tirsdag 10. juli 2012
Kontrolltårn - Automatiserte. USA viser veien
Imagine ATC With No
PeopleThe U.S. contract tower program is
designed to provide ATC service at some 250 airports for considerably less cost
than at locations where the FAA runs the facilities. But sometimes even a
traditional contract tower can cost too much. Melbourne, Fla.-based Quadrex
thinks it might have a solution in the wings. Quadrex president, Dr. Dave Byers,
said, “I had a brainstorm after reading a number of ATC research papers. I saw
technology converging that could help and wondered about a tower that could run
automatically, with almost no human input.” Byers told AIN he
imagines using an X-band radar feeding plotting and movement data into a
yet-to-be-designed “black box” for analysis. He believes the new system could be
built for as little as $1 million a copy, versus a traditional contract tower
with live controllers that can cost more than $500,000 to operate annually. The
new unpopulated ATC system would issue aural warnings at Class D airports on the
Common Traffic Advisory Frequency (CTAF), alerts that would call pilots'
attention to approaching traffic they might otherwise miss. “Imagine a J-3 Cub
tooling around an airport with an inbound jet,” Byers explained. “With no
transponder on the Cub, the jet’s Tcas would normally never see the threat.”
Byers also said, “This is not a remote-control tower where all the data is sent
somewhere else. This is also not a NextGen add-on.” But he does imagine the
system will recognize an impending overload and ask a remotely located operator
for occasional help. "Right now, the key question is what the FAA thinks of the
idea," Byers told AIN.
The airport manager at Beckley Airport (BKW) in W.Va. thought enough of the
auto-tower idea recently to request a proposal from Quadrex about bringing such
a system to fruition. “Right now, we’re at the research level and Beckley is our
test bed,” cautions Byers. “And like any other research, we might find out that
this concept simply doesn’t work.” Byers hopes to convince the FAA and a handful
of private vendors that scarce research dollars would be well spent on this
project. Quadrex’s proposal to Beckley is due in late September.
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