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ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A
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bcollinsmn



Joined: 17 Aug 2008
Posts: 23
Location: St. Paul, MN.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 15, 2008 2:33 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

I'm interested in seeing pix of people's installations of the Artex 406 ELT in a 7A. Where it's mounted, for example. Also, if I read this correctly, the antenna requires a 24" ground plane. Seems to me I've seen people use the whip antenna around the back of the rollbar. I assume it's mounted on the gusset that connects the 705 bulkhead to the longerons (with the gizmo for the tip-up latch.) But how are you accomodating a 24" ground plane there?

Thanks

Bob Collins
RV Builder's Hotline
http://rvbuildershotline.com/


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Charles Heathco



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 201

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 5:12 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Bob, read your question with interest. Sounds like this 406 takes a different setup than the current ones being used? You cant install it same as the ones we are using? Chalrie H
[quote][b]


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bcollinsmn



Joined: 17 Aug 2008
Posts: 23
Location: St. Paul, MN.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 7:25 am    Post subject: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Yeah, I think you can. According to the instructions, the mounting bracket will exchange properly with the existing setups. I'm just curious how people are installing. When you read the instructions, it sounds like they want it as far in the tail as possible with the antenna having this 24" ground plane. But when I've seen various installations, it's tucked under the baggage compartment quite often with the whip antenna bent around the aft side of the rollbar.

According to the instrx, whatever is used, the ELT and the antenna should be in the same "bay". Van's sells that combo ELT/Strobe power supply bracket (which I used for the strobe) that fits on the stringers, but that will only fit directly behind the 706 bulkhead.

It's not big deal, I'm just interested in seeing various permutations before I dive in.


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AV8ORJWC



Joined: 13 Jul 2006
Posts: 1149
Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 10:52 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Bob, I am hoping that this thread actually expands and becomes a Big
Deal, or at least bigger.

I have felt for some time that the location, mount orientation, ground
plane and attempt at concealing the antenna actually leads to an
ineffective or nearly worthless electronic device. That premise was
based on the 121.5 variant not the 406 however, because one build might
have mounted it incorrectly, scores follow suit and then the masses
drink the Kool-Aid. I have always concluded the function might not be
important, only its presence for the DAR signoff.

I have remained curious how many rescues rather than recoveries "after
the fact" are attributed to a properly functioning signal and a
responsible response by the parties that monitor the frequency (either
121.5 or 406.

As a ham (amateur) radio license holder this pursuit of concealing the
antenna has always been fascinating. Do any of the readers have signal
propagation graphs on signal strength radiating from inside the tin can?

John Cox
Aurora, OR

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acepilot(at)bloomer.net
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 11:11 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Well, I don't have data to back me up, but as a fellow ham who dabbles
in the world above 50 MHz (actually, I have stuff for our microwave
bands) and can say that a fuselage would make a "decent" waveguide at
VHF and UHF. Waveguide is made to contain RF. I think putting antennas
INSIDE of a metal container is just asking for it not to radiate to the
outside world when you need it most Smile I've often wondered why some
folks get so bent over an external antenna that may cost them a knot or
two. For God's sake, you're going 160 knots in an RV, what's 158
knots? How fast does one need to go? Take it from me, my present ride
cruises at 65 knots or so...I'd be more than happy with 158 Wink

Scott

John Cox wrote:

[quote]

Bob, I am hoping that this thread actually expands and becomes a Big
Deal, or at least bigger.

I have felt for some time that the location, mount orientation, ground
plane and attempt at concealing the antenna actually leads to an
ineffective or nearly worthless electronic device. That premise was
based on the 121.5 variant not the 406 however, because one build might
have mounted it incorrectly, scores follow suit and then the masses
drink the Kool-Aid. I have always concluded the function might not be
important, only its presence for the DAR signoff.

I have remained curious how many rescues rather than recoveries "after
the fact" are attributed to a properly functioning signal and a
responsible response by the parties that monitor the frequency (either
121.5 or 406.

As a ham (amateur) radio license holder this pursuit of concealing the
antenna has always been fascinating. Do any of the readers have signal
propagation graphs on signal strength radiating from inside the tin can?

John Cox
Aurora, OR

--


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AV8ORJWC



Joined: 13 Jul 2006
Posts: 1149
Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 11:37 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

My premise remains that after the first ineffective install, others
followed by copying, Kool-Aid was passed, really large numbers of
installs supported lack of viable research. The device is aboard, which
meets the letter of the law - Chapter Closed. Practical value - Zilch.
With 406 the discussion deserves to be opened to location within the
aircraft, purpose of the device, mounting technique, ground plane
effectiveness and strong signal propagation (on freq) from a good
distance from the aircraft fuselage regardless of location, orientation
or condition of the airframe.

