Title: Oceanic Air Traffic Services
1Oceanic Air Traffic Services
Will Tidmarsh VATPAC
An overview
2Outline
- Overview of Oceanic Procedures in VATPAC
- Some pictures and real world examples
- Not intended to be a tutorial on oceanic
techniques these are covered in VATPACs
Oceanic Manual. - Questions welcome any time (VATPAC or Real World
flying, etc). But remember Im only a pilot!
3What is Oceanic Airspace?
4Oceanic Airspace What is it?
- Controlled and uncontrolled airspace over the
worlds major oceans. - Nadi FIR Class A
- Brisbane FIR Class A down to 60 South, then
Class G (uncontrolled). - Lack of radar coverage means aircraft separation
is achieved using procedural methods
5Oceanic Airspace VATPAC?
6Procedural Fundamentals
- Two types of procedural separation
- Longitudinal
- one aircraft following another
- one aircraft climbing or descending through the
level of an opposite direction aircraft - one aircraft crossing the path of another
- Vertical
- An aircraft cruising or crossing above or below
another - Both types are used regularly!
7Longitudinal Separation Basics
- Can use time or distance, but time is the most
common worldwide (also the most basic no need
for special ground or aircraft equipment). - Eg. Most flights SE Asia Europe spend around 6
hours flight time under time-based longitudinal
separation.
8Longitudinal Separation Basics
- Time
- Distance
- DME
- RNAV (RNP)
- Here are some useful standards
9Basic Time Standards
- 15 minutes between following aircraft
- If Mach Number Technique used, this is reduced to
a nominal 10 minutes
10Basic Time Standards contd
- Where aircraft tracks cross each other, 15
minutes separation is required at track
intersection.
11Basic Time Standards contd
- Time standards are often cumbersome and very
conservative - They restrict traffic flow and airspace capacity
- A big problem on routes from SE Asia to Europe
- Afghanistan is the bottleneck
- Non-RVSM
- Only two routes through the country
- Extensive enroute holding, delays (costly!)
- Solution? BOBCAT!
- Bay of Bengal Cooperative Air Traffic Flow
Management System - A centralised flow management system. Takeoff
Slot times for aircraft departing SIN, BKK and
KUL at peak times. - Aims to arrange aircraft into a steady flow
separated by 10 minutes by the Afghanistan
(Kabul) FIR boundary - So far so good
12Basic Distance Standards - DME
- Achieved by comparing distance of two (or more)
aircraft from a common DME station. - Eg. Air Canada 522 and Qantas 127, in turn,
request your DME distance Lord Howe Island - Only applicable to aircraft on the same or
closely converging tracks not crossing tracks - Requires regular distance checks and updates when
used (to ensure separation is being maintained)
13DME Standard contd
- 20nm separation required between following
aircraft (15nm if one aircraft climbing or
descending through the level of another) - Opposite direction aircraft may climb or descend
through anothers level once the aircraft have
passed and there is 10 DME difference between
them - Accurate technique (and reduced separation
standard), but very few DME stations in oceanic
areas!
14Basic Distance Standards - RNAV
- RNAV refers to an Area Navigation system this
is usually an aircrafts FMS. - RNAV distance-based separation may be applied
between RNAV-equipped aircraft only - FMS positions are very accurate! So RNAV
separation standards can be lowered. - The most efficient form of procedural airspace!
15RNAV Standard contd
- Oceanic airspace often specifies a Required
Navigation Performance or RNP (eg. RNP10). - This is a statistical value, and represents the
maximum cross-track error (in nautical miles)
expected 95 of the time by aircraft in that
airspace. - VATPAC has adopted RNP10 as the standard for its
Oceanic Airspace. - (Real world has widely adopted RNP4 in oceanic
areas, but this requires ADS/CPDLC - to be
discussed).
16RNP10 Separation Standards
- RNAV RNP10 aircraft climbing, cruising or
descending on the same track must be separated by
at least 50nm (with the Mach Number Technique),
provided that - each aircraft reports its distance to or from the
same waypoint - simultaneous distance checks are regularly
carried out to ensure that the 50nm separation is
being maintained - in the case of aircraft climbing or descending,
one aircraft maintains a level while vertical
separation (eg. 1000ft) does not exist
17RNP10 Separation contd
- Aircraft on converging or diverging tracks are
laterally separated using a table of track angle
versus distance. This table is reproduced in the
Oceanic Procedures Manual. - Opposite direction aircraft may climb or descend
through the others level after visually sighting
and passing each other or once 50nm RNAV distance
has elapsed.
