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-   -   ATC problems for northern europe (https://www.pprune.org/atc-issues/424741-atc-problems-northern-europe.html)

Acklington 20th Aug 2010 14:17

ATC problems for northern europe
 
Sky news is reporting a Frankfurt airport official has said an ATC problem stopping flights to and from northern europe

Avman 20th Aug 2010 14:56

Apparently the system at Maastricht UAC has gone titz-up.

UAC48 20th Aug 2010 15:17

Tact/casa Information Message - Edyy
-------------------------------------
.
Ref. : Edyy Situation
.
Reg :
.
Valid : From: 1300 Until: 1800 Utc
.
Remarks : There Has Been A Radar Failure In Edyy. Currently All
Sctrs Are Regulated At 15 Percent Of Normal Capacity. Delay Per
Flight Can Reach 200 Minutes. Operators Are Requested Not To Call
For Improvement In Edyy Regulations. Cfmu Nod Are Monitoring The
Situation. An Update Will Be Sent As Soon As The Situation Changes
.
Cfmu Ops/brussels

fly_ebos 21st Aug 2010 11:18

We were on the backup system for about 1,5 hours.
Apparantly the track server with down due to too many vfr squawks in the lower airspace (loads of gliding was going on)

levelD 21st Aug 2010 11:33

Interresting Fly_EBOS.
But are you entitled to disclose such specific information? :cool:

Avman 21st Aug 2010 13:46

Keep quiet levelD, or ve may have to disclose a few secrets about you :eek:

UAC48 21st Aug 2010 15:04


Apparantly the track server with down due to too many vfr squawks in the lower airspace (loads of gliding was going on)
In this case, that's not a RADAR failure, but a SYSTEM failure...

Lon More 21st Aug 2010 17:04


In this case, that's not a RADAR failure, but a SYSTEM failure..
.

but you wouldn't expect a Flow Person to know the difference :O


(although what happened was the system was overloaded with radar info)

On the beach 21st Aug 2010 19:35

Sounds like a ginormous hole in the Swiss/Dutch/Eurocontrol cheese.

BrATCO 21st Aug 2010 22:11

Not that big, the hole... as flow management procedures have been implemented. (Will you have another slice ?)

Can it be called a system "failure" ?
Some systems can deal with up to N tracks. They just choose a random track and delete it when they reach N+1. You lose a track, but the system still works. That's the way it was created. Not a failure...

Usually, N is big enough to deal with everyday's life.
And beancounters will tell us : "Statistics show that this event did not occur ! At least, it shouldn't occur more than once every 10000000000000(ish) years..."

Would the capacity loss (85 per cent ?:eek:) have been this huge with an ATC system based on paper strips (not as much automated) ? :E

Lon More 21st Aug 2010 22:54


Would the capacity loss (85 per cent ?) have been this huge with an ATC system based on paper strips (not as much automated) ?
It having been a track server problem, the availability of strips would probably have been of little help. The nature of the route structure makes conflict detection using a paper based system almost impossibly complicated.
If you wanted to regress to the steam age it would be necessary to revert to an airpace route structure that last existed back in the 1980s (when it was decided that they were irrelevant to the system and structure as it developed) By the time this had been promologated and all the flight plans refiled the system would have long been up and running again (IMHO by the way; I've been out of the loop for some years now)

andrijander 22nd Aug 2010 07:54

I'm with Lon on this one. Also what would be our limitation on a daily basis if we were running on strips? An educated guess (to call it something) could well be 20% less traffic a year. We can't operate on strips anymore, it'll be way too busy managing strips i.s.o. managing airplanes.

Perhaps is time we upgrade our server. Or we implement some mitigation procedures to keep a lid on it. There's no perfect system, but it'll be criminal to know about a problem and not fix it.

I guess it'll be top priority though (back at work today, let's see what's up).

A.

BrATCO 22nd Aug 2010 08:15

When you're used to deal with steam, that's not such a big deal when the system "fails" and starts providing hot water.
My (off-topic ?) question was more about cheese layers. From my point of view, removing paper strips (in order to "improve" the system) was just putting a big number of cheese slices in a "fail-unsafe" (by definition) computer. Hence the big loss of capacity when there's one squawk too many.

wolf_wolf 22nd Aug 2010 08:17

So where are the good places to go gliding around central Europe? (southern Germany, Switzerland etc)

PeltonLevel 22nd Aug 2010 10:16


Some systems can deal with up to N tracks. They just choose a random track and delete it when they reach N+1. You lose a track, but the system still works.
Seems like a scary option to me! Particularly if it does it in in a busy area.

BrATCO 22nd Aug 2010 11:51

If N is known the number of tracks can be scanned. When it's too close to N, the supervisor will be warned and he will use ATFM procedures to avoid the override. ATCOs will be advised too.
If N is reached, one can use the backup radar system (based on 20 years ago's simpler technology, N is not the same). Strips are still available, automatic co-ordinations still work (however, not with the same interface).
No real big change in procedures.

Lon More 22nd Aug 2010 12:56


So where are the good places to go gliding around central Europe? (southern Germany, Switzerland etc)
somewhere with good mobile phone coverage - ask ATC Watcher :E

Spitoon 22nd Aug 2010 13:08


Quote:
Some systems can deal with up to N tracks. They just choose a random track and delete it when they reach N+1. You lose a track, but the system still works.

Seems like a scary option to me! Particularly if it does it in in a busy area.
So how else do you think they work?

What's scary perhaps is that it sounds like the system in question fell over rather than degrading the service in a known and managed manner.

Lon More 22nd Aug 2010 15:53

IIRC the track server is one of the older bits of a system which was designed to fail progressively.
One of the problems with Conspicuity Squawks is there is no requirement for mode C info with them. This makes it very difficult to filter them out of the system, especially if the system also supports a conflict detection and alert program

eglnyt 22nd Aug 2010 16:02

I suspect it was the random part that Peltonlevel found scary as I think you'll find he has a fairly good idea of how these things work.

There will always be an N, the important thing is you know what the value of N is and you know exactly what the system will do when it reaches that point. If it drops tracks you really need to know the rules by which it will do that, just randomly dropping tracks would not be acceptable to most safety engineers or the Safety Regulator.

What we don't know from the brief details on this thread is whether the MUAC tracker actually failed or was dropping so many tracks that it was unusable.


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