Small Airports

A small airport or airfield is often unmanned, but a landing airplane still need to talk to Air Traffic Control elsewhere.

By using remote controlled radios, one operator can handle many airfields from one single location.

 

Working Remotely

Remote dispatcher

Small airports and airfields are in many cases unmanned. If they are far away from a large airport with Air Traffic Control, they need to have their own radio to handle safe landings and take aways.

This locally installed radio can be remote controlled from a totally different place. All you need is an IP connection.

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Remote controlled Airfield radio

Common dispatcher - Night watch

In the example to the left, the three airports each have their local small system with one radio and one dispatch PC. The three systems are also remote controlled from one common dispatch site.
This set up can be very useful for example when there is low traffic at night time, but you still need to monitor what is happening at the remote airport. One common dispatcher can then handle all three airports.
The system can be expanded with more airports, dispatchers and also other types of radios.

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Night time watch from one common dispatch site.

 

Radio Types

Fixed radios

The most common radio that we remote control, is the Icom IC-A120. It is remote controlled with audio and PTT plus channel change and squelch setting.

We can also remote Jotron radios with the same functions, and many other radio types, with only audio and PTT (fixed channel).

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Virtual Control head of the Icom IC-A120, remote controlled airband radio

Portable radios

Most portable radios can also be remote controlled. But only for audio and PTT, no channel change.

The drawbacks with using a portable are power through the battery (it needs to stand in a charger) and a small antenna.

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Portable airband radio connected to a network interface