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encoder approval
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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 4:05 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On 12 Aug 2006, at 18:27, <bakerocb(at)cox.net> <bakerocb(at)cox.net> wrote:

Quote:


Responding to an AeroElectric-List message previously posted by
Kevin Horton

2) You wrote: " How can you be assured that a non-TSO'd encoder
will operate correctly at
temperature extremes, or when subjected to vibration, humidity,
voltage variations, electromagnetic interference, etc?

I would base my confidence in a proven non TSO'd altitude encoder
on two things:

A) The superior newer technology used in manufacturing the encoder.

B) The actual past performance of that encoder over years of use in
the field.

3) You wrote: "If the manufacturer hasn't tested his encoder under
the full range of
conditions, then he has no idea how well it will work there."

I worked for years in the airborne weapons testing field and I
assure you that there is no such thing as ground or laboratory
testing "under the full range of conditions". Actual satisfactory
performance in the field after a significant period time in use is
the best indication of the suitability of a piece of equipment for
its intended use.

So, once an encoder had a significant period of satisfactory in-
service use, it would be legal to use that encoder in service. This
might work for currently existing encoders, if we accept that there
is a reasonable probability that an in-service problem would be
detected. But how would this approach help for a new encoder?
Quote:

4) You wrote: "If he has done the testing, and it does operate
properly over the full
range of conditions, why would the manufacturer not want to get a
TSO for it?

Two words -- time and money. When a small business sets out to
create, manufacture, and sell a better mouse trap that it has
developed it can only operate for so long on the capital available
before some income has to arrive in order to sustain the business.
If that capital is totally dissipated in un needed tests and
bureaucratic paper generation before sufficient income arrives the
company dies and the better mouse trap with it.

Surely the manufacturer must do a reasonable amount of testing before
they determine that the encoder actually works correctly. I wonder
why they can't document that testing and use it as part of a TSO
submission. Maybe the answer is to improve the TSO process. Review
the TSO, pull out any unneeded tests, reduce the bureaucratic
paperwork, and streamline the review process. As it is, my
recollection is that the FAA has 30 days from the time a TSO package
is submitted to accept it. That isn't bad (if my memory hasn't
failed me).

Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8


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N6030X(at)DaveMorris.com
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 5:14 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

It also has an RS-232 output that you can feed
into a laptop if you want to record it, graph it,
or use it to create your own flight instrument
displays. Combine it with a $100 GPS from
Wal-Mart, and you can do this: http://www.myglasscockpit.com/FMSSample1.jpg

Dave Morris

At 07:02 PM 8/12/2006, you wrote:
Quote:


On Aug 12, 2006, at 6:22 PM, Charlie Kuss wrote:

>Brian,
> The RMI uEncoder is a great addition for the need stated above. I
>gives you redundancy for all 3 primary instruments as well as an
>encoder which is tied to the altimeter function. It only takes up
>one 3.125" hole in the panel. It's also handy for simplifying your
>scan during "partial panel" practice.

It looks like a good instrument. The only problem with a digital
display is that it makes it hard to see trends. With steam gauges or
tapes, I get information from how fast they are moving, something
hard to see with changing numbers.

Regardless, it does give you a lot of information in one hole. I
think that if I had AoA to give me airspeed trends I wouldn't care.
Something like the uEncoder combined with an electric AI and I would
have good backup for a glass PFD.

>Charlie Kuss

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry




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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 12, 2006 5:55 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

At 06:27 PM 8/12/2006 -0400, you wrote:

Quote:


8/12/2006

Responding to an AeroElectric-List message previously posted by Kevin Horton

Hello Again Kevin, Continuing our dialogue on our current favorite subject:

1) You wrote: "Do you agree that there are important safety-related reasons to
require that the altitude encoder report the correct altitude, over
the full range of conditions under which it will operate?

Yes.

2) You wrote: " How can you be assured that a non-TSO'd encoder will
operate correctly at
temperature extremes, or when subjected to vibration, humidity,
voltage variations, electromagnetic interference, etc?

I would base my confidence in a proven non TSO'd altitude encoder on two
things:

A) The superior newer technology used in manufacturing the encoder.