Bob can give this topic the light that needs to be shed on the issue.

W7COX

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bcollinsmn



Joined: 17 Aug 2008
Posts: 23
Location: St. Paul, MN.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 12:49 pm    Post subject: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

AV8ORJWC wrote:
Bob, I am hoping that this thread actually expands and becomes a Big
Deal, or at least bigger.

I have felt for some time that the location, mount orientation, ground
plane and attempt at concealing the antenna actually leads to an
ineffective or nearly worthless electronic device. That premise was
based on the 121.5 variant not the 406 however, because one build might
have mounted it incorrectly, scores follow suit and then the masses
drink the Kool-Aid.


I spent about $900 on this thing. I was awoken by the crash of Steve Fossett, so I want to make sure I get it right.


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stein(at)steinair.com
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:02 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

This is a question I have that is really a question...and I'm not trying to
be fececious....I truly want to know:

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there? What I mean is, does any of you know anyone who
crashed, and then waited for CAP or whomever to find them? Typically I
usually see two results from a crash. 1) Death. 2) Non Death - people live
through the crash and crawl/walk/run away. Perhaps there are examples, I've
just been trying for years to find any credible for first hand accounts of
where an ELT did or even could have saved a life.... I'm not interested in
hearing hangar stories or "I heard of", but truly credible instances. They
certainly must be there or we wouldn't have this whole ELT discussion to
begin with. I'm just trying to find such examples.

If you know, please share!

Thanks,
Stein

do not archive

[quote]--


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bcollinsmn



Joined: 17 Aug 2008
Posts: 23
Location: St. Paul, MN.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:19 pm    Post subject: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

[quote="stein(at)steinair.com"]This is a question I have that is really a question...and I'm not trying to
be fececious....I truly want to know:

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there?
Quote:
--


First let me say, I don't GET putting DO NOT ARCHIVE on that message, Stein. It's a good question that, it seems to me, will be valuable for people who want to follow this in the future.

But the answer to your question is, yes, I'm familiar with one case that happened in my old neck of the woods, Monterey, Massachusetts. A family flew into Great Barrington where there wer eno services, it was night, winter, so they took off again headed toward Westfield and iced up and went down.

Three boys survived. The father survived but died later in the hospital. Three boys survived. The wife and another boy were killed. It took 18 hours to find them.

Here's a link:

http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/archive/index.php?t-10828.html

Here's one from Canada:

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2007/01/08/plane-survivor.html
I'm sure it's not the only case.

I understand your point -- I guess . Still, if it's a required piece of equipment, why not install it correctly?

For that reason, let's not go into a big debate -- at least in this thread -- on whether ELTS are needed or need to be installed correctly. It's up to each builder. and my choice is it WILL be installed correctly.

Doing some more reading here, it looks to me like I can put a whip antenna topside, 30 inches (at least) forward of the vertical stabilizer. I don't have a problem with antennae in the wind. II presume the skin itself is the ground plane. I do have some concern about whehter there'd be any interference with the GPS antenna but I guess I'll worry about that later.

As far as the mounting is concerned, I'm starting to wonder if under the turtle deck might make some sense? Other than that, I'm kinda digging Mike Hoover's installation which he documents here:

http://www.aclog.com/rv-9a/index.php?c=3#909


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Kellym



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1700
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:34 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

There was a Cherokee 6 that crashed in western Mass in a snowstorm in evening with family on-board, returning from FL. Pilot had been participant in a Piper list. Wife and I think one of the kids died soon after crash. Father survived the night and into morning until he and three surviving kids were found. He died shortly after being rescued. Kids survived.
http://www.ntsb.gov/recs/letters/2007/A07_51.pdf

NSTB is recommending 406 Mhz ELT's and is using Ron Ferris's accident in
support of their recommendation

SteinAir, Inc. wrote: [quote]
Quote:
--> RV-List message posted by: "SteinAir, Inc." <stein(at)steinair.com> (stein(at)steinair.com)

This is a question I have that is really a question...and I'm not trying to
be fececious....I truly want to know:

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there? What I mean is, does any of you know anyone who
crashed, and then waited for CAP or whomever to find them? Typically I
usually see two results from a crash. 1) Death. 2) Non Death - people live
through the crash and crawl/walk/run away. Perhaps there are examples, I've
just been trying for years to find any credible for first hand accounts of
where an ELT did or even could have saved a life.... I'm not interested in
hearing hangar stories or "I heard of", but truly credible instances. They
certainly must be there or we wouldn't have this whole ELT discussion to
begin with. I'm just trying to find such examples.

