May 19, 2003 at 11:41 pm
Airline pilots hear baby cries
Visiting engineers looked “like Ghostbusters”
A baby monitor has been blamed for causing radio interference at Luton airport.
The monitor, used by Lisa Spratley from Stopsley in Bedfordshire, for her baby Freya, blocked the airport’s radio signals to incoming planes.
This meant pilots heard the sound of her baby crying rather than landing instructions.
The first thing Mrs Spratley knew of the problem was when two engineers arrived at her house, just three miles from the airport.
She said: “They said they were working on behalf of Luton airport traffic control.
“They’d been asked to sort out interference they’d been receiving on the airwaves and they had tracked it down to our address.”
Safety unaffected
Using an aerial and receiver, the engineers from the Radio Communications Agency (RCA) traced the problem to the baby monitor in Freya’s bedroom.
They told Mrs Spratley they had experienced the same problem nearly five years earlier with a few monitors that happened to be near airports.
In a statement, the RCA said that once the problem was identified it took them 12 hours to track down the source.
In the meantime, they changed to another frequency and added that safety was not compromised.
By: EGNM - 20th May 2003 at 15:12
lol – amusing story!
By: cbstd - 20th May 2003 at 01:48
When our first child was small, we had one of those thingys. One day I could hear the neighbors bickering, their baby monitor was on our frequency.
I was enjoying the eave’s dropping until I realized that those things work two ways.
I threw it away.
Scott
By: T5 - 19th May 2003 at 23:57
I read about this in today’s paper, a good story. I can just imagine the frustration of the pilots as they wondered what on earth was happening!