B) The actual past performance of that encoder over years of use in the field.

3) You wrote: "If the manufacturer hasn't tested his encoder under the
full range of
conditions, then he has no idea how well it will work there."

I worked for years in the airborne weapons testing field and I assure you
that there is no such thing as ground or laboratory testing "under the
full range of conditions". Actual satisfactory performance in the field
after a significant period time in use is the best indication of the
suitability of a piece of equipment for its intended use.

4) You wrote: "If he has done the testing, and it does operate properly
over the full
range of conditions, why would the manufacturer not want to get a TSO for it?

Two words -- time and money. When a small business sets out to create,
manufacture, and sell a better mouse trap that it has developed it can
only operate for so long on the capital available before some income has
to arrive in order to sustain the business. If that capital is totally
dissipated in un needed tests and bureaucratic paper generation before
sufficient income arrives the company dies and the better mouse trap with it.

5) You wrote: "The fact that air traffic control has not detected a
problem with
someone's encoder says very little."

You are right. But we are not talking about just someone's encoder. We are
talking about hundreds of encoders that have been performing
satisfactorily in flight for years and have satisfactorily passed the FAR
Part 43 Appendices E and F tests many times every two years.

6) You wrote: "If there is a problem, it might not show up until another
aircraft, responding to a TCAS alert tries to avoid your aircraft, yet
hits it because the encode was in error.
Is this acceptable?"

No. But I say again, the technology used and the performance of the proven
non TSO'd encoders is superior to that called for in the TSO. No piece of
equipment can guarantee perfect peformance throughout its entire service
life, but the better technology encoder is less likely to have a problem
show up.

7) You wrote: "If you could write your own wording for 91.217, how would
you word it
to make it cheaper to comply, yet still achieve the safely objective?"

My preferred first step in the process to resolve the present situation is
an interpretation from FAA headquarters that automatic pressure altitude
reporting equipment that is installed in amateur built experimental
aircraft and tested in accordance with the appropriate provisions of FAR
91.411, 91.413, and appropriate Appendices to FAR Part 43 are considered
to be in compliance with FAR 91.217 (b).

I'll let the experts and lawyers work on a permanent rational solution.

I've been watching this thread for several days. Permit me
to offer some observations:

A large portion of my career has been used in efforts to track
down, identify and resolve system malfunctions in broad range
of aircraft. ALL of the mis-behaving systems were tested, blessed,
beat, bashed, certified, etc., etc. Most had LONG histories of
reasonably satisfactory service. Nonetheless, none of the above prevented
expensive failures in these systems. If gizmos in airplanes
didn't break, FBOs would go out of business.

Irrespective of an encoder's pedigree, the ultimate system reliability
is achieved not by filling out one's pre-installation dance-card.
Due diligence the third, forth, and fifth questions
in a Failure Mode Effects Analysis (FMEA) as described in . . .

http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles//FMEA.pdf

. . . is a more useful activity.

In the case of encoders, the person at the ATC 'scope
could not care less whether your encoder is a 30 year old
electro-mechanical marvel/nightmare or last year's latest
and greatest, all solid state design. He/she doesn't care
if it's TSO'd and fabricated from space-grade parts
or whether you built the thing on your workbench from
recycled TV set parts.

What he expects is for you to report level when arriving at
various assigned altitudes and/or reporting present altitude
on initial contact. As you speak the words, he checks for
reasonably accurate representation of your words
displayed on his screen. This operating procedure is a
due diligence to question 3.

Periodic ramp checks are important for both checking
agreement between separate encoder/altimeter combinations
-AND- finding leaks in the system that might cause
significant errors in BOTH systems. While not a pre-flight
test, your hand-off from tower to departure control is
an early-on test of encoder function when you report present
indicated altitude. This has been a reasonable due diligence
to question 4.

Going to question 5 . . . let's consider the probability
of failure while en route combined with the gross numbers
of hours you spend in congested airspace. Here again,
no amount of bureaucratic hat-dancing will guarantee that
the encoder installed on your aircraft will be forever
orderly.

