Title: Assessment of Radio Spectrum Depletion on ATC Voice Communications
1Assessment of Radio Spectrum Depletion onATC
Voice Communications
Steve Zaidman, AAF-1 George Sakai, ASR-1 Federal
Aviation Administration Washington, DC September
16, 2003
There are no benefits to compromising safetyonly
dire consequences
2Objective
- To determine the availability of frequencies to
meet the FAAs spectrum requirements until 2015
3Methodology
- How many new en-route sectors can be accommodated
in todays environment at all 20 centers - Without implementation of 23 Initiatives?
- With the implementation of some Initiatives?
- With optimization?
- How many new terminal requirements can be
supported at 4 major OEP airports - Without implementation of 23 Initiatives?
- With the implementation of some Initiatives?
- With optimization?
4Spectrum Depletion Analysis(Without
Implementation of 23 Initiatives)
5 Spectrum Depletion Analysis Cont(Without
Implementation of 23 Initiatives)
6Spectrum Depletion Analysis Cont(With
Implementation of Some Initiatives)
Notes --- indicates that the frequency can be
assigned if inter-modulation problems are
resolved Values in ( ) indicate the
total number of potential assignments, including
---
7Spectrum Depletion Analysis - Cont(With
Implementation of Some Initiatives)
Notes --- indicates that the frequency can be
assigned if inter-modulation problems are
resolved Values in ( ) indicate the
total number of potential assignments, including
---
8Spectrum Depletion Analysis - Cont(With
Optimization)
- En-route To support 1 additional high sector
requirement for ZNY, the following re-tunes to
the existing environment are required
- Terminal To support 1 additional
departure/arrival requirement at JFK, the
following re-tunes to the existing environment
are required
9Spectrum Depletion Analysis Summary
- Without Optimization of Existing Environment
- En-route No channels available for Super High,
High, and Low sectors in ZAU, ZDC, ZID, ZNY, ZOB,
and ZTL - Terminal No channels available for JFK, ATL,
ORD, and DFW - With Optimization of Existing Environment
- Provides the potential ability to satisfy
additional requirements - Examples
- En-route 6 existing facilities need to be
re-tuned to accommodate 1 new high enroute sector
in ZNY - Terminal 5 existing facilities need to be
re-tuned to accommodate 1 new departure/arrival
requirement at JFK
10What We Can Support until 2015
- En-route
- Without Optimization
- Accommodate up to 3 new Super High, High, or Low
en-route sector requirements for the Eastern-half
of the US (provided that 2 flight-inspection
channels are moved above 136 MHz and a frequency
swap with AFTRCC is accomplished) - If all commercial and business aircraft are
equipped with 760 channel radios, up to 30
additional new Super High, High, or Low en-route
sector requirements in the US can be accommodated - With Optimization
- May be able to satisfy additional requirements
(approx. 3-5) in the Eastern-half of the US,
however, it would be difficult and costly - Terminal
- Without Optimization
- No frequencies currently available for the 4 OEP
airports used in the study. Other OEP airports
will likely have similar or limited number of
available channels. - With Optimization
- Additional requirements (2-3 per OEP airport in
congested areas) may be satisfied
11What Needs to be Done if NEXCOM IOCis Delayed
Until 2015
- Restrict Air-Traffic operational requirements
(e.g. National Airspace Re-Design) - Obtain funding to complete the following
- Procure maintenance radios for AF technicians
(frees-up 2 flight inspection frequencies below
136 MHz) - Move users above 136 MHz (Treasury, Customs,
AFTRCC, etc.) - Procure equipment for increased co-site
interference mitigation - Optimize the VHF spectrum in congested areas
- Procure equipment and resources for more
selective keying (frees up approx. 113 frequency
assignments) - Procure equipment and resources for 6 kHz
off-set carrier frequency use - Require all commercial and business aircraft to
upgrade to 760 channel radios (This will require
rule-making) - Air-Traffic needs to complete Phase II of the AT
frequency audit
12BackgroundInformation
13Problem Limited VHF Resource ? FAA ? DoD
? Other Federal ? Non-Federal
76-88 MHz TVChannels 5,6
108-137 MHz VHF Nav and Comm
88-108MHz FM Broadcast
54-72 MHz TV Channels 2,3,4
NAV
COMM.
108-117.975 MHz
117.975 MHz-137.0 MHz
VOR / ILS
ATC
ATC
ATC
AOC
Other
AOC
124 MHz
129 MHz
137.0 MHz
118 MHz
122 MHz
132 MHz
108 MHz
136.5 MHz
136.0MHz
ATC Voice
ATC Voice
AOC Voice ACARS
ATC Voice
14Current VHF Spectrum Utilization
Channel Usage
Air Traffic Services Usage
Others 10
EnRoute 25.3
Terminal 40.2
ATS 70.5
AOC 19.5
ATIS/AWOS/ASOS 15.3
Search Rescue 6.7 (121.5 MHz, 123.1 MHz)
All Others 12.5
Total Number of Channels Available (118-137 MHz)
760 Total Channels Available for ATC
535 Number of channels include those channels
made available from implemented VHF initiatives
to date.
15U. S. Growth of ATC Frequency Assignments
Average increase in number of channel assignments
per year 307
16This Leads to VHF Congestion
- Increasingly difficult to satisfy ATC
requirements in some parts of the country - New York
- Washington D.C.
- Chicago
- Cleveland
- Atlanta
- New spectrum requirements continue to grow --
additional sectors, runways, FIS, AWOS/ASOS, etc.
17(No Transcript)
18VHF 23 Initiatives
- Developed to obtain additional spectrum resources
or to make available current spectrum resources
through various proposals - Regulatory
- Technical
- Administrative
19VHF 23 Initiatives (Regulatory Proposals)
- Review FCC frequency utilization plan and
investigate the use of UNICOM and other FCC
aeronautical frequencies for ATC - Investigate the possibility of using FSS channels
for ATC, including the frequencies 123.6 through
123.65 MHz - Review fire-fighting frequency assignment policy
- Review policy for AWOS and ASOS frequency use
- Review air show frequency policy
20VHF 23 Initiatives (Technical Proposals)
- Investigate use of part of 121.5 MHz guard band
for ATC channels - Investigate use of the band 136-137 MHz
- Investigate use of existing communications
air/ground radios on VOR frequencies for AWOS and
ASOS (broadcast only) - Investigate offset operation (/- 6 to 10 kHz
off-tuned from the primary frequency) for high
altitude use - Investigate lowering ground control transmit
antennas - Investigate advantages of optimizing equipment
location - Investigate co-site mitigation techniques, for
example, new technologies such as active
interference cancellers, and testing to determine
use of lower transmit powers
21VHF 23 Initiatives (Administrative Proposals)
- Conduct Air Traffic audit of ATC frequencies
- Investigate alternate frequencies for flight
check - Investigate use of law enforcement channels
- Review operational coverage requirements for
communications facilities - Review ground control sub-band
- Review use of two VHF DoD common channels
- Modify FAA data base to accept additional data
which would allow tighter packing of
frequencies - Improve coordination with ARINC on their VHF
frequency usage - Investigate increased use of select keying and
voting systems - Re-use ground control frequencies at high
altitude (vertical separation) - Review use of high-gain (directional) antennas