FAA and EASA Will Upgrade Stall Training
The FAA this month will issue a rule requiring a new approach to
stall training for airline pilots that runs counter to previous guidance.
According to Dr Jeff Schroeder, the agency's chief scientific and technical
officer, the new approach will, "take a lot of work to undo previous training
because some pilots are 'spring-loaded' to the previous technique."
At
the Royal Aeronautical Society's annual International Flight Crew Training
Conference in London last month, Schroeder explained that operators will have
five years to comply with the new requirement. Flight simulator providers will
need to make changes to stall, buffet and icing models used in their devices,
and rules governing these changes should be issued in 2015 with a three-year
implementation grace period.
European Aviation Safety Agency rulemaking
officer Dean Dousi told the conference that his agency will publish similar
rules in the third quarter of 2016, following the publication of a concept paper
before year-end. This will be subject to public consultation next year, with
resulting recommendations to be made to the European Commission in
2015.
The rulemaking process follows in the wake of highly publicized
accidents involving stalls, including Colgan Air Flight 3407 near Buffalo, N.Y.,
and Air France Flight 447's plunge into the Atlantic Ocean within four months in
2009. Since then, multiple industry groups have debated improved approaches for
dealing with loss of control in flight, identified as the leading cause of
aircraft fatalities.
Schroeder estimated the total cost to develop new
aerodynamic models for 50 aircraft types at $20 million, plus another $30
million for these to be installed on approximately 300 full-flight simulators.
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