If you know, please share!

Thanks,
Stein

do not archive


[b]


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Terry Watson



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 290
Location: Seattle, WA USA

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:35 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

--

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ronlee(at)pcisys.net
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:52 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Quote:
Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died
whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there? >
Thanks,
Stein

Interesting question. Personally I have ZERO faith in my ELT "saving" me.
With
121.5 MHz units, a lot of crashes do not activate the ELT. Is there any
proof that
406 MHz units are any better? Not that they are more accurate. Are they
more
reliable in activating when they should?

I have a 406 MHz PLB (GPS model) and intend to install an APRS system
(requires
a ham license) in the future. Along with avoiding pilot error situations
that down the
aircraft, I am not worried nor do I intend to get a 406 MHz ELT.

A Spot system offers far better rescue/recovery functionality (similar to
APRS) than
any ELT in my opinion.

Ron Lee


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d-burton(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:28 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there?

Partner in one of our planes went down trying to cross a local 4000'
mountain pass. He survived the landing in the woods, organized the contents
of the cockpit and certainly could have activated the ELT if it hadn't
deployed. He died trying to walk out through the snow.

DaveB


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bcollinsmn



Joined: 17 Aug 2008
Posts: 23
Location: St. Paul, MN.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:31 pm    Post subject: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

I don't really see any reason for either-ors here. You outfit your plane for whatever you want. If safety is a concern -- and it is for me -- that means traffic avoidance systems, 406 ELTS (yes, they are more accurate than 121.5s), it means an emergency checklist that includes manually activating the ELT before ditching, having the mechanism to use the ELT as a radio, it means SPOT, it means APRS, it means Hooker Harnesses with a crotch strap, it means Oregon Aero seats, it means having a survival kit, it means having a mechanism to break the canop and on and on and on.

Now, then, back to the original question...


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Terry Watson



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 290
Location: Seattle, WA USA

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:57 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Sorry about the previous blank message. I have a friend who is the former
head of the Washington State CAP. I just got an email back from him telling
me that he will tell me the whole story of a CAP member who was lost a few
years ago after crashing in the Cascades in bad weather. He was not
seriously injured but died before the rescuers got to him due to exposure
and apparently also because he had left his survival kit in his car.

OK, I found the report:

Terry

NTSB Identification: ANC95GA048 .
The docket is stored in the Docket Management System (DMS). Please contact
Records Management Division
Accident occurred Wednesday, April 12, 1995 in BUMPING LAKE, WA
Probable Cause Approval Date: 9/3/1996
Aircraft: Cessna 182Q, registration: N97843
Injuries: 1 Fatal.
The private pilot, a civil air patrol (CAP) volunteer, was on a CAP flight
for proficiency training and to conduct business. The VFR cross-country
flight was planned over mountainous terrain. The pilot obtained a weather
briefing that included information about icing conditions along the planned
route. During the flight, no communication was received from the pilot other
than activation of his flight plan after departing the airport. The airplane
was reported overdue, but a search was hampered due to IFR conditions and
snow. No transponder code was issued to the airplane, and no discrete radar
data was located in stored radar data to assist in locating the airplane. By
0900 on 4/15/95, analysis of the primary target radar returns helped in
locating the accident airplane. Also, only an intermittent signal was
transmitted from the airplane's emergency locator transmitter (ELT). The
wreckage was located 3 days later, where the airplane had crash landed on
snow covered mountainous terrain. Investigation revealed the pilot initially
survived the accident, but succumbed to hypothermia. He was wearing a flight
suit over dress clothes, a flight jacket, and dress shoes. No survival
equipment was required to be carried in the airplane. The pilot had a
personal survival kit, but had left it in his vehicle at the departure
airport. A note found in the wreckage indicated that the engine lost power.
After recovery, the engine operated normally. The transponder switch was
found in the "standby" position; inspection of the ELT revealed a faulty
tuning crystal. The pilot had received training in survival skills and was a
CAP survival skills instructor.

The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of
this accident as follows:

A loss of engine power for an undetermined reason. Factors relating to the
accident were: lack of suitable terrain for a forced landing in mountains,
low ambient temperatures that contributed to hypothermia, the lack of
survival equipment, an erratic ELT signal due to a faulty tuning crystal,
and the lack of discrete transponder data to assist in the search.