If you perceive a value in reducing risk of en route
failures going un-noticed, then it's up to you and not your
friendly flying-fuzz to mitigate your concerns. If you're
not adverse to having every manner of useful accessory
installed in your airplane, you might consider something
like this:

http://www.airsport-corp.com/

A friend of mine designed these electro-whizzies and
made a living from their manufacture and sale for a number
of years. This is a line of totally independent monitors
of transponder output that offers not only a real-time test
of PRESENT encoder and transponder behavior, additional
features provide pilots with potentially useful aids to
navigation an aviation.

One may argue the FARs 'til the cows come home but I think
everyone will agree that the ultimate goal is to achieve
the lowest practical level of risk for having a bad day
due to encoder malfunction. We're told that the spirit
and intent of the FARs is to insure this golden condition.

I'll simply suggest as both pilot and system designer that
your lowest practical level of risk will be more closely
achieved by YOUR knowledge and understanding. Then combine
understanding with a reasonable implementation of operating,
monitoring and maintenance of the altitude reporting system.
This philosophy goes directly to risk mitigation and is
TOTALLY independent of who made your encoder, who blessed it
or how well/badly it is made.

Once you're airplane is signed off, what's the likelihood
than ANYONE will ask or care what the pedigree of your
encoder is as long as it accurately performs the regulatory
hat-dances? Once your airplane is signed of, what are YOU
going to do to achieve YOUR goals for system reliability?

I'll suggest that an answer to the later question has a
greater influence on your future flying comfort than answers
to the first.

Bob . . .


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cfi(at)conwaycorp.net
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 8:30 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

In regard to our concerns about encoder approvals, let’s not be hasty about
accusing the EAA of burying their head in the sand on this important, but not
necessary urgent issue. We must remember that the EAA does not have unlimited
resources, therefore, they (like everyone else) must chose their battles
carefully. To put this issue in the spotlight would be very BAD TIMING in
light of the user fee threat that has been looming for at 10 years now. This
would give the Airline Pilots Association and other opponents to the AOPA/EAA
ammunition to show that we are not capable of following the rules as published
and therefore create a hazard to transportation safety (at least in their eyes)
and should be subjected to the fees to minimize the hazards. I believe the EAA
is correct by standing by 91.217(b) since it is the current rule. It would be
foolish and counter-productive for the EAA to publicly support breaking any FAR.
Excuse the pun, but I believe the encoder issue is “under the radar” so to
speak since our ATC friends are not complaining about it. I’m also not aware
of anybody who has had enforcement action taken against them for using a non
TSO’d encoder. If you have, please let us hear about the facts of the
case.

Michael H.

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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 9:26 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

[rant-mode]

The thing that I don't understand is why this is such a problem. Just
who do you think is going to crawl under your panel to check to see
if your encoder is TSO'd?

Pick the encoder you want, wire it to your transponder, finish the
panel, and present to finished product (airplane) to the radio shop
for a transponder check (encoder/altimeter correspondence test) or
for an IFR certification check (correspondence and pitot-static leak-
down test). They run the test and if it meets spec, they sign your
airframe logbook. They aren't going to check to see if your encoder
is TSO'd. They aren't responsible for the airworthiness of your
airplane. You are. You just need them to certify that the encoder and
altimeter read the same thing at the same altitude.

If there is a problem then drag your airplane away, fix it, and bring
it back. Alternatively, fix it right there *yourself*. Don't ask your
avionics tech, A&P, or IA for their opinion or their blessing. If ATC
squawks your transponder, fix it, get it checked, send the FAA the
paperwork, and go about your business. If your transponder really
breaks, pull it out of the panel, carry it into the radio shop, have
it fixed, and put it back in your panel. Your repairman's certificate
means you get to do that.

You learned how to pound rivets didn't you? You learned to construct
your control systems, didn't you? You learned to lay up fiberglass,
weld tubing, or rib-stitch fabric, didn't you? You learned to wire an
electrical system, didn't you? Well then learn to run #22AWG wire to
D-sub pins, solder, and heat-shrink. Yes, you can build your avionics
wiring too.

