Analog experience instrumental to pilot safety
PhD student Sravan Pingali in a flight
simulator with David Newman, head of Swinburne's Aviation Simulation Laboratory.
Source: Supplied
INITIAL results into a study into the way
pilots look at digital and analog instruments suggest experienced pilots facing
an emergency will spend twice as much time looking at their instruments as
novices.
The study by PhD student Sravan Pingali is testing volunteers
in Swinburne University of Technology's flight simulators to see how pilots cope
with the switch between digital and analog cockpits.
The results will be
presented to the Aerospace Medical Association conference in Orlando, Florida,
in May and the head of Swinburne's Aviation Simulation Laboratory, David Newman,
hopes it will produce recommendations for improved pilot training
globally.
There is evidence pilots who have trained on analog instruments
generally find it easier to move to a digital cockpit than vice
versa.
According to Dr Newman, this is because pilots using older
instruments scan them constantly in a highly disciplined sequence to create a
picture of what an aircraft is doing and constantly updating it.
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