torsdag 27. juni 2013
NextGen vs Single European Sky
FAA On NextGen: Steady as
She GoesThe FAA’s NextGen Air
Transportation System initiative is progressing, according to the agency’s
recently issued NextGen
implementation plan report. While the report focuses on improvements to
airspace and navigation capabilities, the implementation plan, and especially
appendix A, provides a detailed summary of technologies already implemented or
planned as part of NextGen, a useful guide for those wanting to learn about
ADS-B and other systems. Operators can already participate in NextGen by
equipping with appropriate avionics. For example, required navigation
performance (RNP) approaches with curved path radius-to-fix legs are already in
place at airports such as Denver, Seattle and others. (Authorization is required
to fly these approaches.) Some airlines equipped with ACSS ADS-B OUT and IN
systems are already conducting operations such as in-trail procedures using
ACSS’s SafeRoute software solutions. The FAA’s ADS-B ground station network has
reached about 500 stations of the 700 planned and is slated for completion early
next year, in plenty of time for the Jan. 1, 2020 ADS-B OUT equipment mandate.
While the NextGen plan raises the possibility of FAA assistance in paying for
required equipment, waiting might be counterproductive, as so many aircraft need
equipping that avionics shops might have trouble keeping up.
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