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Communications

FAA: Airlines Must Retrofit Faulty Altimeters 'As Soon As Possible' (arstechnica.com) 127

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The Federal Aviation Administration says it finally has a plan for the industry to replace or retrofit airplane altimeters that can't filter out transmissions from outside their allotted frequencies. The altimeter problem has prevented AT&T and Verizon from fully deploying 5G on the C-Band spectrum licenses the wireless carriers purchased for a combined $69 billion. The FAA was urging airlines to retrofit or replace altimeters in recent months and now says it has finalized a plan. An FAA statement on Friday said that "airlines and other operators of aircraft equipped with the affected radio altimeters must install filters or other enhancements as soon as possible."

AT&T and Verizon said they will be able to accelerate 5G deployments near airports in the coming months, but the carriers agreed to continue some level of "voluntary mitigations" in the airport areas until July 2023. Altimeters are used by airplanes to measure altitude. The FAA said a new "phased approach requires operators of regional aircraft with radio altimeters most susceptible to interference to retrofit them with radio frequency filters by the end of 2022. This work has already begun and will continue on an expedited basis."

Additionally, "filters and replacement units for the mainline commercial fleet should be available on a schedule that would permit the work to be largely completed by July 2023," the FAA said, continuing: "The radio-altimeter manufacturers have worked at an unprecedented pace with Embraer, Boeing, Airbus and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to develop and test filters and installation kits for these aircraft. Customers are receiving the first kits now. In most cases, the kits can be installed in a few hours at airline maintenance facilities. Throughout this process, the FAA will work with both industries to track the pace of the radio altimeter retrofits while also working with the wireless companies to relax mitigations around key airports in carefully considered phases."

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FAA: Airlines Must Retrofit Faulty Altimeters 'As Soon As Possible'

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday June 21, 2022 @11:34PM (#62641104)

    5G interference with altimeters - this is how the bad guys in Die Hard 2 crashed those planes!

    • > this is how the bad guys in Die Hard 2 crashed those planes!
       
      ... they crashed them by changing ground level by few meters. That's not interference. That's more insidious. Interference can be detected, and they could've landed the plane manually if they suspected the altimeter doesn't work properly.

      • changing ground level by few meters.

        My brother does this all the time. One day the ground level is here, the next it's down there, with nothing but a big pile of soil at the side next to a 13-ton Komatsu to explain how it happened.

      • > this is how the bad guys in Die Hard 2 crashed those planes!

        ... they crashed them by changing ground level by few meters. That's not interference.

        It's not only literally interference, it's deliberate interference.

        You have to literally interfere with the existing signal in order to sub your own

        • by suutar ( 1860506 )

          In Die Hard 2, they manipulated the existing signal, having taken over the control tower. They didn't have to sub their own.

    • No. As far as I know, altimeters are pressure altimeters. Basically barometers with a scale in feet or meters (USSR). The article seems to speak of radar altimeters,which are in airline traffic far less useful.

      For example, height, altitude and flight level mean different things, and their difference is in the calibration. Height is the height above the airfield, so you can land, take off, and fly your circuit safely. That is the value they maladjusted in the movie Die Hard 2.

      So actual flight is usually done

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        No. As far as I know [...]
        The article seems to speak of radar altimeters,which are in airline traffic far less useful.

        Apparently your aviation expertise comes from misunderstanding some fiction in an action movie.

        The radar altimeter is a critical piece of airline flight safety, and is the basis of the Ground Proximity Warning System and several other systems. It is used constantly during every approach to the landing (starting some miles from the airport, down to touchdown). Also, it is used in flight to help avoid hitting things ("What's the billy goat doing up here in the clouds?!?") when the aircraft isn't exactly where

        • Apparently your aviation expertise comes from misunderstanding some fiction in an action movie.

          And where does your expertise come from? Random youtube videos?

          Also, it is used in flight to help avoid hitting things ("What's the billy goat doing up here in the clouds?!?") when the aircraft isn't exactly where it is supposed to be.

          It is one of the single-most important safety innovations in the history of airline service.