Full narrative available
Index for Apr1995 | Index of months



This is a question I have that is really a question...and I'm not trying to
be fececious....I truly want to know:

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there? What I mean is, does any of you know anyone who
crashed, and then waited for CAP or whomever to find them? Typically I
usually see two results from a crash. 1) Death. 2) Non Death - people live
through the crash and crawl/walk/run away. Perhaps there are examples, I've
just been trying for years to find any credible for first hand accounts of
where an ELT did or even could have saved a life.... I'm not interested in
hearing hangar stories or "I heard of", but truly credible instances. They
certainly must be there or we wouldn't have this whole ELT discussion to
begin with. I'm just trying to find such examples.

If you know, please share!

Thanks,
Stein


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stein(at)steinair.com
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:59 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

The do not archive was because this was to settle my personal curiosity more
than anything else. I didn't have anything to add to the technical part of
the discussion, so I guess I just didn't want my weird question filling up
the already bloated archives. I really wasn't trying to make any sort of
point at all (in either direction), I was simply trying to find out some
data that I hadn't seen/heard/read....I get asked questions like that a lot
of times here in my work, so any additional info at least helps me try to
answer peoples questions. That's it, plane and simple - no alterior motive
to start the "should you shouldn't you" debate all over again! Smile

Cheers,
Stein

do not archive (just to make Bob shake his fist at me) !!!

[quote]--


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AV8ORJWC



Joined: 13 Jul 2006
Posts: 1149
Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 5:40 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Stein, can you post here whether you have the equipment to measure and graphically depict the effectiveness of the RF signal transmitted by a properly mounted and functioning 406 device? Seeing the strength and radiation pattern degradation as a result of a roll bar, a plexiglas canopy, a composite shell or inside an aluminum empennage to save a knot and a half might go a long way for the audience.

Or, if not, can you advise how owners can have the tranmitting pattern graphed for their illumination?

My kool-aid pitcher here in the Pacific NW where rescue can turn to recovery quite quickly is empty. I interpretted Bob's original post to involve the ARTEX 406 installation instructions for current installation. Instructions for effective 121.5 signal transmission were lost some 30 years ago. Steve Fossett's loss just drives the point home.

John Cox
W7COX
Aurora, OR


From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com on behalf of SteinAir, Inc.
Sent: Sun 11/16/2008 12:59 PM
To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A

--> RV-List message posted by: "SteinAir, Inc." <stein(at)steinair.com>

This is a question I have that is really a question...and I'm not trying to
be fececious....I truly want to know:

Does anyone know of (or ever heard of) any pilot who crashed and died whilst
awaiting a rescue - someone who lived through the crash but died because
rescuers didn't get there? What I mean is, does any of you know anyone who
crashed, and then waited for CAP or whomever to find them? Typically I
usually see two results from a crash. 1) Death. 2) Non Death - people live
through the crash and crawl/walk/run away. Perhaps there are examples, I've
just been trying for years to find any credible for first hand accounts of
where an ELT did or even could have saved a life.... I'm not interested in
hearing hangar stories or "I heard of", but truly credible instances. They
certainly must be there or we wouldn't have this whole ELT discussion to
begin with. I'm just trying to find such examples.

If you know, please share!

Thanks,
Stein

do not archive


[quote][b]


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Dick Sipp



Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Posts: 215
Location: Hope, MI

PostPosted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 7:14 pm    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

I mounted the 406 antenna on the right longeron at the aft end of the fiberglass top inside the baggage compartment. It follows the bend of the top.

My to do list includes an item to try and determine if I can arrange an actual test activation with the appropriate agencies to verify reception of the signal.

I report if and when that is done.

Dick Sipp
N110DV 90 hours
[quote] ---


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gmcjetpilot



Joined: 04 Nov 2006
Posts: 170

PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2008 1:41 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

John as a fellow HAM, you know the answer, external, vertical polarization with a good ground plane. No one has tested these creative internal ELT antenna installations. It may be fine in a Lancair or Glasair but a all metal RV is not a good canadate for internal antennas. I can tell you the VHF wing tip com antenna's are really piss poor. Any one who has one and is honest will tell you. Some say the wing tip VHF com antenna works. The definition of work is flying 1000' agl towards the airport tower 5 miles infront of you. Forget long distance omni directional communications at max theoretical range of an airborne 5-10 watt VHF transmitter.

