Boston Consolidated TRACON

Coordinates: 42°49′00″N 71°29′37″W / 42.8166°N 71.4935°W / 42.8166; -71.4935

The Boston Consolidated TRACON from the outside.

The Boston Consolidated TRACON (A90) is located at 25 Robert Milligan Parkway in Merrimack, New Hampshire.[1] BCT opened in 2004 after 8 years of development. The A90 function transferred to the new Boston Consolidated TRACON on February 22, 2004. The MHT function transferred over on March 7, 2004. Manchester TRACON used to be located at Manchester Airport right below the old ATCT. Boston TRACON used to be located at the Logan International Airport Control Tower before being consolidated. The new facility is 63,000 square feet (5,900 m2). A Terminal Radar Approach Control, or TRACON, is responsible for descending airplanes from the ARTCC and lining them up for landing at their destination airport, as well as climbing departures before handing off to the ARTCC.

The primary responsibility of the Boston TRACON is the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of arrival, departure, and en-route traffic. A90 is responsible for one main airport, Boston Logan International Airport. Additionally, A90 is responsible for dozens of smaller but busy fields, including Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, Hanscom Field, Norwood Memorial Airport, Beverly Municipal Airport, Lawrence Municipal Airport, Portsmouth International Airport at Pease, and Nashua Airport.

The Boston TRACON is one of six "Large TRACONs" currently existing throughout the United States. The others include the Atlanta Large TRACON, the New York TRACON, the Potomac Consolidated TRACON, the Southern California TRACON, and the Northern California TRACON.

According to the FAA Air Traffic Activity Data System below are the traffic counts for BCT:

BCT is part of the FAA New England District. The Boston Consolidated TRACON is considered the HUB facility for the following facilities:

Areas of Specialization

The Boston TRACON is divided into two Areas of Specialization. Controllers certify in one area only.

Boston Area - The Boston area handles most arrival and all departure traffic from Logan International Airport and surrounding satellites. The Boston Area can open a maximum of 8 radar positions. On a normal day, however, only 5-6 positions are staffed. On the midnight shift, there is only one position open.

Manchester Area - The Manchester area is the other area in A90. Most traffic in the Manchester area is destined to the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, however there are also many General Aviation flights destined to smaller fields. Additionally, the Manchester area provides service to all training flights conducted by Daniel Webster College, which is based at Nashua Airport. The Manchester area can open a maximum of 5 radar positions. On a normal day, only 3-4 positions are open. On the midnight shift, there is only one position open.

A90 is bordered by the following facilities:

Boston Area

A scope at the Boston Consolidated TRACON during the morning departure rush.

General

Along the wall in the back is the Boston Area. The position layout for these sectors from right to left is:

Sectors

Plymouth and Lincoln Sectors recently switched frequencies in order to reduce interference from other nearby facilities. Changes are reflected below.

Each Boston position has the ability to receive and transmit on 121.500 MHz and 243.000 MHz and is monitored by the Bedford Sector (SB).

Manchester Area

A busy Manchester area scope at the Boston TRACON.

General

On the right side of the room when you walk into the Operations room is the Manchester Area. The position layout for these sectors from right to left is:

Sectors

Each Airport Air Traffic Control Tower in the Manchester area (Nashua and Pease) have STARS Tower Display workstations displays that are linked to the A90 STARS automation system.

All of the MHT positions have the ability to receive and transmit on 121.500 MHz and 243.000 MHz and is monitored by the Flight Data position.

The Operations Room

The Operations Room of the Boston Consolidated TRACON.

General

Located on the second floor of the facility. Below the operations control room on the first floor is the electronics room where all of the computer and other electronic equipment is housed. The electronics room has an extra space in case another TRACON moves into the facility and they need somewhere to house the equipment. They have extra space so if they have new equipment delivered they can test it and make sure it works without interfering with the existing equipment. This makes it a seamless transition between old and new equipment. The Facility is backed up by two 1250 kW diesel generators and 4 UPS units (two 225kVA, two 40kVA).

Position layout

The Operations Room of the Boston Consolidated TRACON has sector equipment along three of its four walls. The facility has 19 controller and 9 coordination positions that use the Raytheon STARS automation system and the ACE-IDS from Systems Atlanta, Inc. Also at each position is a computer touch screen which is the Enhanced Terminal Voice Switch (ETVS) built by the Northrop Grumman Corporation, this handles all of the ground to air and ground to ground communications. When you walk in the door, the Boston Area is located on the back wall and the Manchester Area is located on the right wall. The wall on the left mainly contains extra scopes that would be used if the Bangor, Portland, or Cape TRACONs needed to consolidate into the building. Each wall of the room is able to expand outward for extra space, allowing for future expansion. In the center of the room are the Front Line Manager's and Traffic Management Unit (TMU) Positions.

Wall displays

A90 is equipped with multiple plasma flat-screen television screens which are used to display up to 16 different types of information needed by supervisory, traffic management and controllers-in-charge ranging from ETMS to Weather. Although they can be set to display almost anything, they will usually be set to one of three things. Commonly, a map of the Northeast United States will be displayed that shows all traffic landing or departing at Boston or Boston Satellite fields. This allows the controllers to look up at the screen and quickly tell if there is a rush about to come. Also commonly displayed is the IDS5 display. This information is also shown on a small touch-screen above each controller's station. Also, commonly displayed above the Initial Departure sector is a live video feed from Boston Tower showing the departure strip bay. This camera system is used to satisfy the requirement for "non-verbal rolling notification" as required by FAAO 7110.65. What is displayed on each screen can be changed at one of the center console positions, which is controlled with a computer touch screen.

Training

BCT has a state-of-the-art simulator training facility located on the second floor just down from the operations control room. The room contains five training positions. The training room includes a Raytheon Standard Terminal Automation Replacement System (STARS). The STARS system has an embedded simulator ATCoach which is produced by UFA. Inc. out of Woburn, Massachusetts. This system provides the instructor and the student with a virtual display of live traffic on the STARS Terminal Controller workstation TCW. Raytheon provides the hardware and UFA provides the software and embedded simulator. Features of this simulator include: - Weather - Pre-programmed events - 600 aircraft profiles - Up to 24 simultaneous training exercises - Scenario development tools - Pseudo Pilot functions. This is one of the most advanced simulators in the National Airspace System.

Accompanying ATCoach is ATVoice which provides the Voice Recognition and Response for the simulator. ATVoice allows the students to issue clearances directly to the simulated pilots during the exercise and then in turn ATVoice generates the proper pilot feedback/responses.

Above each TDW is an exact replica of the IDS-5 information display.

The facility also has State-of-the-art classrooms which are able to feature computer generated graphics and multimedia source material that comes right from the Operations room.

References

External links

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