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So You Blew Off ADS B Now What?

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  • čas přidán 24. 12. 2019
  • Beginning next week, pilots will need ADS-B if they want to fly in certain U.S. airspace. In case you didn't get it done, Avweb's Paul Bertorelli covers the options in this video. For many pilots, not having ADS-B won't impact their flying much, if at all.

Komentáře • 318

  • @peachtrees27
    @peachtrees27 Před 4 lety +409

    Man oh man that siren was loud…

    • @pilotman012
      @pilotman012 Před 4 lety +7

      Got my attention too!!

    • @sambiscits6711
      @sambiscits6711 Před 4 lety +20

      My wife was trying to sleep in the next room over, when she goes to bed she always tells me to be sure to check my volume, in other words, keep it low so it won't wake her up, I'm going to plead insanity, or at least pretend I don't know what she's talking about, wish me luck.

    • @shawnleary
      @shawnleary Před 4 lety +18

      That was horrible

    • @EUC-lid
      @EUC-lid Před 4 lety +1

      Sam Biscits plead Paul Bertorelli. Works for almost anything.

    • @michaelb.8953
      @michaelb.8953 Před 4 lety +9

      It's 5 am and 20 minutes and I just woke up 20 minutes ago watching this with my cup of coffee and I thought I forgot to turn off my alarm. That wasn't really necessary.

  • @radon360
    @radon360 Před 4 lety +170

    Hearing gets destroyed at 6:38

    • @tam4143
      @tam4143 Před 4 lety +1

      Ya, I had headphones on.

    • @ParadigmUnkn0wn
      @ParadigmUnkn0wn Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, that was almost as unpleasant as the ADS-B mandate.

  • @Towert7
    @Towert7 Před 4 lety +67

    Dam guys, your siren blew my ears out. Now I think I have to go back to the medical examiner to get a new restriction on my medical.

  • @Karuiko
    @Karuiko Před 4 lety +112

    Headphone warning would've been nice.

    • @Master-ls2op
      @Master-ls2op Před 4 lety +2

      when you dont read comments first.... to late...

    • @mktsmith62
      @mktsmith62 Před 4 lety

      Sure glad I wasn't reaching for my coffee.

  • @wootle
    @wootle Před 4 lety +12

    Paul is the best aviation news presenter, love his dry humor! He needs millions of views! More videos from him please!!

  • @tylergordon696
    @tylergordon696 Před 4 lety +83

    I have a few friends that are complaining about it...
    The regs came out in early 2010. You had 10 years
    Most installs are between 2-4k.
    While not pocket change, its still very cheap when it comes to planes. My families last cross country trip cost more than that in fuel.

    • @roytee3127
      @roytee3127 Před 4 lety +10

      "But my plane is worth only $15k." I've read that a lot. Irrelevant, IMHO.

    • @tylergordon696
      @tylergordon696 Před 4 lety +13

      @@roytee3127 i have not seen a 15k plane that would be required to add ads-b that did not need 25k+ in work.

    • @CorbinAviation
      @CorbinAviation Před 4 lety +5

      @@tylergordon696 Mine is a $20k plane that only needs $1,500 for ads-B out....

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety +12

      @@roytee3127 That sounds like somebody who is flying with somebody else paying the bills. Sort of arrogant IMHO.
      I've got twenty airplanes. Putting ADS-B in all of them would be asinine expensive. I made ONE trip in the past two years that I could not have made without ADS-B under the new rules, assuming you can go under the shelf of Class C, and I didn't really need to make that trip in a plane. The economics simply don't compute, at least not for me.
      And I've got a Culver V Satellite that is pretty nice, has radios GPS etc. Not a popular plane and probably not worth much more than about $ 12,000. I'm not doing ADS-B in it until they get the cost down to about that of an ELT.
      And BTW, why exactly is it two to six grand? What it is supposed to do isn't that amazing. It's like a simple GPS and a beacon that should be as easy to install as an ELT. It really should be about three or four hundred bucks. Somebody is getting rich off of this requirement. I wonder if those people, whomever they area, had something to do with it being adopted.

    • @tylergordon696
      @tylergordon696 Před 4 lety +8

      Its all about the certification...
      I am a gc, saftey glasses are a big deal in my industry. my 3 m safety glasses that are tested and rated by ansi( think faa only slightly better) are $50 a pair. My ones that are identical minus the embossed ansi number( from the head of 3m on the west coast) are $10. Hell i have a pair of oakleys that are rated to stop a 22 lr that i have had since i was in the coast guard are not even legal for mw to use.
      What it all boils down to is testing. Just look at modern avionics and the difference between certifed and experimental. Its a sick joke.

  • @BlueBaron3339
    @BlueBaron3339 Před 4 lety +31

    "Oh, and Merry Christmas." Classic Paul 😂 🤣

  • @blancolirio
    @blancolirio Před 4 lety +18

    Excellent Paul! Thanks for posting. Educational AND entertaining!

  • @truenorth636
    @truenorth636 Před 4 lety +9

    Paul, too bad you didn't have a brother. Sometimes you need a big brother to slap you upside the head. In my 4,000 hours of private flying, I have had three "near-death experiences." One time I was saved by a competent and caring approach controller out of Tampa who spotted what turned out to be a C182 evidently doing emergency decent practice above me about 80 nm North of TPA. I was IFR and the other pilot was not using flight following. It took 3 evasive maneuver commands to get me away from him. and prevent the collision. He, of course, never knew the better. Next it was my eagle-eyed daughter, then 18, who spotted an old Taylorcraft flying the wrong way, right out of the sun, turning downwind to Runway 18 at KIRS. Sturgis, MI. If not for her last-second scream "Daddy" and pointing, then my instinctive haul-ass to the right, all 3 of us would have been history. The pilot and I had a "discussion" about his choice not to use his hand-held radio and fly the opposite way in a pattern. Finally, I had one of those "in the freakin' middle of nowhere" encounters over Oklahoma on a long, slow descent into a rural airport and had just fallen below radar coverage. A big twin overtook me from behind, evidently climbing out of a private strip, nose up, not using his radio, he never saw me butI felt the pressure wave from above just prior to the big shadow and the roar of his engines even through my Lightspeeds. Scared the bejesus out of me. I hope my point is obvious. ADS-B, fully complied with, would have avoided all three of these scenarios. So you and your "exempt" friends should think twice, no, five times, before deciding not to buy the damn unit, the battery, whatever it takes, and comply anyway. The life you save might be your own ... or maybe mine, too. (you may say that was not the point of your post. Moot point. It should have been mentioned.)

