Veldig gode og spennende foredrag var det. "To train for the unexpected" ble presentert av Jean Paries som besøkte oss. Sjekk http://www.flyoperativtforum.no/referat/referat2012.htm for foredrag.
Surviving Loss of Control
Requires Manual Flying SkillsRobert Barnes, president of the International
Association of Flight Training Professionals and a frequent presenter at the
World Aviation Training Conference (WATS) alerted AIN to an
important presentation on aircraft handling at the WATS event in Orlando last
week (while AINSafety was attending the Corporate Aviation
Safety Seminar in San Antonio). According to Barnes, Captain Jacques Drappier,
Airbus Senior Advisor Training, focused on the changes to
aircraft control systems and the skills required of pilots who operate
new-generation aircraft. Captain Drappier, as quoted by Barnes, said, “Today
we have fly-by-wire, automated planes, where the pure handling skills needed in
daily life are very limited...But handling skills, [although] less demanding
than before, are still needed. And proficiency can only be achieved through
training and practice.” To which Barnes, a former U.S. Air Force T-38
instructor, added, “We have to understand how automation is really functioning
and we don’t. Plenty of pilots believe automation is a natural evolution,
because aircraft are becoming so complicated. But pilots can’t surrender to the
black box. We still have the responsibility to understand the implications of
the automation in relation to the flying task at hand. We shouldn’t give the
automation designers a free ride on this issue either. They must realize how
automation affects the pilot." As an example, Barnes brought up the Air France
447 accident in 2009, the Airbus A330 that crashed en route from Rio de Janeiro
to Paris killing all board. He said the crew received conflicting information
and was unable to regain control of the A330 after the autopilot disconnected.
“The airplane should help by telling pilots the state of the airplane at the
handover, such as ‘level at FL410, two degrees pitch at this power setting,’"
Barnes said. “When I understand the status of my airplane, I can control it. If
the computer just starts ringing alarm bells and flashing warning messages, how
do you think the pilot’s going to react?”
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