FCC cancels 121.5 MHz ELT prohibition

Started by Eclipse, January 13, 2011, 06:46:29 PM

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Eclipse

FCC cancels 121.5 MHz ELT prohibition

The Federal Communications Commission has formally stayed its rule on the prohibition on the certification, manufacture, importation, sale or use of emergency locator transmitters (ELTs) that transmit distress alerts on frequency 121.5 MHz.2.
The FCC took this action at the request of the FAA. FCC officials are planning a new Notice requesting public comment on the future of legacy 121.5 ELTs to be released sometime in early 2011.

On June 15, the FCC proposed the ban on the 121.5 MHz ELTs, which was followed by an uproar in the GA community. On July 14, the FAA asked the FCC not to implement the rule, noting that the current supply of 406 MHz ELTs is not sufficient to replace all existing 121.5 MHz ELTs in the short term, so, given that most general aviation aircraft are required to carry ELTs, a prohibition on 121.5 MHz ELTs would effectively ground most GA aircraft.

In the stay, filed Jan. 10, 2011, the FCC notes that the FAA "further asserts that 121.5 MHz ELTs can continue to provide a beneficial means of locating missing aircraft even without satellite monitoring of frequency 121.5 MHz, because the frequency is still monitored by the search and rescue community, including the Civil Air Patrol." The FAA is also is concerned about the cost of equipping aircraft with 406 MHz ELTs.

"Under these circumstances, we believe it would be in the public interest to further consider what actions the Commission should take in light of the termination of satellite monitoring of frequency 121.5 MHz, with the benefit of an augmented record," the FCC stay reads.

"That Others May Zoom"

coudano

pretty simple.
121.5 is wideband
FCC/NTIA wants the frequency space around it.

not surprising.


wait until they force broadcast radio over, and all of your legacy car stereos stop working ;)

Spaceman3750

Quote from: coudano on January 13, 2011, 07:08:42 PM
pretty simple.
121.5 is wideband
FCC/NTIA wants the frequency space around it.

not surprising.


wait until they force broadcast radio over, and all of your legacy car stereos stop working ;)

They shouldn't be encroaching on a distress frequency to satisfy their frequency lust. In addition to distress beacons, 121.5 can be used for transmitting mayday signals if necessary, because everyone's supposed to be listening to it. Take that away, and you no longer have that "safety net".

Eclipse

Is a distress frequency encroaching on broadcast space a "bad" thing?

Doesn't that help find the "offender".

"That Others May Zoom"