18Recap -Longitudinal Separation
- Time (15 mins, or 10 mins Mach No.)
- Distance
- DME (good, but rare in Oceanic Airspace)
- RNAV (RNP10) (great, when both aircraft approved
and fitted) - Next, Vertical Separation
19Vertical Separation Standards
- Primitive, but fail-safe!
- Advent of RVSM (Reduced Vertical Separation
Minima) has enabled aircraft with accurate
altimetry systems to be separated by 1000ft
vertically, rather than 2000ft. - Has effectively doubled capacity of upper
airspace - In the real world, some areas still yet to
implement RVSM (and are therefore bottlenecks!)
including.
20Afghanistan
21China (metric altimetry!)
22Vertical Separation contd
- Aircraft being separated by solely vertical means
shall have the following separation minima
applied - 1000ft in RVSM airspace, between RVSM capable
aircraft - 2000ft in RVSM airspace, where one or both
aircraft not RVSM capable - 2000ft in non-RVSM airspace, at and above FL290
- 1000ft in non-RVSM airspace, below FL290
- 3000ft where one or both aircraft are supersonic
- Note In VATPAC airspace, RVSM exists between
FL290FL410 (inclusive) - Some aircraft arent RVSM approved or certified,
or are incapable of RVSM ops on the day. Eg
23Spare Engine (Fifth Pod) Ops
24Ugly, but useful
25Oceanic Communications
- VHF range insufficient, so High Frequency (HF)
Radio used. Very long range! - Noisy and prone to atmospheric interference. (But
this adds charm!) - So, radio procedures are more formal
- UAL873 San Francisco, San Francisco, United 873
on 8867khz - San Francisco United 873, San Francisco, go
ahead - UAL873 San Francisco, United 873 request climb
FL390
26HF Comms contd - SELCAL
- Selective Calling (SELCAL) allows crews to turn
their radios down - If ATC needs to contact the flight, they
broadcast a unique four letter DTMF code
corresponding to that aircraft. This activates a
chime on the flight deck. - SELCAL is checked with ATC prior to tuning out
- Eg.
- Auckland Evergreen 6985 roger, FL310, Auckland
guard primary this frequency, secondary 8867,
LM-AF his four letter SELCAL code.. selcal
27HF Comms contd
- When in VATPAC Oceanic Airspace, voice
communications are assumed to be on simulated
HF. - SELCAL is also simulated.
- The procedures for HF and SELCAL are described in
the Oceanic Procedures Manual.
28Oceanic Procedures Manual
- This is the primary reference document for
Oceanic ATC within VATPAC and VATNZ. Presented in
a user-friendly manner with separation and
airspace diagrams etc. - Detailed information on
- Separation standards and techniques
- Position reports
- Communications and simulated SELCAL procedures
- Controller co-ordination
- Pacific airspace classification, callsigns and
frequencies - Special VATSIM procedures (eg. time compression)
- Oceanic Controller Endorsement (required for
controllers) - Available from VATPAC website.
- Controlling in Oceanic Airspace is an enjoyable
challenge!
29Real World CPDLC (Datalink)
- The last few years have seen the widespread
uptake of Controller-Pilot Datalink
Communications (CPDLC) in many FIRs. - Connection is established between the aircrafts
Flight Management Computer and the controllers
workstation via satellite (or via an ACARS VHF
ground station, when in range). - Firstly, we must log on
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31CPDLC (Datalink) contd
- Once logged on, we can communicate with the
controller using pre-formatted or free text
messages, and send position and meteorological
data.
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34CPDLC (Datalink) contd
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38Real World ADS
- Automatic Dependent Surveillance (ADS) technology
becoming increasingly widespread. - The aircraft FMC automatically downlinks aircraft
position data to the Controller every 30 seconds
or so, giving a radar-like display of aircraft
position. - This allows separation standards to be even
further reduced (eg. from RNP10/50nm to
RNP4/30nm)! - Already implemented in real world South Pacific
and USA Oceanic airspace.
39Question time!
40Thank you!