  • @soflaav8r
    @soflaav8r Před 4 lety +18

    Blown speaker alert at 6:37

  • @LS8eighteen
    @LS8eighteen Před 4 lety +3

    My glider is exempt (no "electrical system") but I decided to install ADS-B out on it. Since I already am flying with a Trig 22 transponder and since my glider is 'Experimental' category, that was quite easy. The Garmin/Trig GPS receiver that works with the T22 is $350, the antenna is $50 and I also installed a squat switch to run the SIL 3 configuration. All works well and my FAA Performance Report came back with perfect results. Here on the edge of the Chicago B airspace I want to be seen!!! Battery drain is negligible and I see that as just an excuse. Btw., we squawk the "glider code" 1202 at all times unless directed otherwise.

  • @mrwjs
    @mrwjs Před 4 lety +7

    Thank for blowing out my eardrums with the buzzer

  • @d.coleman1230
    @d.coleman1230 Před 4 lety +23

    LOL, my cub gets wheezy over a 1000 ft LOL

    • @pittss2c601
      @pittss2c601 Před 4 lety

      It's true. The Cub flies like crap. I have approximately 100 hours in Cubs and they just suck to fly. Poor visibility, control surfaces that don't work, a completely dead engine, light wing loading so your bounce all over the place. I hate that plane.

    • @d.coleman1230
      @d.coleman1230 Před 4 lety +3

      @@pittss2c601 I disagree, I have over a thousand hours in a cub that my father owned. And we didn't have any issue with it except the gutlessness of the engine above 2500 foot asl. Eventually he had a custom engineered turbo put in it and we didn't have any more issues after that,we've been climbed to 9500 foot over the tehachapi mountain ranges in California

  • @rafaelsierra8733
    @rafaelsierra8733 Před 4 lety +7

    Merry Christmas. Excellent instructional video.

  • @lazarogonzalez7086
    @lazarogonzalez7086 Před 4 lety +1

    I am not sure why anyone would not want ADS B. Big Brother, or no electrical system is not reason not to install it. It does enhance your safety. I remember when certain people were arguing against antilock brakes, air bags, and seatbelts. Change is hard, but seems it’s really hard for others.

  • @thegeneralbenjamin9518
    @thegeneralbenjamin9518 Před 4 lety +6

    Merry Christmas Paul. Very informative video.

  • @christianbert9709
    @christianbert9709 Před 2 lety

    I have no clue what your talking about and have never flown an airplane but you still are very interesting to watch.

  • @AGryphonTamer
    @AGryphonTamer Před 4 lety +4

    You blew out one of my speakers with that siren...

  • @BillPalmer
    @BillPalmer Před 5 měsíci

    The glider exception over the top of Class B and C doesn’t require ADSB out above those areas above 10,000 ft.
    91.225 exemption language says:”These aircraft ( non electrical, balloons, gliders) may conduct operations without ADS-B Out in the airspace specified in paragraph (d)(4) of this section.” (The 10,000 ft rule)
    The ADS B requirement around class B and C airspace only applies up to 10,000 ft: “3) Above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport upward to 10,000 feet MSL;
    Therefore a non-ADSB equipped glider can fly over class B and C but only if above 10,000 ft.

  • @GonzoT38
    @GonzoT38 Před 4 lety +13

    There's an inaccuracy here. The regulations do not say you cannot fly under the shelf of class Charlie. Only class bravo shelves by virtue of being inside the mode c veil.

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety +3

      I saw that in this video, and I assumed what you are saying, largely because that is how it was described in the little safety magazine that the FAA puts out at the pilots meetings several months ago, but if you look up the actual law, which I just did after I heard this, it says 'lateral boundaries' of the Class B and C AND the mode C veils. That means under the shelf. I'm not gonna be the one to test what the FAA actually means. I think it means Class C lateral boundaries, within, over, and under, should all be treated as dead airspace, in addition to Class B Mode C veils. I, for one, have learned not to trust ANYBODY's advice on what the law is when their job performance is measured on how many people they can violate. I don't plan on trusting anything the FAA says on their website or their newsletters on subject's like this or what is reported in AOPA or whatever as to what the FAA tells them until this ambiguity is cleared up, so read the actual law. You can find it with a couple of google searches. It says nothing about under the shelf being legal. It says lateral boundaries. So this video just might be right on that.
      However, they also point out that the law says 'after Jan 1', which would appear to mean Jan 2 or thereafter, not Jan 1, but I wouldn't trust some controller somewhere violating you on Jan 1. So this is the other way, even though the law says one thing, I suspect the individual controllers are all assuming the same Jan 1 that we were all assuming for the past couple of years.

