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FAA Issues Airworthiness Directives To Protect Against 5G
December 07, 2021WASHINGTON—The FAA on Dec. 7 released airworthiness directives (AD) requiring operators of helicopters and passenger-carrying airplanes to prohibit certain operations requiring radio altimeter (RadAlt) data when in the presence of 5G wireless transmissions.
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5G now means some flights won’t be able to
land when pilots can’t see the runway
A new FAA rule may lead to flight delays
Verizon and AT&T are hoping new swaths of C-band cellular radio
spectrum will help make the 5G hype closer to reality, but the big mid-band 5G
rollout may have a side effect. Airplanes rely on radio altimeters to tell how
high they are above the ground to safely land when pilots can’t see, and the FAA
is now instructing 6,834 of them to not do that at certain airports because of
5G interference.
The FAA ruled on Tuesday that those thousands of US planes (and some
helicopters) won’t be able to use many of the guided and automatic landing
systems that are designed to work in poor visibility conditions, if they’re
landing at an airport where there’s deemed to be enough interference that their
altimeters aren’t reliable. “Landings during periods of low visibility could be
limited due to concerns that the 5G signal could interfere with the accuracy of
an airplane’s radio altimeter, without other mitigations in place,” an FAA
spokesman tells The Verge.
- “THESE LIMITATIONS COULD PREVENT DISPATCH OF FLIGHTS ... AND COULD ALSO RESULT IN FLIGHT DIVERSIONS”
That likely means flight delays: “These limitations could prevent dispatch
of flights to certain locations with low visibility, and could also result in
flight diversions,” reads a portion of the FAA’s written explanation.
“We are engaged with the wireless operators, as well as our interagency
partners, to do everything possible to make sure the mitigations are tailored to
prevent disruptions,” an FAA spokesman tells us.
The FAA ruling does give airlines and pilots an out — if they can prove
their airplanes have altimeters that are protected or are otherwise not going to
be affected by interference. No airline would comment to The Verge on expected
delays, nor would the Airlines for America industry group that the airlines
pointed us to.
It’s not yet clear which specific airports might restrict low visibility
flight, but you can imagine that they’d likely be in the same places where the
carriers are deploying mid-band 5G — with a few exceptions, they’re the United
States’ most-populated cities. As of December, the planned rollouts (PDF) are in
46 markets designated as Partial Economic Areas (PEAs), including 1-4, 6-10, 12-
19, 21-41, and 43-50. The FAA plans to issue notices for specific airports
later.
Verizon and AT&T did agree to push back the launch of C-band by one
month (to January 2022), and also offered to dial back the power of 5G towers
for six months past that to address concerns. Carriers and their lobbying group,
the CTIA, have suggested that there isn’t a valid reason to fear interference,
but the FAA has so far not been convinced. Nor was an aviation lobbying group,
the Aerospace Industries Association, which sent a letter to the FCC on Monday
suggesting that AT&T and Verizon’s proposed power limits don’t go far enough
for safety. The FCC, not the FAA, is the entity that regulates wireless
interference.
While C-band 5G and these radio altimeters don’t actually operate in the
same band, the bands are close enough that the fear exists. One possible
solution is a band filter for those altimeters, but organizations like the Radio Technical Commission for
Aeronautics (RTCA) have warned (PDF) that it might take years to certify
them and retrofit all the planes.
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