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Transponder (aviation)

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Transponder (aviation):A Cessna ARC RT-359A Transponder (the beige box) mounted beneath a Bendix/King KY197 VHF communication radio in a light airplane instrument panel
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A Cessna ARC RT-359A Transponder (the beige box) mounted beneath a Bendix/King KY197 VHF communication radio in a light airplane instrument panel

A transponder is an electronic device that produces a response when it receives a radio-frequency interrogation. In aviation, aircraft have transponders to assist in identifying them on radar and on other aircraft's collision avoidance systems.


Contents

History

The aviation transponder was originally developed during World War II by the British and American military as an "Identification - Friend or Foe (IFF)" system to differentiate friendly from enemy aircraft on radar. The concept became a core of NORAD technology in the defence of North America during the Cold War.

This concept was adapted in the 1950s by civil air traffic control using secondary surveillance radar (beacon radar) systems to provide traffic services for general aviation and commercial aviation.

Secondary Surveillance Radar

Secondary Surveillance Radar is referred to as "secondary", to distinguish it from the "primary radar" that works by passively bouncing a radio signal off the skin of the aircraft. Primary radar works best with large all-metal aircraft, but not so well on small, composite aircraft. Its range is also limited by terrain and rain or snow and also detects unwanted objects such as automobiles, hills and trees. Furthermore it cannot estimate the altitude of an aircraft. Secondary radar overcomes these limitations but it depends on a transponder in the aircraft to respond to interrogations from the ground station to make the plane more visible and to report the aircraft's altitude.

Transponder modes

Mode A and Mode C

When the transponder receives a radar signal it sends back a transponder code (or "squawk code"). This is referred to as "Mode 3A" or more commonly "Mode A". A transponder code can be paired with pressure altitude information, which is called "Mode 3C", or more commonly "Mode C".

Mode 3A and C are used to help air traffic controllers to identify the aircraft and to maintain separation.

Mode S

Another mode called Mode S (Selective) is designed to help air traffic control in busy areas and allow automatic collision avoidance. Mode S tranponders are compatible with Modes A & C.

Mode S is mandatory in controlled airspace in many countries. Some countries require that all aircraft be equipped with Mode S, even in uncontrolled airspace. However in the field of general aviation, there have been objections to these moves, because of the cost, size, limited benefit to the users in uncontrolled airspace, and, in the case of balloons and gliders, the power requirements for these aircraft that do not have electrical systems.

Mode S transponders can relay additional information, including the permanent identity of the aircraft. Mode S TIS, or Traffic Information Service, allows a radar installation to send information about nearby traffic back to aircraft, which then displays it on the moving map. Mode S TIS is only available when the aircraft is within radar range of a radar installation that supports it. The Garmin G1000 glass cockpit is one example of an avionics suite that supports Mode S TIS.

Operation

In flight a pilot is told to squawk a given code by air traffic control over the radio, such as in the phrase "Cessna 123AB, squawk 0363". The pilot inputs these digits and his blip on the radar becomes correctly associated with his identity.

Because primary radar gives position information but lacks altitude information, mode C and mode S transponders report altitude. Around busy airspace there is often a regulatory requirement that all aircraft be equipped with an altitude-reporting mode C or mode S transponder. In the United States, this is known as a Mode C veil. Mode S transponders are compatible with transmitting the mode C signal, hence no need for a separate designation. Without the altitude reporting, the controller cannot see any altitude information, and the controller must rely on the altitude as reported by the pilot. This has resulted in at least one accident. On August 31, 1986, a Piper Archer with a pilot and two passengers had inadvertently penetrated the 6,000-foot floor of controlled airspace without a clearance and collided[1] with Aeromexico Flight 498, a DC-9 with 58 passengers and 6 crew at an altitude of 6,650 feet. The Archer had only mode A reporting capability and the controller assumed it was below the controlled airspace.

Ident

All mode A, C, and S transponders include an "ident" button, which activates a special "thirteenth" bit on the mode A reply known as Ident, short for Identify. When radar equipment receives the Ident bit, it results in the aircraft's blip "blossoming" on the radar scope. This is often used by the controller to locate the aircraft amongst others by requesting the ident function from the pilot (i.e. "Cessna 123AB, squawk 0363 and ident").

Ident can also be used in case of a reported or suspected radio failure to determine if the failure is only one way and whether the pilot can still transmit or receive but not both (i.e. "Cessna 123AB, if you can hear me, please ident").

Transponder codes

Transponder codes are four digit numbers transmitted by the transponder in an aircraft in response to a secondary surveillance radar interrogation signal to assist air traffic controllers in traffic separation. A discrete transponder code (often called a squawk code) is assigned by air traffic controllers to uniquely identify an aircraft. This allows easy identity of the aircraft on radar.

Squawk codes are four-digit octal numbers; the dials on a transponder read from zero to seven inclusive. Thus the lowest possible squawk is 0000 and the highest is 7777. Because these squawks are sensitive, care must be taken not to squawk any emergency code during a code change. For example, when changing from 1200 to 6501 (an assigned ATC squawk), one might turn the second wheel to a 5 (thus 1500), and then rotate the first wheel backwards in the sequence 1-0-7-6 to get to 6. This would momentarily have the transponder squawking a hijack code (7500), which might lead to more attention than one desires. Pilots are instructed not to place place the transponder in "standby mode" while changing the codes as it causes the loss of target information on the ATC radar screen, but instead to carefully change codes to avoid inadvertantly selecting an emergency code [1]. Additionally, modern digital transponders are operated by buttons and avoid this problem.

There are other codes known as 'conspicuity codes' which are not necessarily unique to a particular aircraft, but may have their own meaning and are used to convey information about the aircraft to ATC, possibly when the aircraft is not in radio contact.

The use of the word "squawk" comes from the system's origin in the World War II Identification Friend or Foe system, which was code-named "Parrot".

Routine codes

"Under no circumstances should a pilot of a civil aircraft operate the transponder on Code 7777. This code is reserved for military interceptor operations."

Emergency codes

In addition to the above universal codes, some countries assign certain blocks linked to certain destinations (flights to some destination always get a transponder code starting with certain numbers). Otherwise the squawk codes are randomly allocated (hence not assigned in sequence).


References

  1. ^ AOPA.org, Collision over Cerritos

Categories


Aviation terminology | Avionics | Air traffic control | Aviation

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