[Scan-DC] Interesting "test" airplane showing up on ADS-B
Daniel Brown
daniel.h.brown at gmail.com
Fri Oct 28 04:15:09 EDT 2016
What antenna are you using?
--
Dan Brown
> On Oct 27, 2016, at 6:40 PM, Andrew Clegg <andrew_w_clegg at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hey Eric --
>
>
> Thanks for the info. I'm still learning a lot about ADS-B, and experimenting with the raw message output from dump1090. I had no idea the rate of messages that would be received. I'm getting a message decode about every 14-20 milliseconds during the day, covering out to over 250 nm. Not bad for my antenna in the windowsill. Anyway, thanks for the additional details.
>
>
> Andy
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Eric C. Carlson <ecarlson at gmail.com>
> Sent: Sunday, October 23, 2016 3:32 PM
> To: Andrew Clegg
> Cc: Scan-DC at mailman.qth.net
> Subject: Re: [Scan-DC] Interesting "test" airplane showing up on ADS-B
>
> They are a big FAA contractor for NextGen ATC, ADS-B, etc. so it could
> be a lot of things. The Mode S specification includes categories for
> identification of ground vehicles, fixed positions/tethered
> obstructions, etc. (even parachute/skydivers). At least at airports
> with ground surveillance, you will see Mode S codes assigned to the
> ground-based surface monitoring equipment (the locations of which are
> emitted in the FAA's ASDE-X data feed). The FAA does multilateration
> as one of several methods for tracking ground targets so this may be
> related. The hex code ADFC2C is above the range allocated for civil
> aircraft but still in the USA range. I see similar codes used for the
> fixed ground positions on airfields and ground vehicles that are Mode
> S equipped (there are a number of codes that are reused between
> different airports).
>
> -Eric
>
> On Sat, Oct 22, 2016 at 9:46 AM, Andrew Clegg
> <andrew_w_clegg at hotmail.com> wrote:
>> I just started running ADS-B on my Raspberry Pi and feeding data to Flightaware.com. One of the interesting decodes is a "plane" with the Ident of "MTRTEST3," which is stationary, and corresponds in Google Earth to a location coincident with one of MITRE's office buildings in Tysons. The ICAO hex code is ADFC2C.
>>
>>
>> I guess MITRE is running an experimental ADS-B transmitter on its roof? Anyone know what specifically they're experimenting with?
>>
>>
>> I checked the FCC's experimentals and there's nothing registered for that site at 1090 MHz. MITRE could be working off an NTIA authorization, which wouldn't show up in the FCC's database. Looks like they've been pretty active in developing the whole ADS-B technology, so it makes sense they would have an experimental system. Kind of odd to have a stationary airplane show up in the data though!
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