
October 1, 2005
As bizjet security concerns mount in today's troubled
environment, a ready market has emerged for wares
ranging from wheelwell sensors and surveillance cameras
to missile protection systems.
By Kim Rosenlof
Two business jets of the same make and model owned by
two different companies sit next to each other on a
lonely airport ramp in a remote country.
While eating
lunch at the hotel restaurant a few miles away, the
pilots of one jet receive an alert on their UHF
transceiver. They use the transceiver to interrogate the
aircraft and discover that the left wheelwell sensor
detected an intrusion. This could still be just a cat or
a bird, but after the alert sounds for the eighth time
in 24 minutes, the pilots decide that something's wrong.
Returning to the airplane, they don't see anything out
of the ordinary, so they turn on the aircraft power to
check out the systems, and a stream of fluid pours out
of the left wheelwell. Subsequent investigation revealed
that a mechanic "borrowed" an hydraulic hose fitting
from their plane to fix the other company's jet.
Sounds like a crazy scenario? According to
www.planecrashinfo.com, approximately 8 percent of
fatal aircraft crashes between 1950 and 2004 were caused
by aircraft tampering or sabotage. And according to
Securaplane founder, Richard Lusko, a scenario similar
to the one introducing this article actually happened to
a Securaplane customer.
"Wheelwells are an area of concern because a lot goes
on in there," says Lusko, who founded the Tucson,
Ariz.-based aircraft security system company in 1988.
"It's an easy place to plant a 5-pound [2-kg] bomb or to
tamper with the aircraft."
The Securaplane 500 Aircraft Electronic Security
System uses DO-160C-compliant passive infrared (IR)
sensors with temperature compensation to detect human
intrusion in wheelwells, plus a customizable number of
ruggedized, all-metal magnetic reed switches for door or
panel detection. Each reed switch comprises two
ferromagnetic blades encapsulated in a non-ferromagnetic
metal body. When the magnet on the door or panel pulls
away from the airframe-mounted switch as it is opened,
the switch blades spring into an open position,
triggering the alarm. A control display unit (CDU)
mounted in the aircraft cabin allows the crew to arm,
disarm and interrogate the system. The CDU also stores
up to 1,600 events, including arm/disarm times, and
intrusion times, locations and duration.
Currently the aircraft crew receives intrusion alerts
from up to 10 miles [16 km] away--depending on terrain
and line of sight availability--through the system's UHF
transceiver. The transceiver also can be used to arm,
disarm and interrogate the system. Securaplane plans to
launch a GSM version to allow pilots to receive alerts
and interrogate the aircraft through GSM-enabled cell
phones or personal digital assistants (PDAs) by the
second quarter of 2006.
According to Mike Anderson, director of avionics for
authorized Securaplane installer, Garrett/Piedmont
Hawthorne/Associated, typical areas receiving IR
protection include wheelwells, engine cowlings, the
avionics bay and cargo bays. Magnetic reed switches
protect doors and easily removable access points, such
as inspection panels. "One of the criteria we use [for
determining where to place sensors] is whether somebody
can get into the area fairly easily," Anderson says. "A
panel that's attached with a Zeus fastener, where
someone can get access fairly quickly, do something and
then close it back up fairly quickly--that's what we
want to protect. If a panel has 200 screws holding it
down, we don't worry about that."
Although some customers are happy with sensor-only
security systems, many choose to add one or more cameras
to their system. According to Lusko, cameras often fill
several roles, including safety, security and in-flight
entertainment.
"Part of the configuration of the camera system is to
allow the crew to see the main and nose landing gear,"
Lusko says, noting that the cameras help the crew verify
the gear are down and locked on landing. And on larger
aircraft, the cameras determine wheel positions in
relation to the tarmac and lighting fixtures during
taxi. "That same video can be piped to the cabin for
in-flight entertainment, and [the same camera can be]
used as part of the security system when the security
system is armed." For the cockpit view, the signal can
be mapped to a T-display (showing the three sets of
landing gear) on any video-capable multifunction
display.
Other customers prefer to install security systems
consisting completely of cameras. UK-based AD Aerospace
specializes in aircraft video security on a wide range
of aircraft from airliners to large corporate jets. Its
FlightVu Defender system, developed for the corporate
aviation market, consists of up to eight cameras that
use video motion detection (VMD) technology to provide
comprehensive peripheral coverage of the aircraft on the
ground.
"For a Gulfstream or a Global Express you'd typically
use four or five cameras mounted throughout the
airplane," says John Dolan, vice president of business
development for AD Aerospace. "[The system] might even
use an underbelly quad-pack, which is a 360-degree view
camera pod."
Available in both color and monochrome, and in both
overt and covert body styles, Defender cameras use VMD
to compare frames, looking for any difference between
one frame and the next. Differences constitute movement,
which in turn may trigger an alarm. Alarm video signals
are fed to the onboard digital video recorder, where
they are digitized, compressed and stored on a removable
hard drive. The hard drive stores approximately 10 hours
of data with an update rate of 12 pictures per second.
Pilots can review the stored video on the ground via an
Ethernet connection from a laptop or through the
aircraft's in-flight entertainment system containing the
IP-addressable FlightVu video server.
"We developed the first commercially available
servers for airplanes about 10 years ago," Dolan says.
"[We offer] a 10/100T-base interface that's 100 percent
Ethernet-compliant with a very friendly, user-oriented,
graphical user interface [GUI]."
Defender also can be configured to transmit the alarm
video signals via a low-power, frequency-hopping spread
spectrum microwave link to an antenna stationed at a
hangar or terminal building. Pilots or other flight
department personnel can then remotely access the video
images via modem with a laptop or personal computer.