    • @FlyingLessons
      @FlyingLessons Před 4 lety +1

      @@kellytrimble4120 your reading and mine of 91.225(d) (3) are quite different. To me it says above only, with exactly the same language as 91.215: "Above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport upward to 10,000 feet MSL"

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety +1

      @@FlyingLessons Yes, you are exactly right. A reasonable person with a background in the subject would assume exactly what you are assuming and what I was assuming it meant, reinforced with prior information, a lot of it from the FAA. But reasonable people could interpret it to mean under the shelf, as evidenced by the people who made this video. If there is an ambiguity, which this vid suggests there might be, I'm not going there until it is cleared up. If you can't go in the lateral boundaries of a Class C, and you have to just stay out of them, then there is really no reason to ever talk to approach. If there is no reason to talk to approach on your way in or way out of an airport just outside of the Class C, I suspect there may be no good reason to ever try to do VFR flight following. The potential for getting violated on this is one more reason a lot of people who need flight following and approach radar services will have to not talk to ATC. When I cross country, I am constantly crossing thru Class C and sometimes going over Class B and frequently go thru Class C at the destination to get to a small airport on the other side, so I don't worry about whether I'm in or out or around or whatever, I just don't think about it. This has me thinking I need to simply steer clear of Class C altogether and not talk to ATC at all unless I'm landing at a Class D. I think that is less safe, but that's what the incentive structure will be. I hadn't really thought of it until I watched this video. You may be right in your interpretation, the same I had, but I can't chance it.

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety +2

      @@littlegreenman1 Yup that's the same graphic I saw in the FAA safety magazine they hand out at the Wings seminars. But if you read the actual reg, it could be interpreted as prohibiting flight under the shelf of the Class C, which is obviously the interpretation of the people making this video, and maybe some controller somewhere looking to gain brownie points for violating people for stuff. That ambiguity needs to be cleared up before I go under the shelf.

    • @hemp184
      @hemp184 Před 4 lety +1

      @@kellytrimble4120 the word AND means both the vertical and lateral conditions must be met in order for that rule to apply (otherwise it would say OR.) Besides that, it aligns with the Mode C requirements which the FAA has made clear was their intent from the beginning. And finally, if there was a challenge from the FAA, all you'd have to do is show them their own official graphic.
      The issue is important because there are many Class C cutouts for GA airports around the country. All of those airports would essentially be closed to non-ADS-B aircraft as of 1/2 if the rule applied there. But fortunately, it doesn't.

  • @CorbinAviation
    @CorbinAviation Před 4 lety +7

    You are leaving out the entire experimental world. Don't need a shop...can install ourselves.

  • @teenflon
    @teenflon Před 4 lety +5

    Haha I wondered why the video was so quiet until the alarm :)

  • @chriskenney4377
    @chriskenney4377 Před 4 lety

    Paul could have been a standup comedian. But, this is best summation I've heard. I've had ADS B in/out for a long time, but this was still worth hearing Paul Bertirelli (sp). Loved it.

  • @highpointview256
    @highpointview256 Před 4 lety +7

    "...and unless otherwise authorized by ATC..." Although inconvenient, doesn't the rules indicate that ATC can directly allow a non-ADSB-out flight? ATC is not the same as contacting the FAA with correspondence, yet the rules clearly discuss ATC authorization in many places.

    • @MidnightMechanic
      @MidnightMechanic Před 3 lety +1

      That would make perfect sense, you'll communicate with ATC well before you'll contact the FAA for anything. Emergency landing? Better get permission from the FAA! Technically they're the only ones that care about your equipment onboard anyway, ATC cares only that your coms are working so they can, you know, make sure you don't die or anything. This rule only seems to effect older planes that aren't old enough to predate electronics, but glass gauge retrofitting is getting more common, since they definitely help keep mental saturation down.

    • @windowsxseven
      @windowsxseven Před rokem

      Aughhhhh BUT THE RULES!!! The rules say!!!! 🤓🤓🤓🤓 The rules!!!!! CLEARLY STATES! THE RULES!!!!!!!!!!!!! BUT THE RULES SAY!!!!!!!

  • @clocksurfer
    @clocksurfer Před 2 lety

    My unmanned aircraft system is equipped with an ADS-B receiver, and I'll be watching/listening for you in the Charlie where I usually fly. (And I'll actually yield to you by a wide margin.)

  • @PhilbyFavourites
    @PhilbyFavourites Před 4 lety +15

    “Stifling Government Overreach” - that’s what they do for perceived good or bad...

  • @steven2145
    @steven2145 Před 4 lety +17

    This is a measure of how many airplanes don't do annuals too.

    • @hemp184
      @hemp184 Před 4 lety +6

      We do annuals, every year - and have never flown out of annual except on a ferry permit. No ADS-B Out installed yet.
      This idea that people who haven't done an ADS-B upgrade by the deadline are somehow delinquent owners is frustrating and ridiculous. I don't have a spare $2k laying around for non-essential avionics. It's that simple.

    • @2Greenlid
      @2Greenlid Před 4 lety +3

      Increased safety for all in the air IS NOT non-essential avionics, It’s joining the 20th century ! We have to constantly improve, not stay stuck in the past...

    • @hempelcx
      @hempelcx Před 4 lety +8

      By that definition you could argue anything that potentially improves safety is "essential". Good luck fitting TCAS on a J-3 Cub. Don't have an AOA indicator? It increases safety so it must be essential right?

    • @steven2145
      @steven2145 Před 4 lety +3

      @@hempelcx The opposite argument is that anything that improves safety is optional! I am sure there are many Libertarians that believe that.
      There is a balance, of course. If ADSB were $250 installed would more of those people without it get it? Sure. Same thing is true about TCAS....if it were a few hundred bucks and weighed a few ounces and were tiny would many GA airplanes start putting it in (particularly those that fly high and in crowded with commercial traffic airspaces), yeah. A lot depends on your mission and the airspace you fly in. My original comment didn't consider that because I fly in a crowded airspace near a large mode c veil near a couple of charlie airports so I just saw it from my perspective. For my mission, I see it as a requirement IMHO.

  • @mktsmith62
    @mktsmith62 Před 4 lety +3

    What amazes me is that this whole gov't campaign looks so very much like the ELD (Electronic Logging Device) push for commercial vehicles.
    As an aside, both of these happened alongside another less obvious change. Look at the electronics included in modern automobiles post 2010.

