Aerodrome beacon

Not to be confused with Airway beacon.
A portable rotating beacon on display at the Alberta Aviation Museum

An aerodrome beacon or rotating beacon is a beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots at night.

An aerodrome beacon is mounted on top of a towering structure, often a control tower, above other buildings of the airport. It produces flashes not unlike that of a lighthouse.

Airport and heliport beacons are designed in such a way to make them most effective from one to ten degrees above the horizon; however, they can be seen well above and below this peak spread. The beacon may be an omnidirectional flashing xenon strobe, or it may be an aerobeacon rotating at a constant speed which produces the visual effect of flashes at regular intervals. Flashes may be of just a single color, or of two alternating colors.

In the United States

In the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has established the following rules for airport beacons:

Flashing rates

  1. 24 to 30 per minute for beacons marking airports, landmarks, and points on Federal airways
  2. 30 to 45 per minute for beacons marking heliports

Color combinations

  1. White and Green  Lighted land airport
  2. Green alone*  Lighted land airport
  3. White and Yellow  Lighted water airport
  4. Yellow alone*  Lighted water airport
  5. Green, Yellow, and White  Lighted heliport
  6. White, White, Green**  Military Airport
  7. White, Green, Red  Hospital and/or Emergency Services Heliport
*Green alone or yellow alone is used only in connection with a white-and-green or white-and-yellow beacon display, respectively.
**Military airport beacons flash alternately white and green, but are differentiated from civil beacons by two quick white flashes between the green flashes.

In Class B, Class C, Class D, and Class E surface areas, operation of the airport beacon during the hours of daylight often indicates that the ground visibility is less than 3 miles and/or the ceiling is less than 1,000 feet. Regardless of the weather conditions, the FAA has no regulation that requires airports to turn the beacon on during the day.

At some locations with operating control towers, Air Traffic Control (ATC) personnel turn the beacon on or off with controls in the tower. At many airports the airport beacon is turned on by a photoelectric cell or time clocks, and ATC personnel cannot control them. [1]

In Canada

In Canada, the regulations are different. Lighted aerodromes are equipped with white single flash beacons operating at a frequency of 20 to 30 flashes per minute. Heliports with beacons exhibit the morse letter H (4 short flashes) at a rate of 3 to 4 groups per minute.[2]

Notes

  1. Federal Aviation Administration (27 August 2009). "Aeronautical Information Manual".
  2. Transport Canada (23 October 2008). "TC AGA".
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