Early Technology Adopter UPS Disconnects ADS-B 'In'
Avionics
Fifteen years after it helped to introduce the technology, UPS is removing
traffic information displays from its Boeing 757 and 767 flight decks because
the equipment is obsolete and there is no Federal Aviation Administration
mandate to use it, the cargo carrier said. It expects to remove the automatic
dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) "In" capability by next
spring.
Responding to an AIN inquiry, the carrier said ADS-B In avionics developed
by its former UPS Aviation Technologies subsidiary are no longer supported by
Garmin International, which acquired the subsidiary in 2003. That reason, and
the lack of an FAA mandate to equip aircraft for ADS-B In capability, led to
UPS's decision to remove the equipment, reportedly announced in October in an
internal company memo.
While it is removing avionics that support ADS-B In-the capability to
display nearby air traffic targets in the cockpit-UPS said it is committed to
equipping for ADS-B "Out," the capability of an aircraft to regularly broadcast
its GPS-derived position to the ground for use by controllers in separating
aircraft. The FAA has mandated that all operators equip for ADS-B Out by 2020,
but it deferred requiring ADS-B In.
"It's important to understand UPS remains an early adopter of ADS-B Out,"
the carrier said. "Our 747, MD-11, 767 and A300 fleets already have ADS-B Out,
and we are installing it on our 757 fleet as they cycle through C checks. UPS
will be equipped well in advance of the FAA's 2020 mandate for ADS-B
Out."
UPS, FedEx Express and the former Airborne Express (now DHL) started
evaluating ADS-B in 1999 under the FAA's Safe Flight 21 program. In October
2000, UPS hosted an operational evaluation at its Louisville, Ken., hub, using
several Boeing 727s. The trial focused on using ADS-B with a cockpit display of
traffic information (CDTI) for approach spacing, departure spacing and airport
surface operations.
UPS's Aviation Technologies subsidiary based in Salem, Oregon, provided an
ADS-B system for the evaluation that included a CDTI, display processing unit
and datalink connection. In August 2003, Garmin acquired the subsidiary for $38
million and renamed it Garmin AT. "The company is known for its leadership in
the development of ADS-B technology and has participated in the development of
innovative equipment to enhance flight safety as part of the Federal Aviation
Administration Safe Flight 21 and Alaskan Capstone projects," Garmin said at the
time.
Despite disconnecting ADS-B In, UPS said that it "remains an advocate for
ADS-B" and the FAA's broader NextGen program to modernize the nation's ATC
system. As evidence of its commitment, the carrier cited its participation in
the FAA's Data Comm program to implement text-based communications between
pilots and controllers. UPS started testing that capability in 2013 at Newark
Liberty International Airport.
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