Wi-Fi Shown To Interfere With Aircraft Systems 300
lukehopewell1 writes "It's official: using Wi-Fi on a plane can interfere with a pilot's navigational equipment, according to airline equipment manufacturers Honeywell Avionics and Boeing today. Boeing confirmed to ZDNet Australia that the issue does exist, but said it has not delivered any planes suffering the fault. 'Blanking of the Phase 3 Display Units has been reported during airline EMI (electromagnetic interference) certification testing of wireless broadband systems on various Next-Generation 737 aeroplanes,' Boeing said."
FAIL (Score:4, Informative)
Re:FAIL (Score:5, Informative)
Go learn about RF. At the frequencies used by Wi-Fi a resonant antenna is only a few CMs long, ie about the length of common circuit traces on the PCB's. Even if you completely shield the control units RF can still leak inside through cabling. There is no magic way to design electronics that are RF immune*, it requires real world testing to discover such faults, as happened here.
The only way to make extremely RF tolerant electronics is to use analog vacuum tube based designs (the Russians continued using tube designs into the 90's).
* Making bug free software is significantly easier.
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Rarely practical(and obviously wholly unhelpful for things like radar and radio communications gear, which explicitly rely on collecting RF); but the only thing stopping you is good sense...
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For low power, though, it's an off-the-shelf item [jdsu.com]...
Re:FAIL (Score:5, Informative)
Most electronic designers are competent enough to put a choke at their power line and a bandpass filter at their cabling. It's not "easy" but it's done in just about any military grade electronics. I guess Boeing engineers didn't think it was necessary.
Re:FAIL (Score:4, Informative)
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The 737 Next Generation is 15 years old.
Re:FAIL (Score:5, Informative)
Most electronic designers are competent enough to put a choke at their power line and a bandpass filter at their cabling. It's not "easy" but it's done in just about any military grade electronics
And to play a violin all you need to do is to draw the bow across the strings. There's a lot more to this than theory.
A choke is inductive at a limited range of frequencies, at other frequencies it acts as a capacitor. Likewise, put a high enough frequency across a capacitor and its behavior becomes inductive. Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) is a very complex subject, there are no easy solutions and it's nearly impossible to have a perfect solution that works at all frequencies.
The 2.4 GHz band used in WiFi is one of the most difficult to shield. All the small metallic parts used in electronic equipment, like screws and button levers, are in the same size magnitude as the wave, so there are plenty of conductive parts to retransmit and conduct the radio frequency.
I guess Boeing engineers didn't think it was necessary.
You guessed wrong.
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The only way to make extremely RF tolerant electronics is to use analog vacuum tube based designs (the Russians continued using tube designs into the 90's).
Tube-based designs are no more tolerant than semiconductor-based designs, as far as interference is concerned. What tube-based circuits DO tolerate better is EMP's, (Electro-Magnetic Pulses), from sources such as nuclear blasts - that's why the Russians continued using vacuum tubes. EMP's will damage or destroy destroy most semiconductors within range, (often even in equipment that isn't powered at the time), but properly hardened vacuum tube circuits usually survive.
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They are more tolerant because they run at high voltage. A few mV can easily cause an IC gate to flip but is drowned out in the noise in a tube.
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My guess is that you are not an EE.
But you don't have to be to understand it in simple terms. navigation systems work in large part by picking up relatively weak RF signals. It isn't easy to do that when you have a bunch of RF transmitters sitting next to it.
Kind of like trying to listen to someone wispier in a rave.
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Yeah, but this isn't a navigation system itself, it's a display unit. I agree that nav systems such as VOR/ILS, TACAN, etc. are very interference-susceptible, which is the reason for "all electronic devices off during takeoff/landing" - but that's not actually the case here.
Re:FAIL (Score:4, Informative)
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The new slashdot meme:
IANAEE.
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Frequencies aren't orthogonal (they're scalars), signals are. If you don't control both signals, you can't control orthogonality. One must also consider the dynamic range of the front end - if overloaded with a high powered signal, the frequency relationship doesn't matter. That calls for good bandpass and roofing filter design.
