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by lxgr
979 days ago
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Pure INS should be pretty rare these days, no? I believe it's now usually a combination of multiple sources (e.g. ground-based navaids like VORs and DMEs, GNSSs/GPS, and INS to reject most spoofed signals or in case everything else fails). |
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But, as it always was, it is regularly corrected with GNSS or navaid corrections. As far as I know most airliners still don't automatically enter corrections for INS and require manual input (basically retyping of GNSS data from a screen into a keypad) to put human into the loop which can verify if GNSS is being spoofed. The pilots can alternatively do the correction using VOR/DME navaids or even their eyes if they feel like it.
As far as I know, it's becoming much more common to have INS with ability to automatically correct drift from GNSS in smaller planes (and I'm sure that will make it to airliners sooner than later).