Lefty
Well-Known Member
I think your slightly confused on the NAVAIDS we are talking about. So I am going to reference some of your posts above as well.
You mention Tacan only station and a VORTAC. Tacan only means when you tune up the applicable Tacan channel your aircrafts Tacan reciever automatically pulls the DME info to display on your Tacan equipment in the cockpit. A VORTAC is designed for military and civil use, so there is a VOR and a Tacan co-located. The DME equipment picks up the signal from the carrier frequency associated with the VOR's VHF frequency.
What you're saying here is much more complex than what you're saying. For the above to be feasible, you would have to find out what Tacan channels are associated with what specific UHF carrier frequencies. Then find out what specific VHF frequencies are paired with those UHF carried frequencies to input into your civil DME equipment. So essentially you would have to research Tacan = UHF = Associated VHF frequency that carries the same UHF freq as a specific Tacan channel.
Yes you are misreading me, I did not say that 112.0 broadcasts the DME info. However with civil use DME equipment you can only input a VHF freq. Therefore for all intents and purposes, 112.0 is where you will get your DME info (because your DME equipment will automatically pull the DME data from the appropriate carrier frequency.)
Using your post as an example, Channel 57 in this specific example is associated with this Tacan only station, for civil use. However I think you will be hard pressed to find a CFII that would teach their students to look up the UHF frequencies associated with a Tacan channel so that they could pair them with a VHF frequency to use the DME. It really has no practical use. All you would be doing is flying around the saying "Well I am 33.5 DME from ABC tacan."
This is getting way beyond the scope of a civilian pilot, because unless s/he work for Flight Check, s/he will most likely never use Tacan equipment.
An interesting thing that you should be able to do is, at any tacan only station you should be able to get dme off of it if you know what frequency is paired to the channel the vortac operates on.
You mention Tacan only station and a VORTAC. Tacan only means when you tune up the applicable Tacan channel your aircrafts Tacan reciever automatically pulls the DME info to display on your Tacan equipment in the cockpit. A VORTAC is designed for military and civil use, so there is a VOR and a Tacan co-located. The DME equipment picks up the signal from the carrier frequency associated with the VOR's VHF frequency.
No, if you have the channel the tacan is operating on, say 57, then if you knew the paired frequency, in this case 112.0, you could put 112.0 in your dme and should be able to get dme off it. Another example would be you run across a tacan on channel 37. If you put 110.0 into your dme, you should get distance.
What you're saying here is much more complex than what you're saying. For the above to be feasible, you would have to find out what Tacan channels are associated with what specific UHF carrier frequencies. Then find out what specific VHF frequencies are paired with those UHF carried frequencies to input into your civil DME equipment. So essentially you would have to research Tacan = UHF = Associated VHF frequency that carries the same UHF freq as a specific Tacan channel.
An no, no DME info is broadcast on 112.0. I don't know if I'm misreading you. The paired frequencies does not mean it is also broadcast on, rather the DME knows where to look because 57 is paired to 112.0. And of course the channels correspond to a frequency.
Yes you are misreading me, I did not say that 112.0 broadcasts the DME info. However with civil use DME equipment you can only input a VHF freq. Therefore for all intents and purposes, 112.0 is where you will get your DME info (because your DME equipment will automatically pull the DME data from the appropriate carrier frequency.)
Using your post as an example, Channel 57 in this specific example is associated with this Tacan only station, for civil use. However I think you will be hard pressed to find a CFII that would teach their students to look up the UHF frequencies associated with a Tacan channel so that they could pair them with a VHF frequency to use the DME. It really has no practical use. All you would be doing is flying around the saying "Well I am 33.5 DME from ABC tacan."
This is getting way beyond the scope of a civilian pilot, because unless s/he work for Flight Check, s/he will most likely never use Tacan equipment.