One popular hidden ELT antenna location on RV's is laying the antenna horizontal in the vertical/horz stab intersection fairing area, under the vertical stabilizer. It is pretty popular and makes no sense to me from a technical stand point. I DON'T KNOW OF ANY ONE WHO HAS TESTED IT FORMALLY or INFORMALLY. I personally think its a bad idea. Hidden use but affective range limited.

The other idea is in the wing but that is a LONG coax run unless you put the ELT in the wing tip as well. The wing tip is also really terrible for propagation and practical reasons, like the wing tip rips off. Also access is not great unless you install an access panel.

The Artex 406 has one antenna for both 406/121.5Mhz about the same dimensions as current ELT antennas.

The EBC has two antennas, one short 406Mhz antenna and a seperate 121.5 Mhz antenna. Of course the 406Mhz is very short.

HERE IS SOME FOOD FOR THOUGHT. The DRAG from one typical (20") ELT antenna is 1/8th mph, 0.125 mph penalty (at 200 mph). Is it worth it to hide antennas?

If you are talking about a 406 Mhz only antenna that is a short antenna with negligible drag. When I raced my RV-4 I took off the Com, VOR antennas for about 1/2 mph to 2/3rds mpg gain. I did put the ELT antenna under the bubble canopy.

Some hide antenna for eye appeal. I think it's not worth it but that is a hard sale with many builders I consult with.

I think the best NON standard is mounting the antenna or antennas inside the canopy/cockpit area. The down side is getting a proper ground plane. The old EBC elts had an internal antenna and the unit was always mounted in the cabin. The new EBC uses two remote antennas as I mentioned above.

I did a informal survey of RV accidents that where off field and survivable; many end up on their back, so the belly is not totally a horrible area. That does not follow the common ELT instructions for mounting the ELT on top of the aircraft.

Of course any thing that does not follow the ELT's instructions violates the FAR / STC approved instructions.

Almost all approved ELT installations call for the following:

- Mount ELT as far aft as possible
- Antenna'(s) be mounted close by, no excessive long coaxial run
- Mount the antenna externally.
- Provide maintence access & access after accident

So the approved ideal location is ELT in the tail cone far aft with the antenna'(s) mounted directly above on the back top, just forward of Vert stabilizer.

The old transmitter was only 100mw and now the new 406 ELT's have 5 watt burst, so that is better regardless of antenna. Still of the antenna is shielded from the satellites than you are invisible even with 5 watts. We also still need 121.5 Mhz and 100mw for local DF steer to find us. How far can can 100mw get out with an antenna buried inside of metal structure? I think you are talking feet not miles in range.

I just can't stand to see such a violation of good antenna installation practices for the sake of looks and a tenth of a mph.

Cheers George



*************************************************************************************************
Subject: RE: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A
From: "John Cox" <johnwcox(at)pacificnw.com>
Bob, I am hoping that this thread actually expands and becomes a Big
Deal, or at least bigger.

I have felt for some time that the location, mount orientation, ground
plane and attempt at concealing the antenna actually leads to an
ineffective or nearly worthless electronic device. That premise was
based on the 121.5 variant not the 406 however, because one build might
have mounted it incorrectly, scores follow suit and then the masses
drink the Kool-Aid. I have always concluded the function might not be
important, only its presence for the DAR signoff.

I have remained curious how many rescues rather than recoveries "after
the fact" are attributed to a properly functioning signal and a
responsible response by the parties that monitor the frequency (either
121.5 or 406.

As a ham (amateur) radio license holder this pursuit of concealing the
antenna has always been fascinating. Do any of the readers have signal
propagation graphs on signal strength radiating from inside the tin
can?

John Cox
Aurora, OR
[quote][b]


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Kellym



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1700
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2008 5:18 am    Post subject: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A Reply with quote

Well just some random musings. I know of TC aircraft with the ELT
antenna bent back under fiberglass ventral fin in otherwise all metal
aircraft..but don't know whether any feds cared about it. I know that my
121 ELT activated on its own in my all metal hangar, and was satellite
detected. Only the weird propagation pattern made it a little difficult
to ascertain it was coming from my hangar and not an ajacent row. So,
not so sure how critical this is, especially at 406 where your radiating
element is approx 1/4 the length of 121 element. Ever look at a police
supervisor car? They often have 5 or 6 UHF antennas around the roof and
trunk, not very far apart. Wonder what issues they have.

gmcjetpilot(at)yahoo.com wrote:
Quote:
John as a fellow HAM, you know the answer, external, vertical
polarization with a good ground plane. No one has tested these
creative internal ELT antenna installations. It may be fine in a
Lancair or Glasair but a all metal RV is not a good canadate for
internal antennas. I can tell you the VHF wing tip com antenna's are
really piss poor. Any one who has one and is honest will tell you.
Some say the wing tip VHF com antenna works. The definition of work is
flying 1000' agl towards the airport tower 5 miles infront of you.
Forget long distance omni directional communications at max
theoretical range of an airborne 5-10 watt VHF transmitter.

