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AUXAIR & ADS-B - What you need to know Submitted by: Bill Melohn We re less than 2 years away from the F.A.A. s mandate for installing ADS-B Out (Automated Dependent Surveillance, Broadcast ) equipment on all civilian aircraft that today are required to have a Mode C transponder in and around Class B and C airspace, as well as above 10,000 MSL (Mean Sea Level). What will be the specific ADS-B requirements for AUXAIR facilities and operations? What do facility owners need to know now before installing ADS-B devices? There s been a great deal of information available to aircraft owners about ADS-B technology available from many sources, but did you know that the concept has already been in active use with marine vessels since 2002? The Automated Identification System (AIS) is required for all commercial US vessels over 65 feet in length; larger ocean going vessels are required to periodically broadcast their position information via satellite or via VHF ground based receivers. AIS, which is administered by the Coast Guard in the U.S., has proven its effectiveness and scalability of broadcast mechanisms for tracking ships and avoiding collisions. ADS-B hopes to accomplish many of the same goals for aircraft. For those of us planning to use our aircraft facilities for both private and Coast Guard operations, there are some important details to know about what sort of ADS-B solutions are necessary, and how we will be expected to use them March 2018 Inside this issue: AuxAir & ADS-B; What you need to know Wearing Jewelry While Underway How and where to find people that have VHF and HF radios Navigating the Surface Operations Manuals Continued on Page 2 1

starting on 1 Jan 2020. AUXAIR & ADS-B (continued) First of all, the 1 Jan 2020 mandate only requires ADS-B Out to be installed on aircraft. That is an ADS-B transmitter (utilizing a highly accurate WAAS GPS source) that will broadcast a message once per second containing the aircraft s location, identification, and other information. The broadcast can be received by other aircraft, ground stations, or anyone within range of the aircraft. This will allow Air Traffic Control to use ground stations along with their existing surveillance radar to track aircraft in controlled airspace with greater resolution than existing radar alone. There are two different communications bands used by ADS- B in the U.S.: UAT and ES. UAT (Universal Access Transceiver), at 978 MHz, is permitted for any aircraft that flies below Class A airspace, and provides The Responder is produced by the National Response Directorate, United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, at no cost to the U.S. Coast Guard or the Coast Guard Auxiliary. Please submit articles for Publication, via the chain of leadership and management, to the editor: Lauren A Getty lauren.pugh@cgauxnet.us Confidentiality Notice: PRIVACY ACT OF 1974: The disclosure of the personal information contained in this publication is subject to the provisions contained in the Privacy Act of 1974. The subject Act, with certain exceptions, prohibits the disclosure, distribution, dissemination or copying of any material containing the home address, home telephone number, spouses names, and social security numbers, except for official business. Violations may result in disciplinary action by the Coast Guard and/or civilian criminal sanctions. Continued on page 3 2

AUXAIR & ADS-B (continued) enough bandwidth to offer not only traffic but other ground to cockpit information, called FIS- B. This can include graphic weather products such as NEXRAD radar images, METARs, TAFs, and TFRs. Reception of these products are optional. It is possible to receive them via a portable ADS-B In device like the Stratus or Dual which displays these products, as well as traffic information, on a portable device like an ipad. ES (Extended Squitter), at 1090 MHz, is the band currently used by your ATC transponder to respond to requests generated by the sweep of ground radar. Since it is more heavily used, FIS-B services are not provided on this band, just traffic information. ES is the means defined for sending ADS-B messages on 1090MHz. It is compatible with existing radar transponders, and is required in all countries other than the U.S. It is also required for aircraft operations above 18,000 feet in the U.S. As mentioned earlier, one of the parameters sent over ADS-B from each aircraft is the aircraft s Flight ID. For most all Private Pilot operations, the Flight ID will be the N number registration for your aircraft. If you currently file flight plans and request ATC services using only your N number, nothing will change for you after 2020. However, if you are conducting a Coast Guard AUXAIR mission and normally use your AUXAIR call sign (i.e. AUXAIR 123AB) in filed flight plans and ATC radio communications, you will be expected to have a Flight ID that matches your call sign. This means two important things that you must know to fly using AUXAIR call signs after 1 Jan 2020. Your ADS-B installation MUST provide for the ability to edit your Flight ID from the cockpit. This is a typical feature of 1090 ES based ADS-B Out devices, like the Garmin GTX 345. It is NOT a typical feature of the standalone 978 UAT transceivers, many of which are designed to learn the appropriate ADS-B Out information by observing the transponder code of your ATC Continued on Page 4 3

