WIRELESS ABOARD, WHY ALL THE FUSS? Douglas J. Hughes, Full Member International Society of Air Safety Investigators © 2011 Douglas J. Hughes DOUGLAS J. HUGHES Doug Hughes was an Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3) professional his entire 42-year career, starting at McDonnell Aircraft in St. Louis after graduation from the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy (Rolla) in 1963 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. He moved to IIT Research Institute in Annapolis in 1968 to work on the DoD ECAC support contract. His graduate Communications Theory degree is from The George Washington University. He retired in 2005 and moved to Ann Arbor to be near family. Mr. Hughes' experience includes database and analysis model development, sponsor-funded project analysis and test support, cosite analysis, equipment spectrum certification, management, and serving as a technical advisor. He is a full member of the International Society of Air Safety Investigators (ISASI) with 31 studies or investigations. All involved aircraft E3, including the Forrestal fire, two RTCA studies of portable electronics aboard, the USAF IFO 21 CT-43A accident in Croatia, RQ-4A AV-2 GLOBAL HAWK, and TWA 800. He continues ISASI activity in retirement by participating in the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Working Group. Lessons learned from the RTCA and a few other safety investigations will be described this evening. PRESENTATION OUTLINE • Wireless Aboard Aircraft – Commercial – General Aviation IF TIME AND INTEREST ALLOWS • Aircraft Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3) • Example Accident/Safety Investigations Involving E3 RECENT ABC NEWS COVERAGE Right click photo to open hyperlink WIRELESS-ABOARD ISSUES • Economic • FAR 91.21 • Public Accustomed to Constant Access to Information – Web and Telephone • Electronics Development – Personal Electronics – Rapid – Avionics – Slow – Aircraft – Generational, but Economic Based • Human Factors ISSUES - CONTINUED • Network Access – Extensive – National Differences - Regulatory – Over Ocean • One or More Devices Radiating on Every Commercial Flight • Technical – Cellular Telephone Signal Formats – Delay Equalization – Pico Cellular Controller For Use Aboard • General Aviation • Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) MANY STUDIES OVER THE YEARS • Over Twenty Different Formal Studies • EMI Issues Addressed by NASA/Langley, US Department of Defense, FAA, Aircraft Manufacturers, Universities, etc. • Consensus Groups – RTCA based in the USA with international participation – European Organization for Civil Aviation Equipment (EUROCAE) with USA participation THE RTCA SPECIAL COMMITTEES • SC-88 – Radiating Oscillators in FM radios vs VOR receivers – DO-119 of April 12, 1963 • SC-156 – Notebook PCs – Wayne Greene of BYTE Magazine – DO-199 of September 16, 1988 • SC-177 – Cellular Telephones – Episode One – DO-233 of August 18, 1999 • SC-202 – Cellular Telephones - Episode Two and WiFi – DO-294C and DO-307 of December 16, 2008 AIR CREW REPORTS • NASA’s Air Safety Reporting System (ASRS) contains hundreds of crew reports of EMI from passenger portable electronic devices (PEDs). • Both commercial and general aviation crews report EMI. • Military crews have also reported EMI from PEDs aboard. • The crew unions (ALPA, APA, AFA, etc.) are concerned about aircraft safety wrt PEDs. AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURER CONCERNS THE PROBLEM WITH PEDs MAXIMUM VALUES Measured PEDs L e v e l, d B u V /m WB Switching Power Supplies 95 NB Local Oscillators and Video Display Sweeps and Clocks 85 75 65 55 45 35 25 1E-2 1E-1 1E0 1E1 1E2 Frequency, MHz 1E3 1E4 FRONT- AND BACK-DOOR EMI (See Figure 5-2 of RTCA DO-294) Front-Door Coupling • PED Undesired Emissions Coupled Through Fuselage Windows and Door Seams to Radio, Navigation, and Radar Antennas • 75 MHz: Marker Beacons • • • • • • • • • • 108-136 MHz: ILS Localizer, VDT, VOR, VHF Comm, VDL 329-335 MHz: ILS Glide Slope 962-1215 MHz: DME (Military TACAN) 982 MHz: ADS-B UAT 1030, 1090 MHz: ATC & TCAS 1530-1610 MHz: Satellite Comm 1575.42 MHz: GPS 4200-4400 MHz: Radar Altimeter 5030-5090 MHz: Microwave Landing System 5350-5470, 9300-9500, 15500-15700 MHz: Weather Radar Back-Door Coupling • PED Desired Emissions Coupled to Avionics Boxes • PED Desired Emissions Coupled to Avionics Wiring PEDs COUPLING ABOARD Wire bundles run everywhere behind the fiberglass panels. Windows become apertures above 100 MHz. There are also wire bundles beneath passengers’ feet and above their heads. PROGRESS TO DATE • FCC Notice Of Proposed Rule Making – Ban on Cellular Telephone Use in USA Continuing • Cellular Telephone and WiFi Use Allowed On A Few Foreign Carriers • WiFi Allowed For US Carriers After FAA Approval Via AC 91.21-1B • A/A and Other Carriers Flying A Few Pico CellEquipped Aircraft – Service Supplied by GoGo/AirCell • More To Come Depending On Positive Market GOGO LOWER USA 48 COVERAGE From: http://www.gogoinflight.com/jahia/Jahia/site/gogo/customerCare/coveragemap OPEN FOR ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS