Basic DF / ELT Training Course
Basic DF / ELT Training Course
OBJECTIVES
By the end of this course, you should:
Know what an ELT is, and how it can be activated Understand why an ELT signal is an emergency Describe how CAP is called out on an electronic search Be familiar with these fundamentals:
Plotting a SARSAT hit on a map (latitude/longitude) Direction finding - Little L-Per Operation Triangulation Body shielding Aircraft coordination/LORAN/GPS operations Ground Vehicle Operations
Is An Aircraft Missing?
How would we know?
Radio distress call Monitored aircraft drops from RADAR Overdue Flight Plan Report from friends/relatives ELT Signal (maybe!)
Advanced Technology
Few of these resources available directly to CAP
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), Thermal/Infrared Imagery, Other Remote Sensing (satellites/reconnaissance aircraft)
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Aircraft Limitations
Weather Cant pinpoint signal
Row of hangers
Bastard Search
Ensure the missing person isnt in a favorite hangout You bastard!
3 Frequencies of Operation
121.5 MHz (VHF) AND 243 MHz (UHF) (Military Guard) 406.025 MHz (new)
Malfunction
switch short battery leakage
Who is listening?
SARSAT/COSPAS FAA Facilities
FSS, Centers, Towers
Airliners
Only if pilot chooses
Military Aircraft
243 MHz Required
SARSAT/COSPAS
Operated by Canada, France, Russia, USA They give us digital lat-long coordinates
CAP Mission Coordinator plots these and assigns assets Ground teams must interpret for land navigation
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Second Pass
Where Is It?
average 30-45 minute wait Ambiguity resolved 5-12 Nautical Mile Average Error
System Review
ELT, PLB, EPIRB Signal Received AFRCC gets coordinates from SARSAT Appropriate CAP Wing is activated
False Alarms
97% of received ELTs are false alarms
121.5 MHz: 1 in 1000 is an actual emergency (0.1%) 406 MHz: 1 in 8 is an actual emergency (12.5%)
Transportation to Target
Ground Teams generally will use vehicles for transportation to and from mission base Aircraft Coordination will get the Ground Team to the target the fastest If no aircraft is available:
Vehicles provide enough speed and range to triangulate Close range may be required for signal acquisition
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Direction Finding
DF unit Measures equal strengths of signal
not wholly accurate, but good enough!
Therefore, when needle is centered, ELT could be either direction Needle always POINTS to the ELT (DF=Direct to the Flipping target) Use a TURN to TELL if the ELT is in front or behind you
Turn the unit to DF (Direct to the Flipping target) Turn at least one FULL circle, stopping and calling, Center! Check: Use Turn to Tell: the needle will point Direct to the Flipping target Use your compass, shoot an azimuth to get a bearing to the ELT
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Reflections
Caused by flat surfaces
Hangars are notorious Rock wall, cliff, or mountains
To beat reflections
Check sensitivity half scale often Use RECeive mode Rubber ducky antenna Off-frequency tuning Usually strongest DF center is not a reflection
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Best method for ground troops to get an accurate fix when search aircraft support is unavailable You must be able to receive the signal
Center up DF unit on the signal Take the magnetic bearing (shoot an azimuth) Correct for magnetic variation
East is least, West is best
Triangulation
Plot your bearings (draw a line) on map The ELT should be where the lines cross!
Body Shielding
Can use L-Per Radio Shack JETSTREAM radio is better and CHEAP! At extremely close range, a 2m VHF radio unsquelched may work
This works ok when trying to figure out a particular aircraft on a flight line, it will probably not identify a particular hangar
Off-Frequency Tuning
Decrease sensitivity when:
Sensitivity (L-Per) is at the minimum and signal is still too strong (full scale on receive) You dont get a null during body shielding You dont have a sensitivity knob (Jetstream) Shortening (Jetstream) or removing (Little L-Per) the antenna will also decrease sensitivity
Off-Frequency tuning may be used any time you have too much signal, but this technique is especially effective during body shielding
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Especially true in low batteries, or odd transmissions You can tell by DEFLECTION Good needle deflection generally indicates a signal that is strong enough to DF
Fence Line (signal can follow) Coffee Can/Stovepipe effect Hangars Moving Target
1998 Scott E. Lanis
Summary
You Should Now:
Know what an ELT is and how it can be activated Understand why an ELT signal is an emergency Describe how CAP is called out on an electronic search Be familiar with these fundamentals:
Plotting a SARSAT hit on a map (latitude/longitude) Direction finding - Little L-Per Operation Triangulation Body shielding Aircraft coordination/LORAN/GPS operations Ground Vehicle Operations
QUESTIONS?