OBAM means "owner *built* and *MAINTAINED*". Maintain your avionics.
If there is a problem, FIX IT. That is one of the reasons why you
built your airplane -- so you could save on the cost of maintenance
too. If you really want to sweat all the certification crap then GO
BUY A TYPE-CERTIFIED AIRCRAFT.

[/rant-mode]

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brianl at lloyd dot com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

"Five percent of the people think.
Ten percent of the people think they think.
Eighty-five percent of the people would rather die than think."
---Thomas A. Edison
Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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Bill Denton



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 97
Location: Chicago, IL USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 10:00 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

I think things may have wandered away from the original issue here...

I believe we started out discussing the situation where non-TSO'd EFIS units
were being used to provide encoded altitude output, and that some radio
shops are reluctant to sign off on these types of installations.

And from what I have read, with the increasing use of the GRT, Blue
Mountain, and Dynon EFIS units, this is increasingly becoming a problem...

--


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jschroeder(at)perigee.net
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 11:10 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

Bryan -

Thoroughly enjoyable rant and it was the best advice on this subject yet.
One small nit, and I hesitate to argue. The FAA inspector who gave us our
airworthiness certificate last month said that the only thing the
repairman's certificate allows one to do is sign off the annual condition
inspection. My build partner, Ron, will have this. He looked at me and
said that Ron and I could do anything else to the airplane we so desired.
He did caution however that some additions and subtractions to a certified
engine may put the engine into the experimental category. No problems
there, until we decide to sell. The engine would be experimental and that
may not make it easy to sell.

Cheers,

John
Lancair ES - ready for first flight
On Sun, 13 Aug 2006 13:23:20 -0400, Brian Lloyd <brian-yak(at)lloyd.com>
wrote:

Quote:
Your repairman's certificate means you get to do that.

--


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jschroeder(at)perigee.net
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 11:44 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

Hello Bill,

One data point:

When the tech showed up for the IFR/Altimeter/Encoder/Transponder
certification, he was surprised when he saw the panel and seemed reluctant
to go forward. We have to have this check before the first flight because
we live under the veil of a Class B.

We showed him the pitot tube (looks like any other), the main & aux static
ports (they look like any other) and showed him the BMA EFIS screen and
the Dynon screen. He was happy when he could see the altitudes and
airspeeds. Both altimeters were within tolerance, there were no static or
pitot leaks and the pressure altitude readout on the transponder was right
on.

He even did the airspeed cal for us so we could develop our own AD table.
WE showed him what that meant and how it is done so it meant no additional
work for him. We also told him, that were it necessary, we could do the
same to get an accurate altimeter on the BMA. Incidentally, both airspeed
indications were within a knot or two of each other.

My feeling is that if an OBAMer takes the time to explain how their system
works, and the tests show that it works, it will alleviate a lot of the
angst.

Cheers,

John
Quote:
I believe we started out discussing the situation where non-TSO'd EFIS
units
were being used to provide encoded altitude output, and that some radio
shops are reluctant to sign off on these types of installations.

And from what I have read, with the increasing use of the GRT, Blue
Mountain, and Dynon EFIS units, this is increasingly becoming a
problem...



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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 11:52 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 13, 2006, at 1:56 PM, Bill Denton wrote:

Quote:

<bdenton(at)bdenton.com>

I think things may have wandered away from the original issue here...

Actually, I think I have hit the real nail on the head.

Quote:

I believe we started out discussing the situation where non-TSO'd
EFIS units
were being used to provide encoded altitude output, and that some
radio
shops are reluctant to sign off on these types of installations.

I understand that was what people were talking about.
Quote:

And from what I have read, with the increasing use of the GRT, Blue
Mountain, and Dynon EFIS units, this is increasingly becoming a
problem...

That is just it and it is just what I said. The non-TSO'd EFIS units
are just fine. Wire it to your transponder and be happy. Don't worry
about the radio shop.

The only REAL issue with using your EFIS to provide both your display
altitude and your encoded altitude is that a single pressure sensor
is providing both. This is a single-point-of-failure. Use a separate
pressure sensor somewhere so you have two sources.

