Pacific engineering trials[edit]
FANS as we know it today had its beginning in 1991 with the Pacific Engineering Trials (PET). During these
trials, airplanes installed applications in their ACARS units which would automatically report positions.
These trials demonstrated the potential benefits to the airlines and airspace managers.
Implementation[edit]
United Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Qantas, and Air New Zealand approached the Boeing Company in 1993
and requested that Boeing support the development of a FANS capability for the 747-400 airplane. Boeing
worked with the airlines to develop a standard which would control the interface between FANS-capable
airplanes and air traffic service providers. The development of the FANS-capable aircraft systems
proceeded simultaneously with the ATC ground system improvements necessary to make it work. These
improvements were certified (using a QANTAS airplane) on June 20, 1995.
Both Boeing and Airbus continue to further develop their FANS implementations, Boeing on FANS-2 and
Airbus on FANS-B. In the interim, Airbus came out with some enhancements to FANS-A, now referred to
as FANS-A+. Various ground systems have been built, mainly by ATCorganizations, to interoperate
with FANS-1/A.
FANS interoperability team[edit]
The FANS interoperability team (FIT) was initiated in the South Pacific in 1998. The purpose of this team is
to monitor the performance of the end-to-end system, identify problems, assign problems and assure they
are solved. The members include airframe manufacturers, avionics suppliers, communication service
providers, and air navigation service providers. Since this time, other regions have initiated FIT groups.
Milestones[edit]
On June 20, 1995, a Qantas B747-400 (VH-OJQ) became the first aircraft to certify the Rolls-Royce FANS-
1 package by remote type certification (RTC) in Sydney, Australia. It was followed by the first commercial
flight from Sydney to Los Angeles on June 21. Subsequently, Air New Zealand certified the General
Electric FANS-1 package, and United Airlines certified the Pratt & Whitney FANS-1 package.
On May 24, 2004, a Boeing Business Jet completed the first North Atlantic flight by a business jet equipped
with FANS. The airplane touched down at the European Business Aviation Convention and Exhibition
(EBACE) in Geneva, Switzerland. The non-stop eight-hour, 4,000-nautical-mile (7,400 km) flight originating
from Gary/Chicago International Airport in Gary, Indiana, was part of a North Atlantic Traffic trial conducted
by the FANS Central Monitoring Agency (FCMA).
In August 2010, Aegean Airlines became the first airline to commit to upgrading its Airbus A320 fleet with a
FANS-B+ retrofit system offered by Airbus.
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