          What? No. You don't need that much accuracy to ensure you're not going to hit a mountain (or random goat in the clouds?). It is not even nearly one of the most important safety innovations, it just provides an extra margin of safety for landings. A regular pressure-sensor altimeter can be (and has been) used as well. If anything the radar altimeters just let the big planes fly approaches a little closer to the ground (couple hundred feet maybe)

          • by Pascoea ( 968200 )

            A regular pressure-sensor altimeter can be (and has been) used as well

            My airplane/piloting knowledge is 100% limited to online content I've consumed, so forgive my ignorance. But how would a pressure altimeter know you're about to crash into a mountain? If your instrument is adjusted to know you're 5000' above runway level, that's all it knows. It's not like it has any way to know that a 6000' mountain is there. Air pressure is still the same at 5000' whether your on a mountain face or in open air, is it not?

            If anything the radar altimeters just let the big planes fly approaches a little closer to the ground

            And, not crash into terrain, at least according to this. [wikipedia.org]"The sy

            • by cstacy ( 534252 )

              And, not crash into terrain, at least according to this. [wikipedia.org]"The system monitors an aircraft's height above ground as determined by a radar altimeter." Modern systems combine that with GPS locations. The article is unclear if GPS elevation is used in the modern version, or it it still relies on the radar altimeter.

              As to whether it is the using the pressure altimeters, GPS, or radio altimeter: different systems do different things in different modes, but the short answer (true for the most advanced systems) is: "All Of The Above."

          • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

            You're very dismissive of youtube videos, but there are some very good ones by people way more qualified than you. Here https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] is an excellent video by Mentour Pilot (an airline pilot and certified line training captain) explaining some of what the radio altimeter is used for (little unimportant things like autoland for low visibility landings), and how 5G could mess with it. It is involved in the operation of the plane to a much greater extent than you want to pretend.

            And here

            • I realize they may be using radar altimeters quite a bit, my point was just that it's not the biggest innovation for flight safety ever since it technically shouldn't even be required (although useful). Would you want to be a passenger when there's low enough visibility that the pilots can't even take over? Autoland should be unimportant except in extreme emergencies and maybe reducing workload for pilots (who are still monitoring the landing).

              I don't have time right now to watch a 20 minute video but I
          • by cstacy ( 534252 )

            Apparently your aviation expertise comes from misunderstanding some fiction in an action movie.

            And where does your expertise come from? Random youtube videos?

            Based on your ignorant comments, and your piloting claims, I would say that mine is from a lot more experience as a pilot over the last 45 years.

            I mentioned the (various professional) Youtube videos to help you learn. But apparently you refused to go look at any of them. This is not a surprise.

    • Just curious.

      Has anyone really seen any major change in their lives, or phones, etc with the move to 5G?

      Honestly, I've yet to see any difference.

      I'm still wondering what the push for it was.

      It seems to have been causing more problems that it solves.

      Here we have the interference with airline instruments.

      I never heard if they were able to help solve the interference that 5G was showing with our Hurricane Tracking and prediction equipment....that conversation kinda faded, but I never heard if there was a

      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )

        Has anyone really seen any major change in their lives, or phones, etc with the move to 5G?

        I can get cheap reliable 300x150 cellular Internet with no data caps in my home. Major change? No, not really. Improvement over 4G offerings? For sure. Finally able to get off Comcast/Xfinity's tit? Priceless..

        • That was exactly what I was going to say. Dirt cheap, (for America,) and reliable internet service. I routinely see 600/150, and for less than what Charter/Spectrum offers for 200/10.

          And with a couple of strategically placed battery backups, I still have rudimentary internet service if the power goes out.

      • Sure.

        My car's 3G modem stopped working because 3G got switched off to make room for more 5G. So now I can't locate my car, lock it, or start it from an app any more.

        Ok, so that's really a fairly minor change.

        Any change that isn't annoying? Nope, none whatsoever. I don't understand the big push for 5G. My 4G phone is fast enough, I can't be bothered to care about getting a new phone.

