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FAASTeam Notice
Type: General Information
Notice Date: Friday, October 3, 2008
Notice Number: NOTC1405
Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast (ADS-B)
This notice expired on
Sunday, November 30, 2008

Attention All Pilots Flying in South Florida
New Traffic and Flight Information Services Are Available Now

Pilots who fly in South Florida can now receive free traffic and weather information in the cockpit. To receive these services, aircraft must be equipped with an Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast (ADS-B) transmitter/receiver or transceiver and a cockpit display of traffic information (CDTI).

The new services include:

Flight Information Service - Broadcast (FIS-B), which provides pilots and flight crews with a cockpit display of aviation weather and aeronautical information.

Be advised, the following FIS-B weather products are for information and strategic purposes only and do not meet the safety and regulatory requirements of official weather products for fuel or flight planning:

  • Aviation Routine Weather Reports (METARs).
  • Special Aviation Reports (SPECIs).
  • Terminal Area Forecasts (TAFs) and their amendments.
  • NEXRAD (regional and CONUS) precipitation maps.
  • Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) Distant and Flight Data Center.
  • Airmen’s Meteorological Conditions (AIRMET).
  • Significant Meteorological Conditions (SIGMET) and Convective SIGMET.
  • Status of Special Use Airspace (SUA).
  • Temporary Flight Restrictions (TFRs).
  • Winds and Temperatures Aloft.
  • Pilot Reports (PIREPS).
  • TIS-B service status.

Traffic Information Service - Broadcast (TIS-B), which enhances a pilot’s visual acquisition of other traffic.

Be advised, TIS-B is only an advisory service. Pilots must continue to exercise vigilance by looking out the window to “see and avoid” other aircraft, in accordance with Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations Section 91.113b. Pilots should not allow themselves to become reliant on the cockpit display of TIS-B information.

The following table lists which type of data link is required to receive TIS-B and FIS-B services:

If the aircraft is equipped with the following data link… Then the pilot can receive the following services…
Universal Access Transceiver (UAT) TIS-B and FIS-B
1090 MHz Extended Squitter (1090 ES) TIS-B

Users of TIS-B and FIS-B can help the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) correct malfunctions and enhance the service by reporting instances of undesirable system performance. The FAA urges users to report the following information:
  1. Time of observation.
  2. Location.
  3. Type and identity of the aircraft.
  4. Description of the condition observed.
  5. Type of avionics system and software version used.

You can report issues by contacting the nearest Flight Service Station (FSS) facility or obtaining FAA Form 8000-7, Safety Improvement Report, from FSSs, Flight Standards District Offices, or general aviation fixed-based operators.

The FAA will publish an advisory circular with additional details about coverage, requirements, limitations, transmission intervals, ADS-B broadcast services, and other information in the future.

For a printable copy of this information, including a graphic showing the coverage area, click here.

For more information about the FAA’s ADS-B program, visit http://www.adsb.gov/.

Questions? Contact the FAA Flight Standards ADS-B Office at: 
9-AWA-AVS-ADS-Programs-AFS@faa.gov or the FAA Aircraft Certification ADS-B Office at: 9-AWA-AVS-ADS-Programs-AIR@faa.gov.