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My guess is you're not an EE either. Interference doesn't quite work like that; orthogonal frequencies, for instance, do not interfere at all even when one is extremely high-powered.
And I'm guessing that you aren't an RF engineer.
It is extremely difficult (and nearly impossible, at a reasonable cost) to design and build a transmitter that only radiates RF on the fundamental frequency. It invariably radiates on harmonic frequencies (integer multiples of the fundamental). FCC regulations limit the acceptable power level for harmonics, but if the transmitter's primary power output is high enough, the harmonics can still interfere with a nearby receiver -- depending on the local str
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The navigational equipment should be designed so it is tolerant of this sort of interference.
Perhaps it will be going forward. However the average age [bts.gov] of an aircraft you fly in today is probably in the neighborhood of 11 to 12 years old. Which means the designs for these planes are even older. Since WiFi wasn't very common (if it was at the consumer level in some cases)when the current planes were designed, it's a little silly to state the current fleet should be designed to be tolerant of it.
Maybe it will be possible to retrofit active designs in the future, but I'd guess the cost involved will be
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I'm guessing that aircraft systems may well be held to stricter standards in terms of rejecting interference; but may or may not be required to accept any interference received.
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You're a good guesser ;)
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My friend works for a company that makes video distribution systems for airlines (such as Lufthansa). The amount of testing that goes into it is crazy. He's one of the guys who runs all the tests in a Faraday cage and what not. The connectors they have to use to meet FAA regulations and all that are crazy.. the plugs have 16 mini-philips head screws in them to keep the plug from ever working its way loose among other things. They also use Cat 6 and 7 cables for the distribution.. he said no fiber optic lin
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oh I've seen it alright... When taking photographs so I could write the removal and installation instructions for the fiber-optic databus on the Eurofighter, I got mad when I saw the assemblers were standing on the fiber-optic harnesses while fitting other items into the avionics bays...
Also, the coaxial cable used to transmit RF signals from the detector heads on the top of the fins on Tornado aircraft have to pass right down the spine tunnel and the slightest over tightening of the cable ties used to secu
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Wait... so basically he's saying that they can't use fiber because the techs building and repairing the aircraft are incompetent?
No, basically he's saying that the technicians who build and repair systems are technicians and not fully-trained RF and electrical engineers.
How is "x fastener should only be y tight" any different from "the bolt holding this important piece of engine together should be torqued to y ft-lb?"
Because there are torque wrenches designed to be used to tighten bolts and nuts, that are calibrated by the maintenance crew. While some cable tie guns have adjustments, they are uncalibrated and subject to many factors that make them unreliable -- at least to aircraft standards. I've had cable ties "cut" while still loose just because the tie bound up; I've had the
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According to TFA this was caught during testing.
The problem I see is all the equipment flying around that was built and certified BEFORE this testing was mandated. And it's much more than you think.
West Wing (Score:3)
The West Wing had a quote from Toby Ziegler that essentially sums up how I feel about this:
Toby Ziegler: "We're flying in a Lockheed Eagle series L1011. It came off the line 20 months ago. It carries a Sim-5 Transponder tracking system. Are you telling me I can still flummox this thing with something I bought at Radio Shack?"
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Not something to be proud of (Score:5, Interesting)
I can make a Tesla coil out of $50 of junk surplus parts and destroy a roomful of the highest end electronic equipment in the world. Hell, a simple spark gap in the right place can cause a world of hurt.
RF energy doesn't give a fuck where you bought something.
You cannot fully shield a device that is specifically designed to receive external signals. In aerospace there's guys who do nothing but electromagnetic compatibility engineering, and not all the threats are external. Sometimes the third side lobe of your strike radar reflects off a rib in the fuselage and the seventh harmonic frequency takes out your very sensitive radar altimeter during initial power up tests.
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Yes, yes they are because it's true.
Another point of ignorance spread through entertainment. But hey, you saw it on a magic box so it must be true.
