We are talking about the FAA here. ALL still applies as every aircraft flying in US airspace has to adhere to FAA regulations.
The US is unique in the world as it has a very large general aviation fleet that must be dealt with as well as commercial fleet. In the late 1990s when I asked FAA regulation and safety division engineers about metric adaptation by FAA I was met by "you have to be kidding" and worse. It simply wasn't to be discussed even if GPS was the underlying discussion. It was more than they could even consider think workable.
It is fairly easy to find solutions to specific examples as described. The problem with metric and the FAA is the enormous behind the scenes problems. This includes regulations, paper products, software, electronics, training/testing, …. and the list goes on. The FAA has been under great pressure to cut costs. It just doesn't have the assets, personel dollars, available to undertake metric adaptation as envisioned by metric proponents. (I am a great believer in metric and have been since the mid-seventies.)
The use of GPS altitude is probably the best approach. This would be a secondary effect of the up-coming requirement by 2020 for ALL aircraft flying in the US airspace to have a TSO-145 or TSO-146 navigation system on board. These are GPS/WAAS navigation receivers. One of the disconcerting results of using GPS altitude (more accurately, WGS-84 altitude) is that many airport altitudes are negative due to the geoid/datum definition. But, these are workable.
m moon
Received: 02:53 PM PDT, 07/10/2013
From: "Martin Vlietstra" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>, "'U.S. Metric Association'" <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [USMA:53060] Re: FAA must Metricate
Correction – ALL barometric altimeters in thousands of airplanes in the United States. Altimeters in Europe show hPa (or mbar).
Due to safety concerns, it will be very difficult to change, though I do see one procedure:
Air Traffic Control: Our airfield has altitude 85 metres and air pressure 995 millibars
Pilot: [enters information onto his instruments which display “-10”.] Acknowledge – I calculate your deviation to be negative 10 millibars from expected pressure.
Air Traffic Control: Roger
This procedure is a completely new one that I thought of some years ago after hearing that a Lufthansa 747 crashed in Nairobi when the pilot entered a pressure of 938 mbar rather than 839 mbar. (Nairobi has a similar altitude to Denver). The instrument would do the calculation and by returning what is effectively a hash-sum, the pilot not only checks his input but gets worried if the deviation is too far from zero.
Any pilots like to comment?
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of m. f. moon
Sent: 10 July 2013 20:20
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:53060] Re: FAA must Metricate
As one very simple example of the complexity and issues involved, consider the simple and small Kollsman window on ALL barometric altimeters is thousands of airplanes. These are and have been for many years in inches of mercury. How do you deal with this in a clean and straightforward way?
M moon
------ Original Message ------
Received: 11:29 AM PDT, 07/10/2013
From: Michael Payne <[email protected]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:53059] Re: FAA must Metricate
With the prevalence of "glass" cockpits nowadays and the related software it's just a case of pushing a button to display metres or feet on the altimeters and altitude pre select window. All aircraft older than about 1996 probably don't have this feature, note there are a lot of airlines still using planes with "steam driven" (as the saying goes) gauges. But these tend to be based in the 3rd world and some older US domestic airplanes like the MD80-82 etc. I highly doubt there was any confusion between units on the Asiana flight crash, it's just crew inattention.
John Steel has all the information stated correctly.
Mike Payne
On 10/07/2013, at 14:01 , "John M. Steele" <[email protected]> wrote:
ALMOST world-wide feet. Russia, China and associates (CIS states, North Korea, Mongolia) were using meters.
Russia uses meters below transition level (where altimeters are adjusted for local pressure) but has gone to feet for "flight levels" (no altimeter adjustment, standard atmosphere is assumed) as part of introducing Reduced Minimum Vertical Separation at and above 29000 ft . I'm not a pilot and I can't adequately explain China but at least in RMVS space they assign a flight level in meters, you have to convert on a government table and fly in feet on a foot-graduated altimeter. (I don't know what they do below transition altitude. I'm sure a pilot could explain it better. Almost all commercial cruise is above 29000 feet and in RMVS space, where the reduced separations have been introduced.
In Russia, you have to change from feet to meters for landing (and reverse on takeoff) but no change if you are overflying. I'm sure the switching requires extra training. As a non-pilot, it seems risky, but I'm not sure how much risk it introduces. Russia and China went in somewhat different directions, each with their "associates" following, so there are two distinct exception spaces in the world, plus rest-of-world feet.
From: Paul Trusten <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Cc: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 10, 2013 1:36 PM
Subject: [USMA:53056] Re: FAA must Metricate
Educate me, folks. I thought that feet were used worldwide in aviation because of the perceived danger of changing over to metric in some kind of terrifying interim. Do we in fact have both meters and feet being used in flight? Talk about your Gimli-Mars tragedies-in-the-making!
Paul Trusten, Reg. Pharmacist
Vice President
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
Midland, Texas USA
http://www.metric.org/
+1(432)528-7724
[email protected]
On Jul 8, 2013, at 0:38, Bruce Arkwright Jr <[email protected]> wrote:
> What if that poor tired Vietnamese pilot, forget he had hit the convert button, after crossing into our air space, but still read meters instead of feet as he approached the landing strip? Will FAA emit to that? At any rate its time for FAA to get on board!
>
>
> Bruce E. Arkwright, Jr
> Erie PA
> Linux and Metric User and Enforcer
>
>
> I will only invest in nukes that are 150 gigameters away. How much solar energy have you collected today?
> Id put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don't have to wait till oil and coal run out before we tackle that. I wish I had a few more years left. -- Thomas Edison♽☯♑
>
>