AUXAIR & ADS-B (continued) transponder, which is still required in your aircraft. They will typically be setup by the avionics installer to use your N number as your Flight ID. This means with many UAT installations you will NOT be able to use an AUXAIR call sign with an ATC radar facility after 1 Jan 2020; you ll identify yourself as N123AB, corresponding with your Flight ID and flight plan. To what do you need to set your ADS-B Flight ID in order to use an AUXAIR call sign? The Coast Guard Auxiliary has its own ICAO registered 3 letter prefix that designates your flight as AUXAIR. That prefix is CGX, so if you plan to fly a mission using the ATC call sign Coast Guard AUXAIR 3AB, you must edit your Flight ID prior to ATC contact and replace your N number with CGX3AB. You should use this call sign when filing your flight plan as well. Important: When not flying Coast Guard missions, you must change your Flight ID back to your N number. Even when using your AUXAIR ID, you will still be visible to ADS-B receivers as both CXG3AB and your N registered call sign, because both your Flight ID and your ICAO registered 24 bit address are included in each ADS-B Out transmission. The F.A.A. is currently monitoring ADS-B transmissions nationwide, looking for configuration errors where the Flight ID and 24 bit address are in disagreement; they will soon be cross referencing Flight ID and flight plan information, so it is important to use the same information in your filed flight plan, call sign, and Flight ID. For more information on this topic, and a survey of many popular avionics manufacturers products, please refer to the article from AOPA Pilot: https://www.aopa.org/news-andmedia/all-news/2017/october/pilot/adsbchanging-flight-id If you have further questions about Flight ID, please reference F.A.A. AC 90-114, which explains the legal requirements for operating ADS-B equipment in the U.S. Section 4-6B covers Flight ID. The F.A.A. Safety Briefing of March 2017 explains the issues in great detail. Also refer to the Auxiliary Aviation Training Manual, M16798, chapter 6, section C4. ADS-B offers new capabilities for managing the airspace, and potentially much more accurate position information in the case where aircraft are missing or outside of conventional radar Continued on page 5 4

coverage. It s our responsibility as pilots to equip our aircraft with the proper ADS-B solution for our needs, and as Aux pilots, we need to also understand how to properly request Aux specific handling when using ADS-B. Wearing Jewelry While Underway Submitted by Rick Saunders DIRd Response Whenever we are involved in Surface Operations, safety should always be a key focus of every mission. The instructions for wearing of jewelry are very clear, don t do it. This is a safety issue. Whenever you are on a Surface Operations Patrol the conditions and mission can change very quickly. We need to be ready to adapt and safely respond to these changing demands and conditions. The instructions are clear and are repeated, with emphasis, 6 times in the Boat Crew Seamanship Manual, COMDTINST M16114.5. The wearing of jewelry, including rings, wristwatches, necklaces or other items not consisting of organizational clothing, PPE, or uniform articles by boat crew members engaged in hoisting, towing, or other deck evolutions where the potential for snagging exists is prohibited. OICs and Coxswains will address this during all pre-underway briefs and Coxswains shall ensure jewelry is removed prior to beginning all deck evolutions. I would also like to remind you that all crewmembers shall wear: the appropriate uniform authorized in the Auxiliary Manual, COMDTINST M16790.1 (series), or OPORDERs (as authorized in paragraph F.7 of Chapter 1). Remember when we are on patrol we represent not only the Auxiliary but also the US Coast Guard. We should do this with professionalism and pride. How and where to find people that have VHF and HF radios (and understanding how to set up and operate them) Submitted by Don Wellons - BC-RTI Six years ago an idea was formed in D7. Why not set up recruiting tables at Amateur Radio Ham Fests to recruit amateur radio operators to join the Coast Guard Auxiliary and participate in our communications programs? They know radios! We started at the Orlando Florida HamCation, one of the largest HamFests in the world. We Continued on page 6 5