Along that line someone talked about the Rocky Mountain uEncoder and
then there was a discussion of whether you could use that as it
wasn't TSO'd. Don't worry. Use it. The key point is now you have
separate pressure sensors, one in your EFIS and one in the uEncoder.
The interesting thing is whether they give the same information when
being tested, i.e. for your IFR cert or xpdr correspondence test, and
in flight.

But you can use any encoder you want to. It doesn't have to be TSO'd.
You are responsible for the airworthiness of your aircraft. Satisfy
yourself.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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Brian Lloyd
brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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rdunhamtn(at)hotmail.com
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 1:06 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

So........

I've wired my Becker TXPDR with altitude encoding from my Dynon EFIS in my
VFR only Sonex.

Am I legal??? Must I have to have an avionics shop "sign off" on it???
WHAT!!!!!!!!

Rodney in Tennessee

Do not archive

[quote]From: "Bill Denton" <bdenton(at)bdenton.com>
Reply-To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
To: <aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com>
Subject: RE: Re: encoder approval
Date: Sun, 13 Aug 2006 12:56:47 -0500


<bdenton(at)bdenton.com>

I think things may have wandered away from the original issue here...

I believe we started out discussing the situation where non-TSO'd EFIS
units
were being used to provide encoded altitude output, and that some radio
shops are reluctant to sign off on these types of installations.

And from what I have read, with the increasing use of the GRT, Blue
Mountain, and Dynon EFIS units, this is increasingly becoming a problem...

--


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Bill Denton



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 97
Location: Chicago, IL USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 1:11 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

"Wire it to your transponder and be happy. Don't worry about the radio
shop."

Since the altimeter/encoder/transponder combination have to be inspected and
checked by the radio shop, how could one do this?

--


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Bill Denton



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 97
Location: Chicago, IL USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 1:39 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

Quote:
From the FAR's, as noted:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

§ 91.413 ATC transponder tests and inspections.
(a) No persons may use an ATC transponder that is specified in 91.215(a),
121.345(c), or §135.143(c) of this chapter unless, within the preceding 24
calendar months, the ATC transponder has been tested and inspected and found
to comply with appendix F of part 43 of this chapter; and

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

§ 91.215 ATC transponder and altitude reporting equipment and use.
(a) All airspace: U.S.-registered civil aircraft. For operations not
conducted under part 121 or 135 of this chapter, ATC transponder equipment
installed must meet the performance and environmental requirements of any
class of TSO-C74b (Mode A) or any class of TSO-C74c (Mode A with altitude
reporting capability) as appropriate, or the appropriate class of TSO-C112
(Mode S).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

As I, and many others, read this and the other portions Part 91, it says:

1. In some places, you are required to have a transponder, but in many
others you are not REQUIRED to have one.

2. VFR or IFR is immaterial for the purposes of this particular discussion.

3. If you have a transponder, whether required or not required, it must be
tested and inspected every 24 months.

In short, if you are going to use a transponder in the US Airspace system,
it must MEET TSO SPECIFICATIONS, and it must be inspected every 24 months.

Like it or not, it makes sense...

--


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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:00 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 13, 2006, at 5:03 PM, Rodney Dunham wrote:

Quote:

<rdunhamtn(at)hotmail.com>

So........

I've wired my Becker TXPDR with altitude encoding from my Dynon
EFIS in my VFR only Sonex.

Am I legal???

Yes.

Quote:
Must I have to have an avionics shop "sign off" on it??? WHAT!!!!!!!!

Yes. You must have the shop perform a transponder correspondence
check where they verify that the transponder and encoder report the
same altitude as your altimeter over the normal operating range of
your altimeter. This is not an inspection of your installation or of
what equipment you have chosen to use, but is just a check to make
sure it is reporting what it is supposed to report. Every airplane
with a transponder must pass this check.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:26 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 13, 2006, at 5:36 PM, Bill Denton wrote:

Quote:

<bdenton(at)bdenton.com>

> From the FAR's, as noted:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
------
--------

§ 91.413 ATC transponder tests and inspections.
(a) No persons may use an ATC transponder that is specified in
91.215(a),
121.345(c), or §135.143(c) of this chapter unless, within the
preceding 24
calendar months, the ATC transponder has been tested and inspected
and found
to comply with appendix F of part 43 of this chapter; and

----------------------------------------------------------------------
------
--------

§ 91.215 ATC transponder and altitude reporting equipment and use.
(a) All airspace: U.S.-registered civil aircraft. For operations not
conducted under part 121 or 135 of this chapter, ATC transponder
equipment
installed must meet the performance and environmental requirements
of any
class of TSO-C74b (Mode A) or any class of TSO-C74c (Mode A with
altitude
reporting capability) as appropriate, or the appropriate class of
TSO-C112
(Mode S).