One popular hidden ELT antenna location on RV's is laying the antenna
horizontal in the vertical/horz stab intersection fairing area, under
the vertical stabilizer. It is pretty popular and makes no sense to me
from a technical stand point. I DON'T KNOW OF ANY ONE WHO HAS TESTED
IT FORMALLY or INFORMALLY. I personally think its a bad idea. Hidden
use but affective range limited.

The other idea is in the wing but that is a LONG coax run unless you
put the ELT in the wing tip as well. The wing tip is also really
terrible for propagation and practical reasons, like the wing tip rips
off. Also access is not great unless you install an access panel.

The Artex 406 has one antenna for both 406/121.5Mhz about the same
dimensions as current ELT antennas.

The EBC has two antennas, one short 406Mhz antenna and a
seperate 121.5 Mhz antenna. Of course the 406Mhz is very short.

HERE IS SOME FOOD FOR THOUGHT. The DRAG from one typical (20") ELT
antenna is 1/8th mph, 0.125 mph penalty (at 200 mph). Is it worth it
to hide antennas?

If you are talking about a 406 Mhz only antenna that is a short
antenna with negligible drag. When I raced my RV-4 I took off the Com,
VOR antennas for about 1/2 mph to 2/3rds mpg gain. I did put the ELT
antenna under the bubble canopy.

Some hide antenna for eye appeal. I think it's not worth it but that
is a hard sale with many builders I consult with.

I think the best NON standard is mounting the antenna or antennas
inside the canopy/cockpit area. The down side is getting a proper
ground plane. The old EBC elts had an internal antenna and the unit
was always mounted in the cabin. The new EBC uses two remote antennas
as I mentioned above.

I did a informal survey of RV accidents that where off field and
survivable; many end up on their back, so the belly is not totally a
horrible area. That does not follow the common ELT instructions for
mounting the ELT on top of the aircraft.

Of course any thing that does not follow the ELT's
instructions violates the FAR / STC approved instructions.

Almost all approved ELT installations call for the following:

- Mount ELT as far aft as possible
- Antenna'(s) be mounted close by, no excessive long coaxial run
- Mount the antenna externally.
- Provide maintence access & access after accident

So the approved ideal location is ELT in the tail cone far aft with
the antenna'(s) mounted directly above on the back top, just forward
of Vert stabilizer.

The old transmitter was only 100mw and now the new 406 ELT's have 5
watt burst, so that is better regardless of antenna. Still of the
antenna is shielded from the satellites than you are invisible even
with 5 watts. We also still need 121.5 Mhz and 100mw for local DF
steer to find us. How far can can 100mw get out with an antenna buried
inside of metal structure? I think you are talking feet not miles in
range.

I just can't stand to see such a violation of good antenna
installation practices for the sake of looks and a tenth of a mph.

Cheers George



*************************************************************************************************
Subject: RE: Re: ARTEX 406 ELT in a 7A
From: "John Cox" <johnwcox(at)pacificnw.com
<http://us.f431.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=johnwcox(at)pacificnw.com&YY=17621&y5beta=yes&y5beta=yes&order=down&sort=date&pos=0&view=a&head=b>>
Bob, I am hoping that this thread actually expands and becomes a Big
Deal, or at least bigger.

I have felt for some time that the location, mount orientation, ground
plane and attempt at concealing the antenna actually leads to an
ineffective or nearly worthless electronic device. That premise was
based on the 121.5 variant not the 406 however, because one build might
have mounted it incorrectly, scores follow suit and then the masses
drink the Kool-Aid. I have always concluded the function might not be
important, only its presence for the DAR signoff.

I have remained curious how many rescues rather than recoveries "after
the fact" are attributed to a properly functioning signal and a
responsible response by the parties that monitor the frequency (either
121.5 or 406.

As a ham (amateur) radio license holder this pursuit of concealing the
antenna has always been fascinating. Do any of the readers have signal
propagation graphs on signal strength radiating from inside the tin
can?

John Cox
Aurora, OR

*

*


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