How and where to find people (continued) talked with hundreds of amateur radio operators, passed out our literature and invited them to join the Coast Guard Auxiliary. The following year several people came by the recruiting table to tell us that they had indeed joined the Coast Guard Auxiliary and were participating in the communications programs. That has happened every year since. Some have told us that they are now communications officers. Last year we expanded our recruiting to the Tampa Bay HamFest as well as the Orlando HamCation. This year we had a recruiting table at the Tampa Bay Ham Fest and Orlando HamCation and plan to have a recruiting table at a Ham Fest in the Atlanta area later this year. At the Orlando HamCation this year our recruiting table was located just inside the front door of the building where all attendees had to pass our table to deposit their tickets in a drum for drawings for prizes. Consequently we had over 13,000 Amateur Radio operators walk by and view our recruiting table. Boy, we sure did talk with a LOT of people! Another thing we have done for the past six years is reserve a private room at a local restaurant in Orlando for a communications meeting on the Saturday evening of the Orlando HamCation. We invite prospective members, interested Amateur operators and D7 members as well as Auxiliary members from other Districts. The turnout is always good and a lot of good ideas are shared. A good example of how putting some new thoughts together with action can yield some real benefits. Navigating the Surface Operations Manuals Submitted by David Larkin, BC-RS If you are involved in Auxiliary surface operations you are probably familiar with the Auxiliary Boat Crew Training Manual, Commandant Instruction (COMDTINST) M16794.51A published in 2007. But do you know about the other manuals that apply to surface operations in the USCG? Some directly apply to Auxiliarists and some are just good information to know and will enhance your knowledge and professionalism. I am going to touch on a few of them and try to explain how they each fit together. For most of your surface operations career, whether that be crewman, Coxswain or PWC Operator, knowing the Auxiliary Boat Crew Continued on page 7 6

Navigating the Surface Manuals (continued) Training Manual, the Auxiliary Operations Policy Manual, COMDTINST M16798.3E and the Nav Rules will be enough to get the job done, but there are some others out there that will allow you to get the job done better, more professionally, and more in line with the USCG standards the active duty/reserve crews operate under. The first thing we all need to remember is that while we have some Auxiliary-specific manuals (mentioned above), every Commandant Instruction (COMDTINST), directive, policy, etc. apply to all components of the Coast Guard, including the Auxiliary component. A major change has recently come to one of our frequently referenced manuals, the active duty s Boat Crew Seamanship Manual (BCSM), COMDTINST M16114.5C. That manual was cancelled on December 12 th, 2017 and completely replaced with the new Boat Crew Handbooks (BCH). The old manual needed updating and the process to update a Commandant Instruction takes years. The draft must circulate around many offices at headquarters for review. If any office makes a change, no matter how slight, the review process starts over again. Changing the BCSM from an Instruction to five separate handbooks allows changes and updates in a timely manner in the future. What it means for us is that we have new, smaller, handbooks for our crews to study and review. If you still have a copy (paper or electronic) of the BCSM it s time to run it through the shredder. It is no longer a usable document. The new BCH s can be downloaded here: http://wow.uscgaux.info/content.php?unit=r- DEPT&category=telecomms-documents (you will need to login with your Auxiliary ID to get to this page). Another document that you really should be familiar with is the Coast Guard Navigation Standards Manual, COMDTINST M3530.2E. That manual provides standards that enable the safe navigation of cutters and boats during mission execution within varied, challenging and unique Areas of Operations (AOR s). The manual also directs each CO/OIC of a cutter or boat station to publish their own Navigation Standards within 90 days of assuming command. Those standards cover local area hazards, prohibited operating areas, specify minimum depths, etc., and apply to all USCG vessels under their control including Auxiliary vessels. If you are not familiar with your local Stations Navigation Standards, please Continued on page 8 7

Navigating the Surface Manuals (continued) ask for them. You may be surprised by what is in them. There are many other manuals and documents that relate to surface operations and I will list a few at the end. You don t need to study them in depth but scanning through them and gaining a better understanding of how all the pieces fit together will only help our overall professionalism and makes us a better part of Team Coast Guard. Here is a partial list of documents you may want to look at: Operations The Vessel Environmental Manual, COMDTINST M16455.1A Waterways Management (WWM): Hazards to Navigation Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTP), CGTTP 3-71.5A Non-Standard Boat Operator s Handbook, COMDTINST M16114.28 U.S. Coast Guard Marine Environmental Response and Preparedness Manual, COMDTINST M16000.14A Coast Guard Mass Rescue Operations Program, COMDTINST 16711.2 Happy reading! Boat Management Manual, COMDTINST M16114.4B Coast Guard Publication 3-0, U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Response Directorate Contact Information Program Area Staff Member E-mail address Director Don Zinner Donald.Zinner@cgauxnet.us Deputy Director Rick Saunders Rick.Saunders@cgauxnet.us Aviation David Starr David Starr david.starr@cgauxnet.us Telecommunications Dave Elliot David.Elliot@cgauxnet.us Education Bruce C. Pugh Bruce.Pugh@cgauxnet.us Surface Operations Danny D. Cole danny.cole@cgauxnet.us 8