Globalstar News 
Air Ambulance Pilot Finds Globalstar Invaluable:
Steve Arnott / Air Ambulance Operator, Northern Canadian Communities


Steve Arnott of Thomson, Manitoba, operates an air ambulance to northern Canadian communities. He transfers residents requiring immediate medical attention to hospitals in larger centres such as Churchill, Thompson, or Winnipeg. Steve regularly flies into remote areas outside of cellular coverage where even radio contact and communication with an air traffic control unit is sometimes impossible.

However, since he acquired Globalstar service, Steve can update patient information and arrival times with receiving hospitals and land ambulances prior to departure.

"The reliable communications that Globalstar provides can mean the difference in life or death for many patients," said Steve. "Providing an emergency physician with advanced details on a patient's condition is invaluable."

A pilot with Skyward Aviation, Steve shared his handset with other company pilots who fly charter flights to fishing lodges and remote outposts. With Globalstar, pilots flying from the most isolated areas can notify their base of changes to flight plans and arrival and departure times. The handset also provides these pilots with an extra sense of security in case of an emergency.

"My Skyward Aviation colleagues are amazed at the quality of the Globalstar handset," says Steve. "And in the areas where I travel, people in these remote regions say they never thought this level of reliable, quality voice communications would ever be possible from their town. You can be sure Globalstar Canada will acquire new customers from Thomson, Manitoba."

Steve appreciates the cost-savings of the handset's tri-mode feature, providing customers with cellular service when using the Globalstar handset in a cellular coverage area. When Steve is in his hometown of Thomson, he can use the cellular feature on the Globalstar handset. As he drives to the airport for work and leaves the cellular coverage area, the Globalstar satellite service can then be activated.

Steve learned about Globalstar from a segment on CTV's Digital Desk, which offered the opportunity to win a Globalstar handset. Viewers submitted applications explaining why they should be selected and the audience voted for the winner on the Digital Desk website. Steve's compelling story received the majority of audience endorsements and he became a Globalstar customer.

* * *

An Enormously Useful Safety Device:
Eric Eller


"Hi all, hope you're all having fun with your phones. I use the cell side of mine all the time, but since I'm not out and about that much, not the G* side. But I do take it with me in my Cessna 310 all the time, simply because it's my normal phone and because I could use it for whatever: making calls to destination airports, friends to change schedule, etc. Or in case my primary radios were to fail.

Which recently happened to me. Specifically over Las Vegas talking to LAS Approach. I could hear them, but they couldn't hear me. Controllers have a simple way of dealing with this; they just ask you to respond by pressing the "ident" feature on your transponder, and they use yes/no questions. Now this was OK while I was just passing through their airspace, but getting in to San Jose Reid-Hillview meant that I was going to have to use radio out procedures, which is always thrilling in that you must enter the pattern no-radio, usually set your transponder to the no-radio code (7600) and wait for light signals. You become the most well known pilot for miles around (the 7600 code sets off an alarm for the controllers).

Or, I could just use my Globalstar phone and call the tower. Which I did after trying the verizon cell service -- it shouldn't and didn't work from the air (sometimes it will I've been told). So I just locked up on the sat pointing out the window, called the tower on their landline (listed in the flight guide I had) and asked them what they wanted me to do, me being about 20 miles south. The nice local controller (he oversees the runways and air, ground controller does the taxiways) told me to proceed straight in to 31R and look for a light on a 1 mile final. All of which I did, got a green light, landed and taxied home.

The radio problem turned out to be a microphone jack that had grounded out to the panel.

I have said this before: this is an enormously useful safety device. Doing what I did was a) legal, since the phone is not part of the installed radio stack and violates no FCC rules for use (so I'm told), and b) saved a lot of people -- me, the tower, all the other airplanes in the pattern -- a lot of possible trouble and confusion with an unknown No-Radio airplane in the pattern. It was really great.

Imagine how much money, time, effort and anxiety could have been saved if the kid who walked out of the forest the other day with injured ankles had been in possession of a G* phone and could have made a call on day one."


* * *


:: Products :: Data Communications :: Airtime Pricing :: Services :: Coverage :: Customer Care :: About Globalstar :: Globalstar News :: Current Promotions ::
:: Home :: Corporate :: Contact Us :: Privacy Policy :: Terms and Conditions ::
 
Copyright© 2010 Globalstar. All rights reserved.