Pilot use of automation eyed in air crashes
By: JOAN LOWY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Pilots are becoming so reliant on computer systems that do most of the flying in
today's airliners that on the rare occasions when something goes wrong, they're
sometimes unprepared to take control, according to aviation safety experts and
government and industry studies.
Increasing automation has been a
tremendous safety boon to aviation, contributing to historically low accident
rates in the U.S. and many parts of the world.
But automation has changed
the relationship between pilots and planes, presenting new
challenges.
Pilots today typically use their "stick and rudder" flying
skills only for brief minutes or even seconds during takeoffs and landings.
Mostly, they manage computer systems that can fly planes more precisely and use
less fuel than a human pilot can. But humans simply aren't wired to pay close
and continual attention to systems that rarely fail or do something
unexpected.
"Once you see you're not needed, you tune out," said Michael
Barr, a former Air Force pilot and accident investigator who teaches aviation
safety at the University of Southern California. "As long as everything goes OK,
we're along for the ride. We're a piece of luggage."
The National
Transportation Safety Board holds a two-day investigative hearing Dec. 10-11 on
the crash of an Asiana Airlines jet that was flying too low and slow while
trying to land at San Francisco International Airport last July.
The
plane struck a seawall just short of the runway, shearing off its tail and
sending the rest of the airliner sliding and turning down the runway before
breaking apart and catching fire. Three passengers were killed and scores of
others injured.
The hearing will focus on "pilot awareness in a highly
automated aircraft," the board said.
Investigators want to know how the
three seasoned pilots allowed a passenger jet with no apparent mechanical
problems in near-perfect weather conditions to lose speed so dramatically that
it was on the brink of stalling moments before the crash.
The pilot
flying the plane was attempting to land without use of the autopilot. Normally,
the pilot in the second seat is supposed to have his eyes on the plane's
computer screens to monitor airspeed and other readings, rather than looking out
the window.
In this case, the second pilot was a training captain who was
grading the performance of the pilot flying the plane. The training captain told
investigators he thought the plane's autothrottle was maintaining engine power
and thus speed, but discovered that wasn't the case just moments before the
crash.
The autothrottle was "armed," or made ready for activation,
investigators said in briefings after the accident, but they left open the
question whether it was engaged and in idle or another mode.
Aircraft
systems can have many modes, or settings, and perform quite differently
depending upon the mode.
Pilot "mode awareness" is a more common
automation-related problems showing up in accidents and incidents, according to
an automation study released last month by the Federal Aviation Administration.
Mode changes occur frequently during flight, often without any direct action by
pilots. If pilots aren't continually paying close attention, they can lose track
of which mode their systems are in.
Pilots also make mistakes when
selecting modes. Mode selection errors were cited in 27 percent of the accidents
reviewed in the FAA study.
Less than six weeks after the Asiana crash, a
United Parcel Service cargo jet flying too low while trying to land in
Birmingham, Ala., struck trees and then a power line before crashing into a
hillside near the airport. Both pilots were killed.
In that case the
autopilot was on, and seconds before the crash there was a loud automated
warning that the plane was losing altitude too rapidly, according to
investigators. The investigation is continuing, but some safety experts see a
possible link between the two accidents.
"I think mode awareness is going
to be very central in both investigations," said John Cox, an aviation safety
consultant and former accident investigator for the Air Line Pilots Association.
"In both cases the airplane appears to have been properly maintained, everybody
is properly trained. A lot of the focus is on how the crew operated the airplane
so that it ended up with the airplane short of the runway."
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