----------------------------------------------------------------------
------
--------

As I, and many others, read this and the other portions Part 91, it
says:

1. In some places, you are required to have a transponder, but in many
others you are not REQUIRED to have one.

2. VFR or IFR is immaterial for the purposes of this particular
discussion.

3. If you have a transponder, whether required or not required, it
must be
tested and inspected every 24 months.

In short, if you are going to use a transponder in the US Airspace
system,
it must MEET TSO SPECIFICATIONS, and it must be inspected every 24
months.

Like it or not, it makes sense...

And all of this applies to the TRANSPONDER, not to the altitude
encoder feeding altitude information into the transponder. Since you
are buying a transponder that already meets these specs you are home
free. Yes you must have the transponder certified every 24 months but
that is an operational check, not a verification of anything you have
installed.

You guys are trying to make this just WAY too hard.

Here it is, one more time:

1. Buy the transponder you like best. Transponders from reputable
manufacturers of avionics all qualify. (I have had good experience
with King, Narco, and Apollo. I have had bad experience with Terra
and Garmin. YMMV.)

2. Connect it to the encoder you like best, be it your EFIS, a Rocky
Mountain uEncoder, a standard production encoder, etc. It does not
matter what kind of encoder it is so long as it does what it is
supposed to do.

3. Install all this stuff in your airplane using standard practices
and good workmanship. (But you are already doing that anyway because
you know that the butt you save may be your own.)

4. When you are ready to fly your airplane, find someone who can do
the transponder certification check for you. It will probably be your
local radio shop but there may be others. They will do the
*operational* check and make an entry in your airframe logbook.

5. Go fly and have a good time.

6. Go to step 4 in 24 months.

NOTE: at no time in the above five steps do you see the words "get
approval".

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brianl at lloyd dot com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

"Five percent of the people think.
Ten percent of the people think they think.
Eighty-five percent of the people would rather die than think."
---Thomas A. Edison
Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:30 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 13, 2006, at 5:06 PM, Bill Denton wrote:

Quote:

<bdenton(at)bdenton.com>

"Wire it to your transponder and be happy. Don't worry about the radio
shop."

Since the altimeter/encoder/transponder combination have to be
inspected and
checked by the radio shop, how could one do this?

Just what I said. Your installation does not need any kind of FAA
approval, IA approval, A&P approval, or radio shop approval. The only
thing you need to get is a transponder check to verify that the
transponder is working, on frequency, and that its mode-C reports the
same altitude as your altimeter. It is not a check of what kind of
encoder you have or of how you installed it. It is just an
operational check. Of course, you want to do that anyway because
*YOU* want to make sure it is working properly. The radio shop has
the tools to interrogate your transponder on the ground and you
essentially want to borrow that.

The radio shop just needs to connect to the static port and place an
antenna from the test box near your transponder antenna. They will
then vary the pressure on your static port. Your altimeter should
show the same altitude that their altimeter shows. Your transponder
should also report the same altitude in its mode-C. That is all there
is to it. If it passes this functional test, you get a logbook entry
and you are good to go.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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brian-yak at lloyd dot com
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 2:38 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

Brian,

A quick question (I hope) - if the transponder displays what altitude it is
transmitting to ATC, is it still necessary to have the shop do the
calibration? Would seem to me that one would only need to compare one's own
altimeter to the transmitted information. I am speaking of experimental AC,
not certified.

Doug Windhorn

---


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 3:06 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 13, 2006, at 6:33 PM, Doug Windhorn wrote:

Quote:

<N1DeltaWhiskey(at)comcast.net>

Brian,

A quick question (I hope) - if the transponder displays what
altitude it is transmitting to ATC, is it still necessary to have
the shop do the calibration?