  • @jalbert9613
    @jalbert9613 Před 3 lety +4

    I would love to see it look more like TCAS.

  • @GlennDavey
    @GlennDavey Před 2 lety +2

    This would be riveting with an initial explanation of ADS-B. As a flight simmer I'm fascinated in real world aviation stuff. Edit: Googled, got it. Very interesting!

  • @jharesc
    @jharesc Před 3 měsíci

    Would love a video titled: "So you want to be IFR... "with clarification of "aircraft ifr equipped" and "ifr certified aircraft" detailing faa certifications and equipment requirements and introducing various products available for retrofit to give instrument approach capabilities using GPS, VOR/ILS, dme etc. Of course with the little certified or experimental aircraft owner in mind.

  • @trilomann
    @trilomann Před 4 lety +1

    Paul thanks for sharing. Always very informative with a great satire. 10/10

  • @kennethschwartz2941
    @kennethschwartz2941 Před 4 lety +14

    I don't think the "No under shelves" is correct as he does not specify "Class B" only and that's only because of the 30 mi. ring... It is OK to fly under Class C shelves. I am surprised that this error was made by him... He needs more clarification.

    • @kevina8172
      @kevina8172 Před 4 lety

      I think your wrong, no more under or over Class C without ADSB IMO

    • @kennethschwartz2941
      @kennethschwartz2941 Před 4 lety +6

      @@kevina8172 FAA web site says different. Nothing has changed from before. No additional restrictions. Under the class C shelf would be new. If you can post something that I am missing then please correct me.
      Class A, B, and C airspace;
      Class E airspace at or above 10,000 feet msl, excluding airspace at and below 2,500 feet agl;
      Within 30 nautical miles of a Class B primary airport (the Mode C veil);
      Above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of Class B or Class C airspace up to 10,000 feet;
      Class E airspace over the Gulf of Mexico, at and above 3,000 feet msl, within 12 nm of the U.S. coast.

    • @TyphoidMarypatrick
      @TyphoidMarypatrick Před 4 lety +2

      I think the entire Mode C veil might be off limits but I'm not sure.

    • @troyhamon6666
      @troyhamon6666 Před 4 lety +4

      Kenneth is correct. The video is misleading. I was also surprised that Paul missed this and I would like to see him walk it back so he isn't adding more confusion to this topic.

    • @andrewalexander9492
      @andrewalexander9492 Před 4 lety +3

      @@troyhamon6666 On another comment, Paul mentions that is correct, you may still fly under Class C shelves without ADS-B

  • @RealGoldRealWealth
    @RealGoldRealWealth Před 4 lety

    Paul you continue to be a voice of common sense to our industry. Of course me agreeing with you could be our similar ages, or we both have instructed way too many students in our careers, but I suspect the real reason we are not seeing more early and now late adopters (prior to the implementation date) are the associated costs of compliance without a perceived tangible personal benefit. Avionics after ten years SHOULD be dirt cheap by now and there's the rub, spending more dollars on a system that we have been doing seemingly fine without up til now. Just like transponders that assist ATC they get the primary benefits but we pay. However with ADS-B In, that should be super real time good for us in the cockpit, so folks, even reluctantly let's all get aboard. BTW a belated Merry Christmas to you too!

  • @martinpauly
    @martinpauly Před 4 lety +1

    This was a very nice summary, Paul, presented in an entertaining manner and with a good sense of humor. Thank you!
    Something I've been hurting my head over, and maybe an idea for an article or video for you: what is going to be different in mandate airspace after January 1? Every time I talk to an air traffic controller, their answer is 'nothing'. If that's true, why the mandate? I'm not at all opposed to ADS-B - I have both 'in' and 'out' in my cockpit and love the information it gives me - but for the life of me I cannot figure out what the FAA is going to do with it come January 2020.
    Thanks also for the Cedar Rapids Beer Summit reference; I live in that town and did not know we had this coming up. I may have to check it out!
    Best,
    Martin

  • @rex669
    @rex669 Před 4 lety +6

    You can fly under but not over Class C air space without ADS-B

  • @DNModels
    @DNModels Před 4 lety +2

    Great video!
    This is the "sad but true" reality of the modern day general aviation.

  • @patrickpowell2236
    @patrickpowell2236 Před 4 lety +14

    3:10 WRONG. You may fly under class C shelf without ADS-B out.

    • @dand579
      @dand579 Před 4 lety +2

      91.225 says: "3) Above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport upward to 10,000 feet MSL"
      There is no differentiation between flying under a Class B or Class C shelf. The regulation simply prohibits both.

  • @andrewcampbell4396
    @andrewcampbell4396 Před 2 lety

    Love your posts, always good value and extremely high on how to fly safely.

  • @brianb5594
    @brianb5594 Před 4 lety

    Excellent recap Paul! Love your humor. Merry Christmas! Happy ADS-B year! 🤪

  • @michaelmccarthy4615
    @michaelmccarthy4615 Před 4 lety

    The best jingle at the beginning and the end!
    A great new year start!

  • @CuratedPile
    @CuratedPile Před 4 lety +3

    This ADS-B out requirement is real pain for us Canadian aircraft owners. The equipment is completely worthless electrical load and spent money in Canada. Sure ours is coming in the next decade, but it's a completely different system, so the current equipment probably isn't useful then either. I do like flying in the US, my customs decal for 2020 is already on, but this is going to limit where I can go and equipping my plane has a very low value. I'll stop whining now.

    • @speedomars
      @speedomars Před 3 lety

      Boo hoo. Canadians are a laugh.

  • @stephenbritton9297
    @stephenbritton9297 Před 4 lety +6

    Your klaxon towards the end just scared the s(censored)t out of my cat that was on my lap next to my computer... that was funny!!!!

  • @billkrokoship
    @billkrokoship Před 4 lety

    Thanks for mentioning my home town of Peoria, IL.! We all love to fly and are a very responsible flying community for GA!

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety

      I have an occassional trip to PEoria, but if I can't get into the main airport at night to get gas and if I have to go to Lacan to stay out from under the shelf, it will be a less safe trip. I normally go into Mt Hawley. This may kill that airport. I can see it killing Bentonville Arkansas, Bird Field near SGF, the little GA field south of Tulsa, and a few others. It's gonna cause a few unforseen consequences.

  • @Jim_Austin
    @Jim_Austin Před 4 lety +1

    It's my understanding that flying 'under the shelf' of Class C airspace does NOT require ADS-B Out. See this graphic on the FAA.gov website: www.faa.gov/nextgen/equipadsb/research/airspace/media/airspaceRequirements.jpg It would probably not be required under the shelves of Class B were it not for the 30-mile Mode C veil.

  • @codygauger7569
    @codygauger7569 Před 4 lety +4

    I don’t find anything saying we can’t fly under the shelf in class C. You said that we can’t fly under the shelves and I’m wondering if that includes C. It says lateral boundaries which I interpret to mean current mode c requirements. Please elaborate. I’m only right sometimes!

    • @scottmajor2620
      @scottmajor2620 Před 4 lety

      cody gauger: I also want to know where that is as well.

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety

      I assumed we could fly in under the Class C shelf as well, but after I watched this, I looked up the actual law. CFR 92 point whatever it is. It says ADS-B required within the lateral boundaries, which would include within, above, AND under the shelf, making the entirety of the lateral boundaries of Class C dead airspace without ADS-B. Don't trust the FAA website (which appears to have been changed at some time in the past few weeks on this), or the FAA safety magazine they hand out at the safety seminars-they appear to be wrong according to a plain english reading of the actual law.

    • @FlyingLessons
      @FlyingLessons Před 4 lety +2

      @@kellytrimble4120 can you please provide the actual reference? the one I see never says anything about under shelves. it only says above:
      91.225 (d)(3) "Above the ceiling and within the lateral boundaries of a Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport upward to 10,000 feet MSL"

    • @rjbishop12
      @rjbishop12 Před 4 lety +3

      Per this graphic, you indeed can fly under the shelf of Class C airspace without ADS-B - the lateral boundary applies to flying ABOVE the Class C airspace.
      www.faa.gov/nextgen/equipadsb/research/airspace/media/airspaceRequirements.jpg
      This is also explaned here: www.faa.gov/nextgen/equipadsb/research/airspace/

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety

      ​@@FlyingLessons The way it is worded is ambiguous. A plain english reading could interpret it as above the ceiling of B&C requires it and within the lateral boundaries, including under the shelf, requires it, or it could be interpreted as areas above the B or C ceiling that are also within the lateral boundaries, but it isn't written that way. Whoever did this video obviously interpreted it to include under the shelf, and I fully expect somebody somewhere will get violated on it by some arrogant controller having a case of the ass against somebody for whatever reason, and when that guy proves he was actually under the shelf, whoever violated him will fall back to saying the reg actually includes the area under the shelf.
      You always have to assume that ambiguous wordings will be interpreted against you at the enforcement level. Even if I might be right to assume it to be legal without equipment under the shelf, I can't even afford to try to defend myself against a violation action no matter how legal I turn out to be. My policy needs to be if there is any ambiguity, don't go there. This video is proof that reasonable people could interpret it the opposite way. So until the ambiguity is cleared up by an actual official pronouncement or rewording of the rule by the FAA, I have no choice but to consider 'under the shelf' to be dead airspace.

  • @jordanelkins9801
    @jordanelkins9801 Před 2 lety +1

    Try to quietly watch a nice, informative CZcams video in my industrial plant control room... Get blasted with a super obnoxious and borderline unnecessarily loud siren, and in turn freaking out and pissing off all of my co-workers. Thanks, Paul...

  • @hogey74
    @hogey74 Před 2 lety +1

    Pretty sure I haven't met this Bertorelli character but he knows way too much about my strategy for managing change. And he is judging me.

  • @radioace318la
    @radioace318la Před 3 lety

    G Thanks for waking up the baby with the warning sfx. But that was nothing compared to the shootdown for not having ADS-B. Then I waked the baby.

  • @roytee3127
    @roytee3127 Před 4 lety +1

    5:44 Checked a couple of times to verify which finger Paul was using.

  • @598133
    @598133 Před 4 lety +2

    Do you think maybe we can get some nice deals on Barnstormers because of people not being compliant lol

  • @dankloker7041
    @dankloker7041 Před 4 lety +1

    He needs to clarify flight under class C airspace. From what I read from FAA it is allowed.

  • @scottfranco1962
    @scottfranco1962 Před 4 lety +1

    See and be seen. Would you turn off your beacon and nav lights to save battery power at night?

    • @hemp184
      @hemp184 Před 4 lety +1

      In IMC? Absolutely.

  • @skidivr
    @skidivr Před 4 lety +5

    How do you get out of an airport that you used the exception to land? Do you have to request another exception to depart or are you covered for the departure?

    • @robertmerkle6879
      @robertmerkle6879 Před 4 lety +1

      Its probably best not the dwell on such minutia.

    • @scottfitzgerald5423
      @scottfitzgerald5423 Před 4 lety +4

      This exception is most likely to get you to an avionics shop to get the ADS-B installed if you missed the deadline.

  • @garynew9637
    @garynew9637 Před 3 lety

    As a retired 68 yo carpenter who has flown a 210 and a lancair 360. I love flying.

  • @khregel8913
    @khregel8913 Před 4 lety +1

    Merry Christmas.informative and funny.

  • @martinvictorhotel289mvh2
    @martinvictorhotel289mvh2 Před 4 lety +1

    Merry Xmas!!! Well Done video ;-) keep up the Good work!

