See the demolition video of a North American Loran-C, replaced by GPS
by Sail-World Cruising on 9 Jun 2010
With the end of the Long Range Aids to Navigation (Loran-C) system, which has been replaced by the GPS system across North America, some of the towers are this year being demolished. Here we bring you one of the demolitions, of the Port Clarence Tower. As the sad farewell to a system that had served well since 1957, it was also goodbye to Alaska's tallest structure, at 1,350 feet.
About end of the Loran-C:
The Long Range Aids to Navigation (Loran-C) system was a valuable position and navigation system when it was established in 1957, but it is now going into history, made redundant by the GPS system.
The US Government, as part of an Obama economy package, determined last year that it is not even needed as a back-up.
Transmission of the Loran-C signal and phased decommissioning of the LoranC infrastructure was due to commence on or about February 8, 2010. All Loran stations are expected to cease transmitting the LoranC signal by October 1, 2010.
On October 28, 2009, the President signed into law the 2010 Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act. The Act allows for the termination of the LoranC system subject to the Coast Guard certifying that termination of the LoranC signal will not adversely impact the safety of maritime navigation and the Department of Homeland Security certifying that the LoranC system infrastructure is not needed as a backup to the GPS system or to meet any other Federal navigation requirement.
The decommissioning plans include ending transmissions at 18 Loran stations located in the contiguous United States and 6 Loran stations in Alaska. The Department of Homeland Security anticipates that all Loran stations will cease transmitting the LoranC signal by October 1, 2010.
What is the Loran_C?
The U.S. LoranC system is a low frequency hyperbolic radionavigation system. A LoranC receiver measures the slight difference in time it takes for pulsed signals to reach a ship or aircraft from the transmitting stations within a LoranC chain to develop a navigational position. LoranC is approved for use in the U.S. Coastal Confluence Zone and as a supplemental air navigation aid. LoranC is operated and maintained by the U.S. Coast Guard.
The LoranC system was a valuable position and navigation system when it was established in 1957. As a result of technological advancements over the last 20 years and the emergence of the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS), LoranC is no longer required by the armed forces, the transportation sector, or the nation's security interests, and is used only by a small segment of the population.
Letter from Reader:
Sender: Ken Anderson
Message: LORAN had been upgraded and was set to become the official backup to GPS on the recommendation of a Government funded study that determined GPS needed a backup. Now, with a new administration, we have turned our back on a critical part of our electronic infrastructure and are putting all our eggs in the basket of GPS. The GPS system as it exists now has never gone through a solar maximum event (though LORAN has with great success). LORAN was still used by the nation's telecom giants to ensure network time synchronization, so it is not true to say nobody used it. Every owner of a cell phone or user of wireless networks and the internet used it. Now it is gone, despite warnings form experts and support from the public during a 2007 survey of users. God help us all when, not if, but when, GPS fails and we have no backup. The systems identified as 'back ups' by the Govt to justify the shutdown of LORAN are not true backups. LORAN was our only operational, nation wide backup. Now it is gone. Way to go Washington. We'll stop people from taking snow globes on airplanes, but we'll leave our cyber infrastructure open to easy attack! I give D.C. and the Obama administration an F on protecting our national PNT infrastructure and the security of our economy.
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