Det er vel snart 20 år siden jeg foredro om emnet på Flyoperativt Forum som da ble avholdt på Leangkollen. Utviklingen har gått saktere enn jeg trodde på det tidspunkt, men ting skjer og en vil få VFR Day om natta, før eller siden.
Technology Helps Pilots Land in Fog
High-Resolution Views of Runways Could
Allow More Airports to Stay Open in Bad Weather
By ANDY
PASZTOR
Technology showing high-resolution, color depictions of
runways could allow more airports to remain open when visibility is limited.
Shown, a jet lands in fog at London's Heathrow. eyevine/Zuma Press
Rockwell
Collins Inc. COL +1.93% and other cockpit-equipment makers are developing
technologies to combat a major source of frustration for airline passengers:
flights that are canceled or diverted due to poor visibility at their scheduled
destinations.
Using computer-generated color images, and sometimes
infrared-enhanced views of runways and their surroundings, Rockwell, Honeywell
International Corp. HON +1.11% and other suppliers are seeking to reduce such
schedule disruptions and lost revenue for carriers.
The new onboard
landing systems have been gaining momentum and seem poised for further
regulatory approvals on both sides of the Atlantic. With high-resolution, color
depictions of runways and other features, they are designed to allow many more
airports that lack the latest ground-based navigation aids to remain open in bad
weather.
In the U.S., they would enable low-visibility landings that are
now prohibited at scores of mid-size and smaller fields.
Proponents say
the result would be increased capacity and improved safety, because pilots would
get significantly more detail about terrain or other potential
obstacles.
Eventually, according to these people, the goal is to
effectively eliminate any requirement to see the physical runway. Crews of
jetliners and business jets could continue low-visibility approaches practically
all the way to the ground -even when they can't see the actual
runway.
Regulators still have a long way to go to give the green light
for such radical changes.
Before current rules can be revised at
thousands of airports world-wide, vendors have to demonstrate that virtual
images are just as safe and reliable as current requirements for pilots to catch
a glimpse of the physical runway just before touchdown.
"It's definitely
a big trend" and progress so far "is a huge deal," Kent Statler, chief operating
officer of Rockwell's commercial products division, said at the international
air show outside London earlier this summer. Relying on sensors that can peer
through moisture regardless of temperature or humidity, he adds, Rockwell has
"spent a lot of time" developing such equipment and significant advances are
likely "in the foreseeable near future."
Preventing weather-related
flight diversions "clearly saves fuel and saves time," according to Chris
Benich, head of regulatory affairs at Honeywell's aerospace unit. The company's
products seek to "squeeze as many benefits out of [the technology] as we can,"
according to Mr. Benich, while reducing overall investment costs for
carriers.
Today, a relatively small percentage of airliners already can
land when visibility is almost nil. The most advanced jets arriving at the best
equipped airports can use fully-automated systems when big storms, low-hanging
clouds or fog prevent most other flights from touching down. Depending on
pilots' preferences, so-called "autoland" equipment also can use computers to
apply brakes, reduce engine thrust and even taxi down the center of the
runway.
In a few years, automated taxi systems are even expected to turn
planes off runways and use electric motors attached to landing gears to direct
them to gates-all without direct pilot commands.
The majority of U.S.
airline flights, however, don't fall into those categories. When typical airline
pilots fly approaches to socked-in airports without relying on the latest
autoland technology, usually they have to see the runway before descending below
200 feet. With special training and equipment, cockpit crews in some business
jets and airliners can descend as low as 100 feet, before deciding whether they
have glimpsed enough of the strip through the windshield to
land.
Otherwise, the pilots must immediately abandon the approach, climb
away from the airport and then circle or divert.
The cutting-edge
equipment under development is intended to chip away at those longstanding
vertical thresholds, while also permitting landings when pilots are able to see
less than one-quarter mile down the runway prior to touchdown.
The
Federal Aviation Administration last year proposed rules that for the first
time, would allow pilots to postpone a go-round decision until their plane is
below 100 feet using enhanced or so-called "synthetic" vision. But the timetable
for a final, broad policy decision isn't clear, and the regulations ultimately
may call for case-by-case approvals of specific systems at various categories of
airports.
An FAA spokeswoman didn't have any immediate
comment.
Rockwell, based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has staked its claim to
displaying images and certain cockpit instruments data on aircraft windshields.
The company says it recently completed over 140 test approaches and plans to
begin certification flights in 2015.
Two years ago, Rockwell scored a
marketing coup when Chinese aviation regulators committed to install the
company's windshield-systems, called "heads up displays," on hundreds of new
Boeing Co. 737 planes and potentially several other jetliner models. The devices
allow pilots to concentrate on the forward view rather than having to glance
down to scan cockpit instruments during takeoffs and landings.
Honeywell,
based in Morris Township, N.J., is focused on what it describes as a less
expensive system, dubbed SmartView, that uses traditional displays inside the
cockpit.
Within the next few years, Honeywell expects the latest versions
to be installed on nearly a dozen different airplane models, including a
regional jetliner.
Honeywell officials have argued their solution-melding
a digital data base with an infrared camera-is able to give pilots maximum
information and unmatched image fidelity, without the extra acquisition and
maintenance costs associated with installing windshield displays.
At San
Diego International Airport alone, the company previously projected widespread
use of its system could permit hundreds of additional flights to land there
annually.
But with fast moving jets at altitudes below 100 feet, many
experts believe pilots most likely wouldn't have enough time to scan instruments
inside the cockpit and also look out the windshield to try to catch sight of the
runway.
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