Epic Fail (Score:2, Insightful)
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Having worked in the airline industry for a while ... these things take years to work their way through because there's so much regulation around it.
Order a plane now, and it will take a couple of years to get your new plane. That plane and the components it uses have been through an exceedingly long design cycle in order to get all of the
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The Epic Fail is yours. Specifically your desire to spout off about things you don't know about. Hey, why don't you study RF for a few years then put your opinion in? no, of course not. RF engineering is hard and takes smart people, and you are lazy and stupid.
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Seriously inconvenience? Quite possibly. Fuck with the relatively tight timeslot scheduling of the nation's busier airports, causing millions in inconvenience? Conceivable. Cause the plane to automagicall
Re:Just an FYI (Score:4, Funny)
There are no English words that contain "ww".
Aww. :(
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Really? grep ww /usr/share/dict/words has 87, a good portion of which appear to be unquestionably real words.
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flawwed isn't a word in English but there ARE English words that have the "ww" combo, that combination was fairly rare and you often tend to see them separated into word phrases but glowworm, powwow, and arrowwood are real words in English.
But there is one word which is quite common -- if you consider acronyms to be "real" words (and only Scrabble seems to think they aren't) -- then WWW is probably the most common.
Re:Just an FYI (Score:4, Insightful)
By that logic half the words in the average English speaker's vocabulary aren't "English words".
Seriously? (Score:3)
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End result (Score:2)
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Flying is a service you purchase from a private entity, not a human right. Dont like the security (and personally, I think its retarded and ineffective)? Get your own cessna, or dont fly.
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While it indeed is a private entity offering this service, this doesn't mean one can't discuss how this private entity treats its customers. Secondly, the security is put in place by the airport, usually ruled by the countrys laws. The airlines themselves can't make too many demands.
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Being able to freely move between states is, in fact, a right.
The transportation method doesn't matter. The fact that they have no choice makes your argument irrelevant.
Let me know when I can choose an airline based on security options.
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Some years ago I was in a plane ready to take off when the cabin informed of "technical difficulties"
They went searching in a particular area of the seats and found someone who had forgot to turn off his phone before leaving his coat in the luggage compartment(*). It was more educational than a ton of posters asking me to turn off my cell phone.
So... well, let's say that I am that moron that will ask you politely to stop talking when the plane is going to start the take off, even if that means interfering w
"Blanking" (Score:3)
I can't imagine a wireless signal interfering with a hardwired display this badly, so is this more an issue with wifi interfering with various sensors that feed the display, causing the system to momentarily "blank" the screen rather than present spurious and inaccurate data?
(Yes I did RTFA)
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I like the photo in the article of the plane crash from LOST. Nothing bad has happened so far because of this but lets show a crashed plane anyway.
How can this be allowed? (Score:2, Insightful)
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If it's potentially dangerous, how can safety be over-engineered? Or on the other hand, if it's not dangerous at all, why even bother raising the issue?
Ancient technology ignored... (Score:2)
I guess the idea of a grounded Faraday cage around each piece of equipment escapes them?
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So? Why should reality get in the way of Slashdotters claiming to have a "simple" fix so they can run their wi-fi and text people wherever they want?
Because, obviously, the input of random geeks on Slashdot is far more informed than the people who actually make these things and have to build them.
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Oh, c'mon. The antics of the Slashdot Brain Trust are priceless.
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Honeywell screws us all (Score:2)
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Let us be sure to publicize this fact every time the subject comes up so that Honeywell's name is eventually equated with the Honey Bucket Man. Not shielding electronics used in airplanes is incompetence at best.
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"this is a serious fail on the part of Honeywell for not accounting for WiFi in their engineering & testing process."
no it is NOT. god damn it, learn a fucking think about avionics before slap your gums together in a vain and ultimately useless attempt to make your self seem smart.
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Planes fail from cascade events that always start with something innocuous. OTOH, the fact that you think a wi-fi signal and a 'solar storm' are the same thing, and that you think a 'solar storm' currently doesn't have an impact on nav control point to one fact: You are an ignorant fuck.
