DrMoab
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- The Utah Backwater
Is there any kind of regulation that says you can't bring one on an airline with you?
Always wondered if it would show correct speed.
Always wondered if it would show correct speed.
SCW said:No offense to those who live there, but I HATE that town and that airport (Midway and O'Hare). Traffic everywhere, damn toll roads, traffic, expensive, traffic, delays at airports and freeways, traffic......
I was on a flight and a guys cell phone rang. He ansered it and started telling his bud all about the flight and what he saw down below. Us freqent travelers were all looking in dis believe but the flight steward walked up and looked at the guy as he kept on talking! The steward just rolled his eyes, walked away and left the guy talking on his phone.SCW said:They only tell you to turn them off during takeoff and landing, most of the time the stewardess will ask how fast we are going, etc during the flight.
Boatwrench said:I use my GPS on cross country flights all the time. It's in my backpack along with a camera and cell phone, never been asked to pull it out at security even though all the charger and USB cables are right there with it.
After 9/11 and flight 93, the myth that cell phones would interfere with the plane controls during flight becomes quite questionable.:shhh:
Boatwrench said:I use my GPS on cross country flights all the time. It's in my backpack along with a camera and cell phone, never been asked to pull it out at security even though all the charger and USB cables are right there with it.
After 9/11 and flight 93, the myth that cell phones would interfere with the plane controls during flight becomes quite questionable.:shhh:
Boatwrench said:...
Cell phones, OK, may mess with comms as you state, but then why was there as recently as this year an FAA proposal to lift the ban on cell phone use during flights? (for the sake of peaceful flights I am glad the ban wasn't lifted).
dunno.
Tom
wow ron your sounding really smart, now quit copying out of the bookCaptain Ron said:Just quoting you to use the terms.
The FAA proposal is based on in flight use, not during departure, approach, and ground operation. The hitches as I read it so far are; FCC Regs, technology cell phones still being supported, and other reasons.
There's a saying in aviation about the FAR's. "They're written in blood". There's a good reason 91.21 went in unchallenged. It's a saftey of flight issue. Lifting it will take a good long time, despite all the high powered lobby efforts, which have all failed so far.
My older Nokia with Verizon is terrible. It'll produce 10 degree swings on the VOR CDI during it's little "chats" with the network, and it's more than clearly audible on the comms. So are Nextel and iPhones. I havn't dared to see what the effect would be on an ILS approach, but 10 degree CDI deviation during an approach means by law you have to go missed at that point.
Going missed in IMC can be high risk move. The possibility of losing SA increases dramatically.
--ron
Zuki-Ron said:Ron the big things about cell phone use are not navigation, but strictly network concerns. In essence, if your phone is in a plane which does not support a local network (AeroMobile for example), you cell phone has the possibility of jamming the groundbased cell network by hitting many thousand cell sites at once.
As far as other electronics, with airlines, most everything is game once you are in the air, though they still frown on use of transmitting equipment in the air.
I never had any problem in my small plane with the use of 2m equipment or camera(s) interfereing with VOR (LF) or Airband (VHF-AM) communications, or with LORAN-C reception, so I don't expect that larger commercial aircraft with a more bullet proof backbone would have any issue.
Most of the big boys don't use VOR or GPS approaches anyway.
RNAV is still alive and kicking.
Ron
Zuki-Ron said:...
How can you tell if there is a Pilot in a room?
Ask...
Zuki-Ron said:Ron the big things about cell phone use are not navigation, but strictly network concerns. In essence, if your phone is in a plane which does not support a local network (AeroMobile for example), you cell phone has the possibility of jamming the groundbased cell network by hitting many thousand cell sites at once.
As far as other electronics, with airlines, most everything is game once you are in the air, though they still frown on use of transmitting equipment in the air.
Zuki-Ron said:...
I never had any problem in my small plane with the use of 2m equipment or camera(s) interfereing with VOR (LF) or Airband (VHF-AM) communications, or with LORAN-C reception, so I don't expect that larger commercial aircraft with a more bullet proof backbone would have any issue.
...
Zuki-Ron said:...
Most of the big boys don't use VOR or GPS approaches anyway.
RNAV is still alive and kicking.
Zuki-Ron said:Ron:
Here is info on the cell info.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-501431.html
http://www.aeromobile.net/
Zuki-Ron said:The info on RNAV I got a year ago from a NW pilot who was taking a jump seat flight back home, he was sitting next to me, so I felt free to chat with him. I asked him specificaly about GPS navigation and he said they used RNAV. RNAV, he explaned to me, couples direct to the auto-pilot and most landings were actually "hands off" with the pilot supervising. He also explaned that though GPS was showing up in newer planes, many of the older planes had RNAV systems that worked just great.
You can also look it up on the web.
...
DrMoab said:OK cool.
Guess I will take my GPS on the plane Fri and see what happens.
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