The CAA Final Decision
http://tinyurl.com/llhkr4
Mode S. The CAA decision
Moderators: John Dean, Moderator
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I guess this is the relevant part for most of us, unless you want to go abroad......
"The decision means that there is no current requirement for all aircraft to carry Mode S transponders in all UK
airspace.
The decision is not designed to facilitate an increase in the amount of commercial air traffic or UAVs operating in Class G
airspace and the measures are not linked to airspace charging or radio carriage. Also, nothing in the announcement will
lead to GA aircraft that cannot equip with Mode S transponders being grounded. However, aircraft that are not
equipped with transponders may encounter difficulty in obtaining clearance to access certain airspace."
"The decision means that there is no current requirement for all aircraft to carry Mode S transponders in all UK
airspace.
The decision is not designed to facilitate an increase in the amount of commercial air traffic or UAVs operating in Class G
airspace and the measures are not linked to airspace charging or radio carriage. Also, nothing in the announcement will
lead to GA aircraft that cannot equip with Mode S transponders being grounded. However, aircraft that are not
equipped with transponders may encounter difficulty in obtaining clearance to access certain airspace."
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- Location: Herts
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- Posts: 257
- Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 11:00 am
From http://www.caa.co.uk/default.aspx?catid=810&pagetype=90
'The issue at Schipol is a display issue rather than an SSR one and relates to the specific airspace design and controller tools. It is not the swamping of the radar system causing problems but the overlapping of large numbers of labels on the radar screen when GA are very active. This issue will not affect the UK, as NATS’ systems will be able to filter out responses from aircraft not in the controller’s area of interest. However, this filtering will not affect the ability of automated systems and safety nets to identify potential conflicts.'
'The issue at Schipol is a display issue rather than an SSR one and relates to the specific airspace design and controller tools. It is not the swamping of the radar system causing problems but the overlapping of large numbers of labels on the radar screen when GA are very active. This issue will not affect the UK, as NATS’ systems will be able to filter out responses from aircraft not in the controller’s area of interest. However, this filtering will not affect the ability of automated systems and safety nets to identify potential conflicts.'