  • @FlyMeAirplane
    @FlyMeAirplane Před 4 lety +1

    Many of the Towers I've asked if they have ADS-B receivers/capability and I haven't found one yet that does so how will they know if we have ADS-B out?

  • @allihusk6519
    @allihusk6519 Před 2 lety

    Was freaking out about this before I bought my ‘47 Taylorcraft.
    Flight school drilled regs into me for weeks only for me to go out and buy a plane where they don’t apply😂

  • @gaflying3448
    @gaflying3448 Před 4 lety +1

    How many part 121 are equipped? I’d say that ‘one time exception’ rule is going to get a lot of exercise in a few days.

    • @hempelcx
      @hempelcx Před 4 lety +1

      Part 121 flights aren't held to Part 91 requirements. Interesting thing happens when airliners fly under Part 91, which they do occasionally (ferry/maintenance flights, etc.) IMO, the FAA looks the other way.

  • @MrxEVILCRAZYx
    @MrxEVILCRAZYx Před rokem +1

    Headphone warning at 6:37

  • @cleburne-dfwseptic6843
    @cleburne-dfwseptic6843 Před 4 lety +11

    Just turn your transponder off, and fly at the speed of a Piper Cub

    • @DumbledoreMcCracken
      @DumbledoreMcCracken Před 4 lety +1

      And, that's the height of safety. Good job.

    • @ConvairDart106
      @ConvairDart106 Před 4 lety +1

      We were not too excited about seat belt laws either, but we have learned to buckle up. No fender benders up there. Best insurance yet devised. Embrace it!

    • @hempelcx
      @hempelcx Před 4 lety

      I have a family member who drives around for hours with the seat belt alarm going off because he refuses to wear it and can't figure out how to disable the alarm. No joke.

  • @PaperPilotJack
    @PaperPilotJack Před 4 lety +1

    Hey @avweb, how about the situation where I'm based in a class C but the plane is undergoing annual. The adsb out won't be installed and ready for test flight until mid January? Do I just fill out that form so I can do the adsb test flight?

  • @electricjed
    @electricjed Před 4 lety

    Informative, but I think your wrong on one thing. As far as I can see you CAN fly under the class C shelf. Can anyone clarify if I’m wrong or right?

  • @EdJZatta
    @EdJZatta Před 4 lety +6

    The ADSB cost is a small price to pay for the increased safety.

    • @Dudeisthere
      @Dudeisthere Před 4 lety

      @@svp2587 So how is more technology that takes workload away from the pilot and provides accurate data a bad thing?

    • @Dudeisthere
      @Dudeisthere Před 4 lety

      @@svp2587 Yes, like every flight student ive learned the "pen and paper" flight planning in flight school. Its slow, ineffective, can put alot of workload on the pilot when flying in unfamiliar areas and has its limitations (cant fly above clouds for example as that would make navigation impossible). Good luck flying like that on a long cross country, i wouldnt want to do it.
      With a GPS i know where i am immediately, i can fly the most direct route without the need to take diversions for landmarks that are easier to spot. GPS outage? Thats why you still carry the old fashioned map as a backup, its still useful for that, just not as a primary navigation device.
      The same things apply to spotting other traffic. Every airplane has blindspots, scanning the skies constantly takes alot of focus and is impossible to do constantly on a long flight, many times airplanes blend in with the background so well that they become almost impossible to spot, thats why midair collisions and near misses are still a thing in the GA world. Its been a long time since two airliners collided, and why is that? Because they can see the traffic around them on their computer screens (and have ATC of course).
      Youre saying that all the modern stuff keeps pilots from flying the plane, i find the opposite to be true. If i need to spend less time for navigation (GPS) and looking out for traffic i can use that extra capacity i now have for flying.

  • @kevinnee6588
    @kevinnee6588 Před 4 lety

    You missed a class D in the CT area, you mentioned Tweed, Bridgeport, and Waterbury/Oxford but you missed Sikorsky Heliport.

  • @DumbledoreMcCracken
    @DumbledoreMcCracken Před 4 lety

    If it isn't required under the shelf of Class C, then why do they bother saying "Lateral Boundaries"? They *could* have just said: "(3) Within, and up to 10,000 feet MSL above the ceiling of, Class B or Class C airspace area designated for an airport"?
    FAA is crazy.

    • @AVweb
      @AVweb  Před 4 lety +1

      The language is explained in the second video. You have read it together "above the ceiling and within lateral boundaries." I didn't explain it clearly in this video.

  • @David-ty1xz
    @David-ty1xz Před 4 lety

    Lateral boundary of CLASS C? This would include under the shelf, no? The Shelf is within the lateral boundary, right? "Question questions question clouding the minds of so many young people today".

  • @Curtster1962
    @Curtster1962 Před rokem

    So if my understanding is correct, the ADSB rules are almost identical to transponder rules? What I’m wondering is if one HAS a transponder and or ADSB installed, and is flying in an area where it’s not required (say, Class E airspace) must they be operating?

  • @jjohnston94
    @jjohnston94 Před 4 lety +1

    The FAA never met my parents. They'd let my brother do whatever he wanted, but me? Well, I "know better", so I couldn't.

  • @FrankBredow
    @FrankBredow Před 4 lety +9

    ADSB makes us all safer. In my opinion there should be be no airplane in the air without it. Old boomer airplanes included. Let's not talk about airplanes without a radio. Just letting you know that that we all are secretly judging you.

    • @DumbledoreMcCracken
      @DumbledoreMcCracken Před 4 lety

      NORDOs would be okay if everyone also had ADS-B in, and the system showed people's notional intended route. Little tougher for a sailplane though. The NAS is still in the stone age, and will always be.

