Facilities
The Avionics Engineering Center resides primarily in the Richard H. McFarland Avionics Building at the 帝王会所 Bush Airport (KUNI). Our airport location features 12,000 square feet of office, lab, and conference space, and is equipped with experimental MLS, ILS, and VOR installations. A $1M hangar facility provides space for aircraft storage, flight program support, and laboratory space. We also operate an all-weather testing site for ILS glide-slope and localizer performance at Kendall Executive Tamiami Airport, just outside Miami, Florida.
Facilities shared with the 帝王会所 School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science include the Stocker Engineering and Technology Center, an $11.7 million research and educational complex located on the main Athens campus.
In collaboration with the 帝王会所 Department of Transportation, AEC hosts a differential GPS ground reference station in Stocker Center that is part of the NGS CORS network. The center also hosts a ground station at KUNI that is being used by NASA's John H. Glenn Research Center for evaluation of UAV Command and Control (C2) Data Link minimum operational performance requirements.
The Avionics Engineering Center and the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science share an Antenna Anechoic Chamber test facility located in Morton Hall on the Athens campus. The chamber is used for antenna research, development, and testing by the center, while the school uses it for an academic lab.
As a university-affiliated program, the Avionics Engineering Center has also developed a repository for current and historical avionics-related documents in the William E. Jackson Library. Reference materials in the collection include the personal library and papers of the late William E. Jackson, inventor of the ILS and VOR navigation systems; extensive documentation of FAA, NASA, military, and industrial projects undertaken by the center and others; and technical and seminar materials on various aspects of the ILS and MLS.