Yes. The correspondence check is requires by the FARs.

Quote:
Would seem to me that one would only need to compare one's own
altimeter to the transmitted information. I am speaking of
experimental AC, not certified.

That is a good idea to do on a regular basis but it is not enough.
You must get a transponder certification check every 24 months.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 13, 2006 5:26 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On 13-Aug-06, at 6:33 PM, Doug Windhorn wrote:

Quote:

<N1DeltaWhiskey(at)comcast.net>

Brian,

A quick question (I hope) - if the transponder displays what
altitude it is transmitting to ATC, is it still necessary to have
the shop do the calibration? Would seem to me that one would only
need to compare one's own altimeter to the transmitted
information. I am speaking of experimental AC, not certified.

Ignoring the FAR requirements for a moment - if you haven't had the
system checked, how do you know the altimeter is showing the correct
altitude?

Kevin Horton
RV-8 (Finishing Kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 6:31 am    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

Kevin,

Thought of that after Brian's reply and reading the FAR 43 App F.

Although, as a "Repairman", AND if one had the proper equipment and knew how
to use it, I presume one could sign off a test on their own airplane.

Doug

---


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 12:23 pm    Post subject: encoder approval Reply with quote

On Aug 14, 2006, at 3:19 PM, <bakerocb(at)cox.net> wrote:

Quote:


8/14/2006

Responding to an AeroElectric-List message previously posted by
Brian Lloyd

Hello Brian, Thanks for your input.

You wrote in part: "But you can use any encoder you want to. It
doesn't have to be TSO'd.
You are responsible for the airworthiness of your aircraft. Satisfy
yourself."

I am in concurrence with the thrust of your statements, but FAR
91.217 is relevant. If your encoder / transponder is not TSO'd as
called for in 91.217 (c) then the installation must pass the tests
required by FAR 91.217 (b).

ARRGGGH! You are making me want to tear my hair out.

OK, I am going to say this just one more time as you are insisting on
muddying the waters, pissing on the wedding cake, as it were.

YOU MAY USE ANY ENCODER YOU WANT TO USE. WIRE IT UP TO YOUR
TRANSPONDER. DRAG YOUR AIRPLANE OVER TO GET A TRANSPONDER
CERTIFICATION AND THEN GO FLY.

Why do I say this? Because of FAR 91.217(b) which reads:

(b) Unless, as installed, that equipment was tested and calibrated to
transmit altitude data corresponding within 125 feet (on a 95 percent
probability basis) of the indicated or calibrated datum of the
altimeter normally used to maintain flight altitude, with that
altimeter referenced to
29.92 inches of mercury for altitudes from sea level to the maximum
operating altitude of the aircraft;

Hello! This is the transponder certification test! This is the test
performed by the radio shop on your airplane! They feed absolute
pressure into your static system and check the transponder altitude
(mode-C) output at several pressure altitudes. The mode-C output of
your transponder must track your altimeter to within 125' of what is
indicated on your altimeter.

The key point is that you have TESTED your installation to ensure it
is working.

Quote:
Unfortunately at the present time (until corrected) FAA HQ has
described a testing process for compliance with FAR 91.217 (b) that
is unreasonable. See their response to my letter in a previous
posting.

This is what happens when people ask questions of the FAA. You get
some boob who hasn't got a clue to interpret things for you. The key
point is that FAR 91.217(b) is very clear and needs no interpretation.

The transponder certification test is where you test and calibrate
your encoder to transmit altitude data corresponding within 125' of
the indicated or calibrated data of the altimeter normally used to
maintain flight attitude, with that altimeter referenced to 29.92"Hg
for altitudes from sea level to the maximum operating altitude of the
aircraft.

Notice just how similar my words are to 91.217(b)?

Now, if you don't cease and desist trying to confuse this issue, I am
going to come over there and beat your hands into a bloody pulp with
a hard-bound copy of the FARs so you can't type any more. Smile

(BTW, if you use the same pressure sensor to generate your altitude
readout AND drive your transponder, the altitude sent by the
transponder absolutely MUST be the same indicated since they are both
the same data.)
Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
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