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety

      I disagree. I've had ONE trip in the past two years that i could not have made without ADS-B. The economics are simply not there for it. A lot of people will be flying around the periphery of Class C to get to outlying airports on the other side and no longer talking to ATC, and no longer using flight following. The first two or three times some approach controller vectors somebody without it through prohibited airspace and then violate them for it, and word gets around, even if not totally true, people will stop using ATC for flight following and will stop talking to approach at all when circumnavigating the Class C or Class B to get to an outlying airport. And then you will have somebody without ADS--B on the edge of congested airspace no longer talking to anybody. I don't think they thought this thru. I think they made the judgement like you without evidence that everybody should be required to have it because it is nice for people who can afford the ADS-B In equipment. It's not gonna work quite as expected, IMHO.

    • @FrankBredow
      @FrankBredow Před 4 lety

      @@kellytrimble4120 Kelly Trimble You are right it is judgment call. The same rules apply for me and cars without seat belt and airbags. As for affordable. The ADSB requirement is 10 years old. Which is $33.00 per month for a 4k installation. At any point in the last ten years one could have started saving up for it. Of course this is easy for me to say I just rent and you seem to own. But too expensive is not a valid argument for anyone out there.

    • @truenorth636
      @truenorth636 Před 4 lety +1

      @@FrankBredow Or $16.50/month for a Uavionics skybeacon or tail beacon. Nothing to it. No excuse.

    • @kellytrimble4120
      @kellytrimble4120 Před 4 lety

      @@FrankBredow It's a very valid argument. I have twenty airplanes, mostly collectible. I was just explaining in another comment, I have one, a Culver V, which is nice, with radios GPS, whatever, not worth more than probably $ 12,000. $4k is simply not feasible.
      Second, I've analyzed my flying. In the past two years I made ONE trip that would have required ADS-B under the new rules, assuming we can fly under the shelf, and I really should have driven that one anyway. ADS-B simply doesn't pencil out. Sorry.
      Third, if you saved your pennies for ten years like you said, when you finally do install it, you need to start saving pennies again, because you will probably have to do it again. The experience with GPS is that the manufacturers quit supporting them with updated maps after a few years. We put Appollo 2001 GPS units, IFR certified and everything in probably seven or eight airplanes, put MX-20 moving maps in I think three or four of them, and they are all junk. After about ten years you couldn't get map updates. And there is some funky tech reason why some older GPS units don't work at all anymore, not even for VFR. That is the way avionics are headed. You get a big sell, spend a lot of money, and then you are required to do it again in six to ten years to stay current. AND I suspect there is some sort of ongoing maintenance or inspection requirement that will be coming on these if it isn't already there.
      Sorry, the economics are simply not there for it. I think it will result in a less safe flying environment. It is great for all of the big iron people who don't like having to look for traffic, but it will result in a lot of people who should be using flight following no longer doing so. I use VFR flight following all the time, almost every trip over thirty minutes. This thread has got me thinking and I am concluding that talking to ATC won't make any sense unless and until you are approaching the boundary of a Class D you intend to land at. I think other people are going to conclude the same thing once they actually think about it and actually do a long VFR cross country. Great for the corporate and commercial guys going in and out of the international airports or into the center of the Class C airports, but less safe out in the sticks.

  • @namewitheld
    @namewitheld Před 2 lety

    One year later and still blowing it off successfully.

  • @lelievre12
    @lelievre12 Před 4 lety

    Thanks Paul. Nice translation that even I can understand.

  • @johnmajane3731
    @johnmajane3731 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice job, clearly explains the requirements with some humor to keep it interesting.

  • @ZeeroGamingTV
    @ZeeroGamingTV Před 4 lety

    Cubs really going to have a market now.

  • @jamesmerkel9442
    @jamesmerkel9442 Před 4 lety

    If u fly slower than 300mph your fine, below 20k. Jets u should hve every safety thing u can hve.

  • @nvabill
    @nvabill Před 4 lety

    AVweb I think you need to correct the no under shelves statement you are making. It is perfectly legal to fly under the Class C shelves provided you are not in another type airspace preventing it.

  • @AflacMan13
    @AflacMan13 Před 4 lety

    Sooo... is there an ADS-B that just does all relevant freqs and both In & Out for both domestic AND international for on-the-cheap?

  • @leonchapman3578
    @leonchapman3578 Před 3 lety

    You know that cell phone in your pocket does the same thing so why the adsb its all about control little by little the people do nothing until one day they wake up realizing they arw bowing to the big ? (Your own input there )

  • @Tristan_Hayes
    @Tristan_Hayes Před 3 lety

    I'm relatively new to aviation... What do you mean "last vestige from rugged individualism and freedom from stifling overreach"?

  • @cumulusgrandus1996
    @cumulusgrandus1996 Před 4 lety

    Now that the bean counters can see who you are, you'll be getting the bill for utilizing airspace and ATC on the next go around of GA taxation. I'm sure EAA and AOPA will take that up the wazoo as readily as ADS-B.

  • @shammanas9332
    @shammanas9332 Před 4 měsíci

    Love this guy man 😆

  • @ferebeefamily
    @ferebeefamily Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the video.

  • @erikthered4929
    @erikthered4929 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video as usual, and merry Christmas... but there's a slight problem at czcams.com/video/gnSeOR3nnx0/video.html. Thank god I do not wear headphones, because if I did I think I'd be hearing a ringing noise all day, but I have large PC speakers and that alarm sound practically blew out the cones on the speakers compared to the rest of the video. The volume discrepancy was HUGE. I'd love to se better audio editing for these videos, but regardless thanks for all the great content!

  • @gnielse
    @gnielse Před 4 lety +1

    Fantastic. Will I need the e-mail permission to get the certification flights done in my plane once the install is complete?

    • @hemp184
      @hemp184 Před 4 lety +1

      As far as I know, you're not actually required to verify an ADS-B installation though. You can just fly it and then run a performance report afterward (nbaa.org/aircraft-operations/communications-navigation-surveillance-cns/ads-b/verify-your-ads-b-performance-with-free-faa-web-tool/)
      I guess if ATC says "We don't see you on ADS-B" then you'll know it's not working. :) Would be the same if your Mode C transponder quit.

