laytonl Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 My airplane, N918TH, has been showing up on Flightaware on flights around Oxnard CA and I’m based in Georgia. You think this is an ADSB mixup and if so, should I do anything about it? lee Quote
Mooney-Mark Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 Check to make sure your airplane is still in your hangar! 4 3 Quote
amillet Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 Last week I saw a friend’s E model on Flightaware in California. It was safely in its hangar in AZ. Quote
ArtVandelay Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 Given the speed of the duplicate I would guess it’s a 172 or Archer type with the wrong tail number configured in its ADSB out box.Seems to be based out of OXR, maybe you can call them and ask if they have an aircraft with a similar tail number? Quote
Marauder Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 My plane periodically flies on her own down in Texas. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro 1 Quote
DonMuncy Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 10 minutes ago, Marauder said: My plane periodically flies on her own down in Texas. Homesick? 1 Quote
Greg Ellis Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 When my Dad owned his Cessna 340, it was based in Texas. However, Flightaware showed it as an Aerostar based in Florida. This was 7 years or so ago before ADS-B out was even a twinkle in the eyes of the FAA. Not sure why it happen. I don't think I would worry about it unless you or family members rely on Flightaware for information about your flights. Quote
MBDiagMan Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 When I bought my F, I had them swap the 345 in my C into the F. On the first test flight the F showed up in flightaware with the tail number of the C. They reconfigured the 345 in about two minutes and all is well. Quote
EricJ Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 I'd ask around about what authority might care about that. I wouldn't want to get called about somebody else's deviation and have to prove it wasn't me. 1 Quote
Marauder Posted November 1, 2018 Report Posted November 1, 2018 I'd ask around about what authority might care about that. I wouldn't want to get called about somebody else's deviation and have to prove it wasn't me. If they don’t resolve it, we could also argue that it wasn’t our plane flying when they try to dispatch a handling fee for ATC services. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro 1 1 Quote
laytonl Posted November 1, 2018 Author Report Posted November 1, 2018 Thanks guys. I assume it’s an ADSB issue. Good point about perhaps getting charged landing fees etc based on tracking software. Lee Quote
Reid Posted November 2, 2018 Report Posted November 2, 2018 (edited) FlightAware shows the data was from LA center, not through ADSB. It would appear that a controller mixed up the tail number. Edited November 2, 2018 by Reid Quote
Bolter Posted November 2, 2018 Report Posted November 2, 2018 If you feel like digging deeper, look when and where they landed, then listen to ATC.net archives for that time and tower. Note if any tail number is similar sounding. Quote
laytonl Posted November 3, 2018 Author Report Posted November 3, 2018 On 11/1/2018 at 9:50 PM, Reid said: FlightAware shows the data was from LA center, not through ADSB. It would appear that a controller mixed up the tail number. What indicated this data is from LA Center versus ADSB data? Lee Quote
Bryan Posted November 3, 2018 Report Posted November 3, 2018 In FlightAware, you can click on the View Track and it will show you the reporting position report and who/what did the reporting. Quote
amillet Posted November 3, 2018 Report Posted November 3, 2018 My friend’s phantom flight (N1279X) in Van Nuys doesn’t seem to show source of data Quote
Reid Posted November 3, 2018 Report Posted November 3, 2018 37 minutes ago, amillet said: My friend’s phantom flight (N1279X) in Van Nuys doesn’t seem to show source of data In this case, the source of the data was SoCal TRACON. See attached Quote
amillet Posted November 3, 2018 Report Posted November 3, 2018 That column didn’t appear on my iPad. Thank you Quote
rbridges Posted November 3, 2018 Report Posted November 3, 2018 On 10/31/2018 at 9:05 PM, Marauder said: My plane periodically flies on her own down in Texas. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro Probably one of your ladies commandeering it for the 100 hamburger run. She didn't hear you say 100 dollar hamburger run. 1 Quote
laytonl Posted November 3, 2018 Author Report Posted November 3, 2018 21 hours ago, Bryan said: In FlightAware, you can click on the View Track and it will show you the reporting position report and who/what did the reporting. Thanks Bryan! I don’t know that. Lee Quote
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