So if I leave wifi on? (Score:2)
So if I open up my laptop and start using it, it starts seeking wifi signals. Is this enough to interfere with the plane?
'cause I don't ever hear flight attendants telling people to disable their wifi (or bluetooth, etc.). Just to "turn off" cell phones. Which itself is weird, 'cause I can leave mine on and put it in airplane mode, right?
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'cause I don't ever hear flight attendants telling people to disable their wifi (or bluetooth, etc.). Just to "turn off" cell phones. Which itself is weird, 'cause I can leave mine on and put it in airplane mode, right?
Every time I fly I hear the flight attendants tell us to power down the device completely, they usually specify that airplane mode is not ok. I've always assumed this was because they have no way if knowing of anyone actually put the thing into airplane mode or not.
Of course I don't know that that has anything to do with wireless transmission interference. They might just do it to make sure people aren't distracted by their electronic gadgets and actually listen the safety briefing.
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Every time I fly I hear the flight attendants tell us to power down the device completely, they usually specify that airplane mode is not ok. I've always assumed this was because they have no way if knowing of anyone actually put the thing into airplane mode or not.
I fly frequently on various airlines and have never heard "Airplane mode is not OK" or even any reference to "Airplane mode" at all. What airline do you fly?
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Actually my experience (in Europe) is that during start/landing, all electronic gadgets are disallowed, even MP3 players. Once in the sky, only active transmitters are disallowed.
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Yup. This is because ILS is an old and very finicky interference-sensitive system (It basically relies on determining where within an RF "pencil beam" coming from the end of the runway you are). The concern is that leakage from just the clocks in an active device could throw off the ILS system's accuracy.
Once you're airborne, ILS doesn't matter, and the remaining navigational systems are far less interference-prone.
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More likely it has to do with other passengers believing a rogue cellphone might crash the plane and may complain to the flight attendant if they see another passenger using a cellphone. The other passenger has no idea if airplane mode is in use.
Rather than risking a headache of explanation or calming down snippy passengers, it's easier for the attendant to just tell everyone to turn them all off. They don't really stand to gain anything by splitting hairs over with someone over what's ok and what's not ok.
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The ban on electronic devices in general is for no other reason than to force you to pay attention. Takeoffs and landings are the most critical phases of flight where the most can go wrong. They want your maximum attention during these times in case of an emergency. Yelling brace brace isn't gonna get through if everybody's got their MP3 players turned up to 11. That's why they still let you have your headphones plugged in to the in seat entertainment system, because any announcements pre-empt whatever you'
Radar about to be "jammed" (Score:2)
This is a non-story (Score:5, Informative)
Not only is it for one specific module, its only at elevated power levels, not typical power levels. Lets watch the corporate media fuck this up and turn into a scare tactic to show more ads to morons.
http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2011/03/10/354179/wi-fi-interference-with-honeywell-avionics-prompts-boeing.html
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Wow. That earns a big FU for the editors.
Thanks for the information.
Re:This is a non-story (Score:5, Insightful)
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the corporate media
Why pick on them, and not the bloggers and commenters?
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Because there's a profit incentive in outrage and fear. I'm curious to see if CNN can outcrazy Fox on "ZOMG WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE ON A PLANE BECAUSE OF LAPTOPS!!"
I see bloggers as a much lesser evil and they typically have comments sections in which they can be corrected - like I just did to slashdot.
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except wi-fi systems can fall out of spec...assuming they where in spec tio begin with. It's not uncommon for a parts manager in China decides to use an inferior line of parts for some manufacturing.
For example, lets say you order 1000 lots of an item. Maybe lot 250-670 have a part from a different vendor...like the parts managers father in laws el-cheapo transistor manufacturer.
