Study Fails To Prove Cellphones Interfere With Flight

A few days ago I blogged about the Carnegie Mellon study on cellphones in aircraft, wondering if it wasn’t total bunk. Today I found out I was right: it doesn’t prove anything. The IEEE article on the study admits it right in this paragraph (emphasis is mine):

There is no smoking gun to this story: there is no definitive instance of an air accident known to have been caused by a passenger’s use of an electronic device. Nonetheless, although it is impossible to say that such use has contributed to air accidents in the past, the data also make it impossible to rule it out completely. More important, the data support a conclusion that continued use of portable RF-emitting devices such as cellphones will, in all likelihood, someday cause an accident by interfering with critical cockpit instruments such as GPS receivers.

So the researchers didn’t actually prove anything, they just said it might be true. Let me apply their conclusion to a different scenario, equally truthful as their own:

Nonetheless, although it is impossible to say that cows may someday build rockets and colonize the moon, the data also make it impossible to rule it out completely.

Yes, cattle seem to lack skills in building rockets. Their social skills don’t extend to much more than an occasional “moo.” Yet its impossible to rule out completely that one day they could build rockets and colonize the moon.

Other snippets of their article are also dubious. For instance, researchers are shocked, shocked to learn that some people try to use their phones in flight!

Our research shows clearly that, in violation of FCC and FAA rules, calls are regularly made from commercial aircraft.

News Flash: people sometimes break rules. Especially when the rules are arbitrary. These are rules that the FCC implemented not for safety reasons, but to keep an airborne phone from lighting up several cell towers. And the one the FAA adopted it not for security but for the sake of convenience or comfort to the passengers (or if you’re of a more conspiratorial nature, to drive use of the expensive AirPhones)?

The researchers later contradict themselves, at least partially (all emphasis mine):

Furthermore, PCS is regulated separately from cellular; the FCC does not restrict airborne use of PCS wireless handsets.

That’s right, the FCC does not restrict the use of your PCS phone in flight. If you’ve got Sprint or Verizon service, you can gab with Aunt Martha until the signal fades. Your flight attendants might get annoyed, the FAA may beat you down, but the FCC won’t care.

The researchers do touch on the scariest part of interference – that occuring to the GPS system. The article states:

Our measurements also found emissions from other onboard sources—devices used by passengers—in the frequency used by GPS.

Pretty vague, huh? Emissions were found, but from where? How do they know it came from devices used by passengers? It certainly doesn’t say that this interference came from phones. The article cites a NASA technical memorandum (PDF) about a particular phone, the Samsung SPH-N300, but did not test this phone itself. It basically took the memo at face value with no testing of its own at all.

In the case of the Samsung phone, the reports to NASA were from the general aviation community. These are smaller aircraft than airliners. The Samsung phone has a GPS receiver built in, meaning it could interfere with other nearby GPS receivers – if placed right next to or on top of them! Certainly this is a different scenario from one where the phone is somewhere in the cabin, far away from the cockpit. While the NASA test seems sound, a RF-proof lab is a far different environment than an actual aircraft. The fact that a phone radiates does not in itself prove it interferes with avionics.

The most damning evidence of a fraud is this:

Ours was a conservative estimate, since a call made at the other end of the cabin from the instrumentation would be below the threshold we could observe.

Uh, come again? You had a sensitive broadband antenna and frequency analyzer in the overhead bin – a bin separated from the cabin by a flimsy plastic door – and you could not detect a call made from the other end of the cabin? You mean to tell me these phones are so powerful as to overwhelm shielded electronics located in the cockpit behind a steel-reinforced cabin door, yet you couldn’t detect them fifty feet away using an oversized antenna? Are the passengers flying pigs, by chance?

The report then goes on to cite the ASRS database, a database aircrews “and others” use to report strange behavior in the aircraft they fly. This database is flawed for many reasons. Number one, the entries are anonymous, meaning no followup can occur. Number two, if so-called emissions experts with a fancy spectrum analyzer can’t detect a cellphone in back of the cabin, how likely are the aircrews to positively identify the source of the interference? Aircrews aren’t trained in the science of radio. They are trained to either fly the plane or to hand out peanuts. If something odd occurs on the flight, guess what’s going to get blamed – those spooky electronics. Captain Bob ain’t leaving his seat to hunt down a naughty PDA. This data is anything but scientific.

One scary scenario the article cites comes from the dubious ASRS database. A 30-degree navigational error was supposedly corrected when a passenger turned off his DVD player. DVD players aren’t intentional radiators: they do not by nature transmit. There might be some interference caused by them by their intermodulating frequenies (IF) but its highly unlikely that those weak signals would be strong enough to overwhelm a VOR receiver in the cockpit. And that’s assuming the IF was anywhere near the VOR frequencies, which is unknown.

The model of the so-called offending DVD player (called “the new DVD players” in this 1999 report) is not stated. The plane was an ancient B727, apt to have other troubles due to age, and its wiring and antennas were not subsequently inspected. The radio signals coming from the ground (including the VOR transmitter the plane was supposedly near) are far more powerful than any a DVD player could produce. One incident does not constitute scientific proof. Even so, for inexplicable reasons the researchers cite this case (submitted anonymously, remember) without bothering to recreate it themselves for testing purposes.

Sorry, guys. You’ve gone round and round and you haven’t proven a thing. You can’t show that any interference occured; you can’t identify the source of any signals you did measure; you base your conclusions largely on anonymous, non-scientific, self-reported data; and you can’t even detect a cellphone in the cabin fifty feet away.