  • @derekrausch3499
    @derekrausch3499 Před 4 lety

    I don’t think you need ads-b under class c...

  • @jamesmerkel9442
    @jamesmerkel9442 Před 4 lety

    Ppl hve been flying since 30s & they managed. Most ppl want new tech but not req.

  • @screamingbeagleproductions1876

    You can fly under the class C shelves. It is typically class E airspace not C and there is no "veil" rule. Here is the FAA's own diagram. www.faa.gov/nextgen/equipadsb/research/airspace/media/airspaceRequirements.jpg

  • @blaster-zy7xx
    @blaster-zy7xx Před 4 lety

    Cool, he used my home airport of Punta Gorda for his class D example. I wonder if the rental planes will have ADS B?

    • @Sokeresa
      @Sokeresa Před 4 lety

      Yeah, and it would cost another arm and half a leg to rent now Haha
      Hope you can fly with half a limb

  • @AndrewBoundy
    @AndrewBoundy Před 4 lety

    Great video - thanks!

  • @marcjacobson6096
    @marcjacobson6096 Před 4 lety +1

    You said anything under the shelf meaning under class B & C shelves but the FAA website shows this diagram that shows ADS-B is NOT required under the class C shelf. So which is it? www.faa.gov/nextgen/equipadsb/research/airspace/media/airspaceRequirements.jpg

  • @alanaspurling6469
    @alanaspurling6469 Před 4 lety

    I’m no expert on this topic, but don’t your non-electrical aircraft still have to use the online app?

  • @jpoppinmoneyunit7098
    @jpoppinmoneyunit7098 Před 4 lety +1

    What about tricky Anchorage Alaska airspace? The only way into Merrill field is the East mountain side? The published VFR procedures in class D airspace also say mode C transponder required so does that mean ads-b too?

    • @CaptGreg-wl1wb
      @CaptGreg-wl1wb Před 4 lety

      jpoppinmoneyunit I’m just hoping it’s not needed to fly in the pattern at Merrill until I can get mine installed.

    • @kevina8172
      @kevina8172 Před 4 lety

      really good question. Ship creek hi or low never needed a transponder, so I for one still don't get it, I do know I used to fly Birtchwood to Seldovia over or under Anc Class C with or without a transponder, No more with out ADSB

    • @AustNRail
      @AustNRail Před 4 lety

      kevin arseneau wow you admit to being up ship creek? I’ve been there without a paddle here in Oz!

    • @andrewalexander9492
      @andrewalexander9492 Před 4 lety

      @@kevina8172
      " Ship creek hi or low never needed a transponder "
      No, that's not true. Ship Creek high departure puts you either in, or over Anchorage Class C Airspace, and a Mode C transponder has been required for that for quite a while. The only departures from Merrill Field to the Northwest which would be legal without a Mode-C transponder would be departures which stay below the 600 ft limit of Part 93, an after that, below the 1400 MSL floor of Anchorage Class C.
      "I used to fly Birtchwood to Seldovia over or under Anc Class C with or without a transponder"
      Again, flying over Class C Airspace requires a Mode -C transponder, the flight you describe would not be legal (Unless you were flying over 10,000 MSL).

    • @kevina8172
      @kevina8172 Před 4 lety

      @@andrewalexander9492 so I learned to fly at Merrill in 1975 a lot has changed, Both of my Bonanzas have/had modeC but the cubs did not and They gave ship creek hi all the time. Sold the last Merrill based Champ 20 yrs ago no transponder, so things change, you must be a CFI so can I fly above the 4,100 Class C with ADSB without talking to ATC
      next month?

  • @paulcrooks3742
    @paulcrooks3742 Před 3 lety

    So what is ADS b in

  • @adamjhuber
    @adamjhuber Před 4 lety +2

    I’ll try my new headphones I got for Christmas while watching this video. 6:39 RIP my ears!

  • @speedomars
    @speedomars Před 3 lety

    ADS-B out is a way to show you are not a D....that is, a toad in the sky who doesn't about others safety, even if you don't care about yourself. How many pilots are like that...sadly, likely too many.

  • @zendean5207
    @zendean5207 Před 4 lety +1

    Wtf with that alarm sound? It was so loud me and both of my dogs jumped out of our skins!.

    • @theLuigiFan0007Productions
      @theLuigiFan0007Productions Před 3 lety

      Well, if you look at the average volume in his videos, it's way under standard normalization of -1dB.
      Honestly, that's a major improvement he could make before uploading, and it would help improve content quality.
      I put this up to show the difference if you normalize the voice first. czcams.com/video/54ld5GdCg6A/video.html

  • @FGCH03
    @FGCH03 Před 4 lety

    Hello do you have any video about the below 10000 speed restriction it is msl or agl?

  • @christopherg9806
    @christopherg9806 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for blowing my ear drums out.

  • @bushyfly2
    @bushyfly2 Před 4 lety +1

    Are you sure about needing ADS-B under the shelf of class C? I see conflicting info about that including FAA websites. Reading the regs I can't confirm one way or the other. Depends on what a persons bend of thought is.

    • @AVweb
      @AVweb  Před 4 lety

      Under shelves of Class B only.

    • @bushyfly2
      @bushyfly2 Před 4 lety

      @@AVweb Thank you

    • @tonytheflyer
      @tonytheflyer Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah I caught that too. I just had a friend ask me that same question yesterday and all graphics I found that show where ADS-B is required clearly do not include under class C shelves.

    • @bushyfly2
      @bushyfly2 Před 4 lety

      @@tonytheflyer Glad we got clarification on that. Thanks to Paul.

    • @tonytheflyer
      @tonytheflyer Před 4 lety

      @@bushyfly2 Yep. Apparently it's common point of confusion for some reason. I was reading a Pilot's of America thread yesterday and it was a constant yes it is, no its not back and forth lol.