        • My 5G phone with T-Mobile works in Northern Arizona when most Verizon or ATT phones don't. Of course the low-band 5G also doesn't interfere with any of this stuff as it uses the freed up VHF from when tv stations moved digital.

          On the UWB 5G it does allow me to have home Internet and directly competes with my local cable company which is good as they need some competition to stave off abusive policies like 1TB bandwidth caps on gigabit Internet service. Of course I can get unlimited bandwidth usage by payin

          • Wow...so you're using cell phone internet to power all the internet in your house??
            • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
              I mean, it's not technically "cell phone internet" in that it doesn't involve a cell phone. It's a dedicated modem (is that the even right technical term anymore?)/router. But yes, it is a cellular Internet connection. I've been running the same thing (I assume) at home for about a year now. There's a couple things (such as the double NAT) that makes it a bit of a pain, but it's a small price to pay to be able to get away from the incumbents.
              • I mean, it's not technically "cell phone internet" in that it doesn't involve a cell phone. It's a dedicated modem (is that the even right technical term anymore?)/router. But yes, it is a cellular Internet connection. I've been running the same thing (I assume) at home for about a year now. There's a couple things (such as the double NAT) that makes it a bit of a pain, but it's a small price to pay to be able to get away from the incumbents.

                That's very interesting.

                Is this in the US? If so, what carrier?

                • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
                  This is in the US. T-Mobile is who I use, but Verizon offers a similar service. My experience VZ is less prevalent/available. I'm pretty regular at 300/150 Mb upd/down. And no caps. I'd have to read into the terms and conditions, but they may throttle with "excessive" usage, I haven't had an issue with that. As far as the "business acct" comments, this is the biggest issue. No fixed IP, no port forwarding, really no external access. I get around it by maintaining a VPN connection to an external VP
          • If you've already got T-Mobile, you should see if this is available to you: http://www.t-mobile.com/home-i... [t-mobile.com]

            Is the modem a Cradlepoint or Peplink? No. But they give it to you for nothing. My biggest gripe is that, thus far, I don't think there's any way to avoid double NATing if you want to use your own router behind it, (which I do, but it doesn't really affect my usage scenario.YMMV.)

            I've been WFH with it for a year; it's been rock solid. Throw a battery on it, and work to your heart's content through yo

            • My biggest gripe is that, thus far, I don't think there's any way to avoid double NATing if you want to use your own router behind it

              Can't you bridge the interfaces on your own router? I presume it runs dd-wrt or openwrt ;)

  • I was against the cell companies deploying the 5G networks around the airports while there were questions. After all, it doesn't matter who is at fault. You can't put people's lives in danger like that. But now that it has been established that the frequencies outside of the altimeters' range actually affect them, I'm all for the airlines being forced to retrofit the devices to come into compliance. And if they don't, ground them. The airlines are coming back with a vengeance, trying to recoup money lo
    • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Wednesday June 22, 2022 @12:13AM (#62641140)

      Don't fly on any airlines that do that. I've been on Southwest twice in the last month, you get two carry on and two checked at no extra charge, plus their seats aren't as packed as the others.

    • The airlines are coming back with a vengeance, trying to recoup money lost during the pandemic by gauging travelers for as much as $60 for a checked piece of luggage one way among other "innovative" ways to keep the cost of the ticket down and still make more money, but this one item falls right on them, fair and square.

      You sound like you're flying low cost airlines and complaining that you get low cost service. Why do you do that? Do you also ask people to punch you in the face and then complain when your nose hurts?

  • 5G interferes with doppler weather radar.
    • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

      It's actually the other way around. The Doppler Radar interferes with 5G. The 5G is approved by the FCC, which gives it precedence. This collision means that either: Doppler Radar is not approved by the FCC, OR... the FCC is incompetent.

      • The 5G is approved by the FCC, which gives it precedence.

        Doppler radar is approved by the FCC. I don't know why you thing something has precedence based on simply being approved.

        • The 5G is approved by the FCC, which gives it precedence.

          Doppler radar is approved by the FCC. I don't know why you thing something has precedence based on simply being approved.

          Welcome to the endgame of electromagnetic spectrum crush.

