Airbus: Pilots don't really need windows
A flight deck with viewing screens could go at the
base of the vertical tail, and possibly still have windows for seeing to the
front and sides of the aircraft. Photo: Airbus/U.S. Patent And Trademark
Office
Future airliner flight decks may do away with
windows and move out of the nose of the aircraft, according to
Airbus.
The European airplane maker filed a patent application Dec. 23,
published June 26, for a flight deck that relies mostly or entirely on
electronic viewscreens.
The first advantage is aerodynamic, since flight
deck windows require interrupting the ideal scalpel shape of the nose, Airbus
wrote. Also, big windows and the reinforcement required for them add weight to
the aircraft.
Putting the flight deck at the front of the cabin takes
valuable space away from the cabin, "thereby limiting the financial profits for
the airline company exploiting the aircraft," Airbus wrote.
Without the
need for windows, the flight deck could move "to an unused zone of the aircraft,
and in particular into a zone difficult to configure for receiving passengers or
freight," Airbus wrote. One possibility is the base of the tail, where the
flight deck could still have some windows. Another is in part of the cargo
hold.
Finally, relying more on viewscreens would improve pilots'
perception and awareness, by giving a more complete view of what's going on
outside the aircraft, according to Airbus.
In addition to the
viewscreens, Airbus envisions a system that could project holograms of objects
such as storm clouds and ground obstacles, and chart a course around
them.
"The object of this preferred version is to immerse the pilot in a
three-dimensional universe, at the center of the action," Airbus wrote.
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