Text messaging using a short message service (SMS) also
can be employed to alert pilots of alarms.
The system also can be used in conjunction with AD
Aerospace's other FlightVu products for additional
safety and security. These include the FlightVu Witness
closed circuit television camera system for in-flight
cabin and cockpit security, CargoVu for larger aircraft
with cargo holds, and FlightVu Spectator for in-flight
entertainment.
Despite their ability to indicate that an aircraft
has been compromised, security systems can present a
burden to the pilots who have to respond to the alarms.
Because wheelwell sensors cannot tell the difference
between a cat and a human, and video cameras cannot tell
the difference between a lineman walking past the
aircraft and a terrorist approaching the aircraft,
pilots often have to respond to false alarms.
To reduce the number of false alarms, Securaplane is
introducing a range controlled radar (RCR) sensor that
can be configured to scan a defined radius and ignore
any readings past the specified distance. "It's actually
a miniature radar using very low power and yet [is] very
effective," Lusko says. "We can set [the RCR] at any
limit we want--3 feet, 5 feet, 4 feet [0.9, 1.5, 1.2
m]--and it doesn't see beyond that. So this is a
breakthrough in security."
The $1,800 RCR, expected by March of 2006, also will
be more cost-effective than traditional IR cameras,
which start at $20,000 per camera, according to Lusko.
Securaplane currently is developing an underbelly pod
that will include four RCR sensors and a GSM
transmitter. Pilots will be able to view, on a
GSM-enabled cell phone or PDA, a graphic of the
intruder's path around the airplane, including any place
the intruder stopped. Lusko expects the pod to be
available in late 2006.
A critical concern regarding security systems is the
amount of power they consume on the tarmac. Security
systems cannot draw on aircraft batteries and must run
on their own emergency supplies. Using mainly low-power
magnetic reed sensors drawing a few mA each, the
Securaplane 500 system can last for five to seven days
on its BP-550 power communications unit and for seven to
10 days if an additional BP-650 battery pack is
installed. Adding the RCR would only draw another 4 to 5
mA, compared with a standard camera's 180 mA.
While the majority of corporate operators are
satisfied with camera and sensor-based aircraft security
systems, a select few are worried about threats of a
decidedly more sinister nature--shoulder-fired missiles.
Although a number of companies have developed or are
developing onboard anti-missile defense systems for
military and commercial aircraft, BAE Systems'
AN/ALQ-204 Matador infrared countermeasure (IRCM) system
is available as a factory-installed option on Gulfstream
G300, G400, G500 and G550 aircraft.
The Matador protects against heat-seeking
surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) by using an infrared lamp
to present a false target to lure the missile away. "The
missile tries to lock onto a heat source, and the
[aircraft engine] exhaust is the place where it wants to
lock," says Matador program manager Scot Chebin. "The
Matador provides a false target, away from the aircraft,
that's hotter than the exhaust's heat signature. This
deters the missile from hitting the airplane." The
Matador requires little pilot attention. Once the pilot
engages the system, usually during taxi procedures, the
Matador continuously projects the false target to
protect the aircraft. At altitude the pilot can leave
the system on, turn it off or put it in standby mode,
depending on the area of the world in which the aircraft
is flying.
Although the Matador system was first developed more
than 20 years ago for the U.S. military and has seen
action in a number of conflicts, its $2.25-million price
tag and approximately 200-pound [91-kg] weight penalty
deterred civilian customers until the late 1990s, when
several countries began requesting the system for their
heads of state aircraft. Since 1999, nine heads of state
flying nine different aircraft platforms have installed
the Matador system.
However, although Gulfstream offers the unit as an
option, the U.S. State Department has not yet released
the technology for public use, meaning corporate
aviation customers currently are not allowed to purchase
the Matador option. BAE Systems is working with the
State Department to obtain a release for its first
corporate customer, and expects to obtain the go-ahead,
with certain restrictions, by the end of the year.
"Before 9/11 there really wasn't a reason for [the
Matador] to be offered in the commercial marketplace,"
says Bill Emerson, BAE Systems business development
director. "Now we're looking at the terrorist threat in
a changed world. We're making the technology available
to business jet operators now because there's a need in
a post-9/11 environment."
Although it also is currently available only to
military customers, a Compact Airborne Early Warning and
Control (CAEW&C) system has been developed by Israel
Aircraft Industries' Elta System Group for the
Gulfstream 550. Elta's CAEW&C system includes phased
array radar, phased array identification friend or foe
(IFF), signal intelligence (SIGINT) and a communications
system with a data link and satcom system.
Taking security one step farther, Honeywell
International recently flight tested an existing
communications management unit (CMU) loaded with new
cryptographic software to send and receive secure data
link messages via the airborne communications addressing
and reporting system (ACARS). In addition to protecting
messages from interception by unauthorized individuals,
the new Secure ACARS software was designed to achieve
the following:
Compress transmitted message size by up to 30
percent,
Use cryptographic integrity algorithms to ensure
messages are not corrupted, and
Authenticate messages to assure the recipient that
the message is from a legitimate source.
"Currently, individuals with inexpensive radio
scanners and freeware available through the Internet are
able to monitor unsecure ACARS message transmissions,"
says Frank Daly, president of Honeywell Commercial
Electronic Systems. "Flight plans and other sensitive
information can be intercepted easily, and in many cases
computer enthusiasts retrieve and post such information
on the Internet for anyone to see."
Although the U.S. Air Force cofunded the development
of the Secure ACARS technology, Honeywell plans to make
the system available for commercial and business
aircraft operators in early 2006.
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