I’m gonna make a call here myself, and I call bs.

[Update] Another blogger takes a hard look at the CMU data and also has issues with the report.

Cheap Thoughts: Neutral

Is there anything more useless than the “neutral” gear of a car’s automatic transmission? It doesn’t do anything! What a waste of effort having to shift over it every time I need to get to the useful “drive” and “reverse” gears.

AT&T To Buy Bellsouth

How can AT&T, er …I mean SBC’s purchase of Bellsouth be a good thing? Remember when there was only one phone company in town? Remember how high your phone bills were? We’re heading back to those days, thanks to a Congress that can’t say no.

Where’s Elliot Spitzer when you need him?

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Countdown To Slackerdom

I was buying some things at the local grocery store last week. I saw the total was going to provide me a wad of singles so I do what I usually do: I kicked in a quarter to make my change a fivespot. You’d think this was simple math, but you’d be wrong. The slacker at the register gave me a blank look.

“Aw, man,” he sighed, fumbling with the money. “The last math I did was advanced trigonometry.”

Dust off those advanced trig skills, dude. NASA may be calling you.

Fake City Gets Front-Page Treatment

I love college basketball as much as the next guy, but does this story about a student selling a basketball ticket deserve front-page treatment in the N&O? Some enterprising Dookie economics major wanted to spend weeks living outdoors so he could sell his basketball ticket for big cash. Fine by me.

Why is the paper printing stories about Krzyzewskiville, a fake “tent city” on the Dook campus? When did this elevate to front-page news?

Maybe the N&O had to take a break from whipping up a flu frenzy.

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Australia

Looks like I’ll be making a two week long visit to Australia in a few weeks. I’m going on a business trip to Melbourne and Sydney, providing training and sales support for my employer. There’s also a question as to whether the wife and kids will join me.

This will be the second visit I’ve made to Australia. The first one was in uniform, as my ship – the USS Elliot – visited Perth back in the summer of 1991. It was of course winter there at the time and rained practically the whole, three day visit.

The flight will mark the third time I’ve crossed the line, this time being the first by air. Even though I’m a trusty shellback, I would strongly doubt that airline passengers crawl through food scraps when flying over the equator. Maybe I’ll toss some peanuts across the cabin to mark the occasion or something.

The trip is work, make no mistake. My schedule is filling up more and more each day. For that reason I wonder if Kelly and the kids would enjoy making the trip with me, as they probably won’t see me for most of the day. Still, it will be nice to visit a country I enjoyed so much on my last visit and its always good to get out of the country and explore.

Study says cell phones could cause problems on aircraft

A study by Carnegie Mellon University, in conjunction with those wacky folks at the FAA, has indicated that the use of mobile phones can pose dangers to critical equipment on aircraft. Dr. Bill Strauss of the Department of Engineering and Public Policy, says his study indicates the interference from these devices is higher than expected.

“These devices can disrupt normal operation of key cockpit instruments, especially Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers, which are increasingly vital for safe landings,” Strauss said.

Until the study’s results appear in the IEEE’s Proceedings, we’ll just have to wonder about a few things:

  • How could they know the aircraft’s GPS receiver was affected if they were monitoring it only from a receiver in a carry-on bag?
  • Did they have an independent method of determining their position like LORAN?
  • Were the researchers in constant contact with the pilots?
  • Are the pilots trained in GPS technology to the point they can recognize faulty behavior?
  • How does one measure from an overhead bin the effect of a cabin transmitter on electronics in the cockpit?

This sounds like a sham to me. The press release is vague with details. Nowhere does the press release specifically state that cellphones were observed to affect aircraft systems. It simply states that the risk is “greater than expected.”

Show me where a properly functioning mobile phone, transmitting on the 900 MHz or 1900 MHz bands at a puny 600mW at its strongest, affected the reception of a 1575 MHz GPS signal coming in from an external aircraft antenna. Show me! Any harmonics at 1575 Mhz must be significantly weaker than the primary signal. That’s assuming such a phone is shoddy enough to cause harmonics, which is a big if since undoubtedly it never would have gotten FCC approval.

How can a device be safe to hold right next to your brain and at the same time dangerous enough to endanger an aircraft? How does this make sense?!?

It’s either one or the other, folks. Somebody’s lying to us.

Retirement

I will say one thing before calling it a night. My dad worked his last day at IIBM today, putting the cap on a 37-year career. IBM put food on our table. It allowed us to take nice vacations. Gave us great health care. It took us to many new and exciting homes around the southeast. My dad even finagled one of those new IBM PCs for us not long after they rolled off the assembly lines for the very first time. The blogging greatness you see here is owed to my dad’s career.

He’s hanging up his wingtips for golf shoes now. I’m happy for him, and very proud of him.

Bravo Zulu, Pop! Well done!

Back From Chicago

I’m back from a business trip to Chicago. Fortunately for me and my family, this was just an overnight deal. I’m putting the brakes on any more traveling for the next few weeks.

I don’t really have much else to say at the moment. Gonna just take it easy for the rest of the evening.

UAE Ports Deal

For once I have to side with George Bush, hard as it sometimes is. The deal allowing Dubai to run U.S. ports isn’t a threat to security. The controversy is nothing more than a few idiot Congressmembers grandstanding to the media in an effort to show they’re tough on security.

I visited Dubai during one of my naval deployments. It is the Las Vegas of the Middle East: a Westerner could feel right at home there. Dubai knows its future depends on doing business with the West.