WaiexN143NM wrote: Am i misreading their website, iLevel or not comprehending correctly whats listed, ie the new iLevel3 AW with optional certified gps source(like the new trig tn72 unit) would meet the requirements and be adsb out? For experimentals?
mike.smith wrote:WaiexN143NM wrote: Am i misreading their website, iLevel or not comprehending correctly whats listed, ie the new iLevel3 AW with optional certified gps source(like the new trig tn72 unit) would meet the requirements and be adsb out? For experimentals?
Unless they say it has ADSB-out and meets the mandate, it doesn't. From reading the product on their web site, it's not an "out" device. It only has an option for a certified GPS signal to go into the box. They say, " iLevil AW can be used as a portable or permanent-mount instrument." From everything the FAA has said in seminars, if it's portable at all, then it will NEVER be a compliant "out" device.
I would absolutely be happy to be proved wrong, so I'm going to contact the company and ask.
JohnAJohnson wrote:Michael,
Your post below has stirred up a bit of conversation on the various forums. Within 12 hours of your post, one of the guys on vansairforce (http://www.vansairforce.com/community/s ... rx&page=31) texted with Bill Moffit and had this to say:
fastj22 wrote:One thing I gleaned was the way Navworx sniffs the squawk code and pressure altitude from a Mode C transponder. My Skyguard does the same thing. But I've noticed I don't always see myself until I get high enough even though I see towers on WingX and am seeing other traffic. It seems the unit will not send your location information unless it can get the pressure altitude from your transponder and your mode C transponder only sends it when it gets pinged by ATC. So even though the Skyguard is sniffing my squawk and PA, unless I'm in a radar area, I don't send out my position and thus don't see myself all the time.
mike.smith wrote:fastj22 wrote:One thing I gleaned was the way Navworx sniffs the squawk code and pressure altitude from a Mode C transponder. My Skyguard does the same thing. But I've noticed I don't always see myself until I get high enough even though I see towers on WingX and am seeing other traffic. It seems the unit will not send your location information unless it can get the pressure altitude from your transponder and your mode C transponder only sends it when it gets pinged by ATC. So even though the Skyguard is sniffing my squawk and PA, unless I'm in a radar area, I don't send out my position and thus don't see myself all the time.
The Skyguard setup manual shows a static pressure line directly into the Skyguard box. So shouldn't the box get the PA directly from the static pressure line? I've been emailing with the company and have asked them a boat load of questions. For you, I'll just ask if you like the system and how it's wired and plumbed? I did note on their diagram they show 4 UAT antennas! Do you have 4 antennas?
fastj22 wrote:...One thing I gleaned was the way Navworx sniffs the squawk code and pressure altitude from a Mode C transponder. My Skyguard does the same thing. But I've noticed I don't always see myself until I get high enough even though I see towers on WingX and am seeing other traffic. It seems the unit will not send your location information unless it can get the pressure altitude from your transponder and your mode C transponder only sends it when it gets pinged by ATC. So even though the Skyguard is sniffing my squawk and PA, unless I'm in a radar area, I don't send out my position and thus don't see myself all the time.
So, they didn't go into it, but does Mode S always send out PA? Or can you hard wire your transponder to the ADS-B transceiver to always send PA to the unit? Or is everyone just speculating like a bunch of gossips in a knitting circle.
fastj22 wrote:I noticed in the Skygaurd install guide, they reference the DB9 being able to communicate with the transponder and altitude encoder. But in the pin out section, all those pins are labeled "For Future Use". So hope springs eternal that someday they will have something more than sniffing the PA from the transponder. That is if they survive all this Navworx mishegas with the FAA.
mike.smith wrote:fastj22 wrote:I noticed in the Skygaurd install guide, they reference the DB9 being able to communicate with the transponder and altitude encoder. But in the pin out section, all those pins are labeled "For Future Use". So hope springs eternal that someday they will have something more than sniffing the PA from the transponder. That is if they survive all this Navworx mishegas with the FAA.
I have a list of questions out to the company. I'll post them when I get answers.
As for the antennas, I don't know why 2 are required for 978 and 2 for 1090 with the Skyguard. Other manufacturers are calling for a single post antenna for each frequency. From Freeflight Systems (for instance) installation manual: "For airworthiness approval of ADS-B out systems (AC 20-165A) single bottom mounted antenna (TSO-C154c Class A1S) installations are allowed." Two antennas (1 on top and one under the plane), appear to only be necessary in certain TSO installations for certified aircraft, that does not include experimentals. Same for NavWorx; only a single antenna needed for one frequency. I looked at the actual wording in TSO-C154c, and it appears only one antenna is required for our applications (A1S).
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