          The problem is twofold. The first is that the F.C.C. has bypassed technical acumen for political appointment of reliable wonks. None of these appointments know or understand the physics involved in electromagnetics. You don't just take a vote and change RF.

          RF is an unruly beast. I love giving dissertations on all of that, but suffice it to say that at useable frequencies for this sort of thing, signals do not just sit at their assigned frequency

  • The FAA should have seen this coming years ago and required airlines to update their equipment years ago. It's a bit insane that they waited so long.

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      It's a bit insane that they waited so long.

      I wonder if FAA had staff cuts like many other agencies, those left have a lot of other tasks and items, 787Max as one of them. Then a hostile executive branch taking a chain saw to existing regulations. There are some regulations that were written in blood decades ago but why they were created has become a mystery for many people.

    • Which is more necessary, 5G around airports or working altimeters?

    • The FAA should have seen this coming years ago and required airlines to update their equipment years ago. It's a bit insane that they waited so long.

      Should have seen what coming? That a new technology will be allowed in an adjacent band thanks to the financial interests of the tech industry bending the approvals process in a way that caused the FCC to not do their one job: prevent license holders from interfering with each other?

      Reminder: The first issue with radio altimeters weren't based on any test with radio altimeters, it was just someone running matlab models of the ITU standard and the FCC's 5G allocation and saying: Ya done fucked up, these two

      • The FAA should have seen this coming years ago and required airlines to update their equipment years ago. It's a bit insane that they waited so long.

        Should have seen what coming? That a new technology will be allowed in an adjacent band thanks to the financial interests of the tech industry bending the approvals process in a way that caused the FCC to not do their one job: prevent license holders from interfering with each other?

        Reminder: The first issue with radio altimeters weren't based on any test with radio altimeters, it was just someone running matlab models of the ITU standard and the FCC's 5G allocation and saying: Ya done fucked up, these two cannot co-exist in their current form.

        Exactly this. We have to remember that the F.C.C. which was once a technical agency, is now a place where the decisions are made by people with political, not physics or technical backgrounds.

        To these folks, you just assign a frequency take the money you were given and all will be well.

        It ain't necessarily so! RF does strange and not always intuitive things, and understanding it isn't easy, and politics aren't in the general skillset. So we're crowding the available bandwidth with signals that beat ag

    • The FAA should have seen this coming years ago and required airlines to update their equipment years ago. It's a bit insane that they waited so long.

      We really have to get better at foreseeing all unexpected problems. ANyhow can you give me the citations that the FAA knew that radar altimeters were going to be interfered with, a long time ago?

  • Retrofitting faulty altimeters is an accident waiting to happen!

    They should replace faulty altimeters instead.

  • by chas.williams ( 6256556 ) on Wednesday June 22, 2022 @06:13AM (#62641476)
    How long before the airline industry claims that it can't find any money to replace these altimeters, and the government *must* provides funding for their replacement. We can just roll it all into NextGen, the other slushfu... boondogg.. "upgrade" for the industry.
  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Wednesday June 22, 2022 @11:48AM (#62642084)

    Let's see, FAA has approved these RADAR-based altimeters for decades, they're safe and don't interfere with other aircraft operations. Along comes 5G and the US Gov't opening up spectrum that now causes interference with FAA-certified altimeters. Why? Two companies who paid a huge amount of money to a large feeding bureaucracy can't use the spectrum they paid for.

    All of this lies with the US Gov't and it and it alone should pay for the retrofit or give back the money to the companies who bought the spectrum that caused the interference.

    Wait, that's how it should work. Ultimately, we the taxpayer or consumer (same-same) will be paying for this Gov't fuckup. It looks like it'll be coming out of the consumer bucket because we'll be paying for it with higher airfares.

    • HIgher airfares is the worst case you can think of? How about planes raining down like hail.

      • The RADAR based altimeters aren't the only system that detects altitude on aircraft. There are also aneroid barometer altimeters [google.com] which use a pressure bellows are still in use on all commercial passenger aircraft. The RADAR based altimeters are used for those major airports that require precise altitude control on approach.

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