RAs are Resolution Advisories, vertical path guidance commands issued by the TCAS system to avoid a potential collision.
TCAS
II provides this. TCAS III was supposed to include lateral guidance (turn commands) as well, but has now been scrapped to the best of my knowledge.
The new system in the making is Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast,
ADS-B, where the aircraft and ground stations are all communicating over TCP/IP inspired datalinks, telling each other where they are and what they are up to. Thus, no radars are required. Each pilot can have the full picture presented right there in the cockpit, just as if they had a radar scope today (if not better). This will open entirely new possibilities as far as airspace management goes! How about free flight? Or even self-separating traffic in trail of one another along the airways?
TCAS
II requires a mode S transponder, something you won't see in many light aircraft.
There is also a "faux TCAS" available for
GA, which is not a TCAS at all since it doesn't interrogate the transponders of other aircraft. It merely listens in on the responses transmitted to other interrogations, and tries do determine the distance based on other parameters such as signal strength. Anyone who has tried it and would like to chime in with how well it works?
Cheers,
Fred
I thought I was doing good trying to avoid those airport hotels... and look at me now.