggestion, Ed Kilbourne! You don't have to wait until
there is a rule to buy a piece of safety enhancing equipment. Even if
it isn't our perfect solution, it is a hell of a lot better than just
your eyes.
FLARM is coming to the US, Mike, so please do your best to accept it
and stop trying to say it is just another distraction that is going to
further delay this "ultimate" system that the government is
designing. Then three years from that date, he says "Just one more
wait..."
Steve Leonard
A reasonable point. There is a lot of little used space to fly in.
As someone who started as a power pilot, I still find it hard to imagine
how one would be willing to fly in such close proximity to other aircraft
that you cannot continuously see.
"Cessna 123, traffic at your 3 o'clock, one mile, same direction" gets
my attention.
"glider 45, traffic at your 6 to 7 o'clock, 50 yards behind, 100 feet
above, circling in same direction" sounds terrifying. (I am in a blind
spot for him, and he is in one for me.)
I worry enough about a plane a mile away in a traffic pattern. Not having
continuous visual separation at 50 yards distance scares me.
I don't think the proprietary flarm system is the answer (being a fan of
open standards). I would much prefer spending my time where the only other
traffic is likely to be a bird, and enjoying the view.
Alan
Thanks Steve, I think it's a good move. I know as far as sailplanes
are concerned the more of my glider buddies that use the them the
better, I need to study more on how it will help with power traffic,
but anything to help me "see" what's out there has to be a good start.
Also............I lost a friend in a mid air a few years
ago...........I'll share 2 things: I dug his transponder antenna out
of a 3 foot hole in the ground, it's now sticking out of the top of a
tree trunk his glider snapped off as it's crashed thru the
trees..........the other; seeing your friend strapped to a backboard
at the end of a rope under a helicopter is something I NEVER want to
experience again.
Yes, buying Flarm was a good move for me.
Brad
From http://www.lxavionics.co.uk/flarm.htm :
“Flarm consists of a very low power RF transmitter (868.2 MHz) with a
range of 2- 3 Km that continuously broadcasts its position and
velocity vector derived from its integrated GPS receiver. It uses a
combination of a barometric altitude sensor and GPS derived altitude
for determining proximity and flight path. In parallel it receives any
signals from nearby Flarm equipped aircraft . . . ”
Anyway, the important thing is that its collision alert algorithm
seems pretty good, but not perfect, and at least one person has
reported that the height difference shown (is the threat higher,
lower, or at your level) can sometimes be in the wrong direction – but
only when it is almost on your level anyway.
I don't find that surprising. We are sensitive to height differences
of a few feet. Neither barometric capsules nor GPS height are that
accurate. But GPS height as determined by two units very close to each
other are probably subjected to a very similar if not identical error
in height calculation, so the differences are probably small compared
with the absolute height tolerance.
Regards - Chris N.
> I would much prefer spending my time where the only other
> traffic is likely to be a bird, and enjoying the view.
>
> Alan
Alan - The flaw in that logic is that you cannot control who choses to
fly close to YOU or your location! You can try to hide, but if you
can get to a certain place with your glider, chances are that other
aircraft are capable of reaching that location as well.
I'm not trying to be mean or say that you have to like gaggle-flying
or the FLARM device; I'm just saying that a "head in the sand"
attitude isn't a substitute for protection.
--Noel