Advertisement
Get Your FREE E-Newsletter
LOGIN | Welcome, Guest.
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
Avionics: Office in the Sky
Written by Talbot Boggs   
Internet access is hot, but Canadian operators remain hesitant
Although generally lagging behind the US, executive aviation customers in Canada are becoming increasingly interested in outfitting their aircraft with ‘office in the sky’ capabilities such as internet access, airborne television, faxes and printers, and the latest in audiovisual systems and equipment.

Internet access is perhaps the hottest item in cabin avionics today. “We are getting more and more requests for the internet,” said Mike Shaw, avionics manager of Innotech Execair. “People want to use their time as productively as possible when they are in the air – something they can’t do on a commercial airliner.”

Modification centres that do installations of these sophisticated high-tech systems agree that Canadian customers are interested but are lagging behind the US, mainly because of the costs involved. To outfit a cabin with internet connection, airborne TV, fax and photocopying capabilities, and the latest in audiovisual systems and equipment can easily run to $1 million. These centres estimate there are perhaps only a handful of business aircraft in Canada equipped with internet and only slightly more with airborne TV.

“There’s a lot of want for these products, but there’s a reluctance to spend several hundred thousand dollars to get 128 kbps (kilobytes per second) internet connection, which is not very fast for land but is fast for aviation,” said Bill Arsenault, vice-president and general manager of Mid Canada Mod Centre. “There would be a huge market at one-quarter of the price.”

The pioneer in this blossoming industry is Inmarsat, the global network satellite owner and operator. Its Swift64 service can deliver in-flight internet connection speeds up to 64 kbps for a single channel or 128 kbps when two channels are bonded together. Even higher speeds are available using data compression techniques.

While not as fast as what’s available on land, 128 kbps “is faster than dial-up service and is respectable,” said Gary Nash, president of ABC Completions. Swift64 handles typical web surfing and e-mail transfers. When the next generation of satellites begins operating next year, they will be able to offer connection speeds of 432 kbps.

Entry to the internet at 40,000 feet starts at about $150,000 for an onboard data terminal and rises by a few hundred thousand dollars after adding associated equipment such as an antenna, satcom transceiver, network file server, router, wireless hub, data ports and more. User charges vary depending on the internet service provider, but typically web surfing starts at about $10 per minute.