Indeed. There are plenty of things in aviation where they care so much about compatibility that something survives decades after it should reasonably be obsolete and replaced.
Inches of mercury, magnetic bearings (the magnetic poles move! but they put up with that) and gallons of fuel, all just accepted.
Got a safety-of-life emergency on an ocean liner, oil tanker or whatever? Everywhere in the entire world mandates GMDSS which includes Digital Selective Calling, the boring but complicated problems with radio communication are solved by a machine, you just need to know who you want to talk to (for Mayday calls it's everyone) and what you want to tell them (where you are, that you need urgent assistance and maybe the nature of the emergency)
On an big plane? Well good luck, they only have analogue radio and it's your problem to cope with the extensive troubles as a result.
I'm actually impressed that COSPAS/SARSAT wasn't obliged to keep the analogue plane transmitters working, despite obsoleting (and no longer providing rescue for) analogue boat or personal transmitters. But on that, at least, they were able to say no, if you don't want to spend a few grand on the upgrade for your million dollar plane we don't plan to spend billions of dollars to maintain the satellites just so you can keep your worse system limping along.
> Inches of mercury, magnetic bearings (the magnetic poles move! but they put up with that) and gallons of fuel, all just accepted.
Here in Europe we use hectopascals for pressure, as does pretty much everywhere else. It’s important to have a magnetic bearing in case your glass dies and you’re reliant on a paper map and compass, if you didn’t plan with magnetic bearings you’d be screwed if this happened in an area of high magnetic variation.
Air pressure is reported in hectopascals and fuel quantity in kilograms (or tons). It's only in America where this isn't the case. We're still using feet for altitude in most places though (it's mainly Russia that uses metres).
Inches of mercury, magnetic bearings (the magnetic poles move! but they put up with that) and gallons of fuel, all just accepted.
Got a safety-of-life emergency on an ocean liner, oil tanker or whatever? Everywhere in the entire world mandates GMDSS which includes Digital Selective Calling, the boring but complicated problems with radio communication are solved by a machine, you just need to know who you want to talk to (for Mayday calls it's everyone) and what you want to tell them (where you are, that you need urgent assistance and maybe the nature of the emergency)
On an big plane? Well good luck, they only have analogue radio and it's your problem to cope with the extensive troubles as a result.
I'm actually impressed that COSPAS/SARSAT wasn't obliged to keep the analogue plane transmitters working, despite obsoleting (and no longer providing rescue for) analogue boat or personal transmitters. But on that, at least, they were able to say no, if you don't want to spend a few grand on the upgrade for your million dollar plane we don't plan to spend billions of dollars to maintain the satellites just so you can keep your worse system limping along.