This exact thin cause Seagate to end up with several lots of failure from one of their HD lines in the 90s.
the problem: an airplane is a metal aluminum tube (Score:3)
they need to build airplanes out of brick, or concrete
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i made a dumb joke, but heck, if they can build boats out of concrete
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concrete_ship [wikipedia.org]
i therefore desire some insane mofo to try to build an airplane out of concrete
oh yeah, carbon fiber is amazing (Score:2)
they already use it
http://www.google.com/search?q=carbon+fiber+aircraft [google.com]
but i'm talking about building an airplane out of something absolutely insane, impractical and impossible at face value. like cast iron. or concrete
yes (Score:2)
and as opposed to a transparent aluminum tube ;-)
Time to go back to IR and Visible light. (Score:3)
Hey didn't we see something about a network that works in the optical spectrum not to long ago. Seems like a good idea on an airliner.
What sort of equipment is this? (Score:5, Informative)
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Actually if you look through details, it sounds like an EMI hole below that which is specified by the relevant standard was within the 2.4 GHz band.
This hole was nowhere near deep enough for a WiFi device to actually exceed the threshold, but the FAA is VERY conservative when it comes to civilian airliners - Any hole in that band = eliminate all transmitters in that band just to be sure.
Tempest in a teapot... (Score:4, Funny)
I dunno. This seems like something with a terribly simple fix...
JUST DON'T USE WIFI.
If you want networking in an aircraft, do it with wired Ethernet.
Of course this screws over all of the most hyped devices but that's life sometimes.
[Nelson] Ha Ha! [/Nelson]
Conflict of interest? (Score:2)
Yes, because we know Boeing and Honeywell have no interest in keeping WiFi on a short, monetized leash in aircraft...
http://www.boeing.com/Features/2010/04/bds_feat_BBSN_031210.html [boeing.com]
Completely inaccurate headline (Score:2)
Headline should read, Poorly Designed Aviation equipment Suffer interference From WIFI, with the body reading, "...when WIFI transmits at levels far in excess of consumer equipment."
There isn't a story here.
Phone use in airplanes has always been about economics and excessive use of scarce ground resources.
Terrorist EE Applications are rising (Score:2)
In other news, university officials have noticed a sharp increase in the number of terrorists applying for admission to EE degree programs. Until now, terrorists have traditionally favored chemistry and chemical engineering programs. Chem E applications have dropped sharply.
Chem E prof: "I really don't understand it. We still have a great program, Although it was strange: all that these students seemed interested in, were exothermic reactions.
EE prof: "I really don't understand it. Who would study EE
Sounds more like a design flaw (Score:2)
This really sounds like a failed design where blame should go to Boeing rather than the IEEE standard.
Didn't mythbusters address this once? (Score:2)
And didn't they conclude that portable consumer devices that are operating within normal parameters could not interfere with the plane or its operation?
Does this mean that the Mythbusters were wrong?
Hooray! (Score:2)
...and I say thank all that's holy for that. Anything that keeps airplanes as the one place that I'm not going to be bothered by "CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW?" or disturbingly personal/intimate conversations of total strangers is entirely welcome to me. Give me one refuge from connectivity, please, just one.
cellphone and speakers (Score:2)
I've never understood why people call this a myth. Whenever I'm sitting near speakers and my cell phone decides to check in with the tower, I hear a distinct beeping noise. If I can *hear* the effect of a signal, why do people think that a switch can't flip because of it? I don't want to die in a fireball of doom because you wanted to tweet that the guy next to you on the plane just farted.
Wifi does not interfere with "Airplanes". (Score:2)
Totally Appropriate PA moment (Score:2)
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2006/10/30/ [penny-arcade.com]
Here's the fix... (Score:2)
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"TSA to search your pockets and confiscate any electrical devices."
Next on terrorist theater, pack proper electronics in a notebook to spoof avionics test equipment and make landings impactful.
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??????
Let me ask yourself: when you are in a plane... are there, now, other WiFis to which you can connect? Not someone else's computer that is useless (unless you want to have a LAN party), but something that will give you internet access?
Even if Boeing is designing that "new" Wi-Fi that you guess, they do not need to deliver FUD to become the only operator. In fact, this only discourages Wi-Fi usage (yes they can claim later its Wi-Fi is safer, but some doubt will remain...)
Next conspiracy theory, please?