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The contents of the Special Committee 31 page were merged into Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics on 9 April 2017. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
The organization changed its name in 1993 to RTCA, Inc. "RTCA" is no longer an abbreviation for "Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics". Kernel.package (talk) 23:49, 2 January 2009 (UTC)
RTCA membership is international, it is not limited to companies and people United States. Its printed guidelines are used world-wide. In Europe, EUROCAE utilizes them in a manner similar to that used by the U.S. D.O.T.'s FAA. --Kernel.package (talk) 00:41, 3 January 2009 (UTC)
The page should have added to it, a section that lists the organizations publications. Such as list would provide information useful to the worldwide manufacturing industry, in addition to people working in aviation but who are far enough removed from regulatory affairs that they may not be aware of all that RTCA can influence. No commercial airplane in the U.S. has ever fallen from the sky due to a software failure. This fact is due, in no small part, to the achievements made by RTCA, Inc. The achievements are not technical; credit for the technical aspect of its publications is due to RTCA Inc.'s members. The achievements are in management and in social expertise. They have created an environment where hundreds of technical poeple can pool their knowledge. Once pooled, RTCA brings the process of document creation to an end and a guideline is born. --Kernel.package (talk) 00:41, 3 January 2009 (UTC)
RTCA, Inc.'s use of the term "guideline" reflects the careful selection of the term, in contrast with "standard". Rather than create something that has obsolesence designed into it, as does a standard, it uses the term "guideline". In this way, the FAA can require compliance with the given document without restricting the entity who seeks TSO approval from adhering to an obsolete reference. RTCA Inc.'s guidelines describe sets of minimums, to which a regulatory agency (such as the FAA) can require compliance without the possibility of there being an argument about what the guideline (document) means. The FAA seeks compliance with the levels of safety and reliability that the guidelines describe. This leaves flexibility open to the party seeking approval whereas compliance with a standard is more likely to result in a fixed, inflexible requirement that is prescribed by the agency.
As an organization that advises a Federal Regulatory Agency, RTCA's accomplishments are noteworthy. (That is, compared to other agencies like the, say, the FDA). Through the FAA, its influence applies to everything that is in the air above the United States including the Space Shuttle. Since the statement about being noteworthy is an opinion, it cannot be stated in the article as it is here. Enough facts about RTCA do exist to make this clear. (Its success is due in part to the engineering wing of the FAA. These are the folks who audit the manufacturers for compliance with a guideline. The engineering wing tends to be overlooked. The well-known parts of the FAA are those that get involved during accident investigation or when there are problems with controlling air traffic. Nonetheless, it is the engineering people who contribute their IP through RTCA during document development and these contributions play a part in the development of both new and improvement avionics hardware).