First it can be done already. Next, it is happening sooner than we think. All objections disappear because the pilot remains in full capacity at all times. He is not on a simulator but is handling a terminal of a data link. Better yet additional skills are immediately available to him. He is even well rested with natural breaks built in.
This vastly improves the odds of saving a plane when an emergency hits. Actual on board flight crew can even be trained well on implementing emergency procedures including engineering fixes. Right now they are completely helpless. Been able to pop open doors to locate a fire would be hugely helpful or even just to be able to inspect the outside of the craft can help. The talent is there. Use it already.
On board pilots are going to be obsolete and this has been true in practice for years. They barely fly the big birds at all.
.
After Alps Crash, Some Experts Ponder Flights Without Pilots
By Associated Press | April 17, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1324726-after-alps-crash-some-experts-ponder-flights-without-pilots/
NEW YORK—To improve airline safety, maybe we need to remove the pilots.
That radical idea is decades away, if it ever becomes a reality. But
following the intentional crashing of Germanwings Flight 9525 by the
co-pilot, a long-running debate over autonomous jets is resurfacing. At
the very least, some have suggested allowing authorities on the ground
to take control of a plane if there is a rogue pilot in the cockpit.
The head of Germany’s air traffic control agency on Wednesday became the latest to raise such a prospect.
Such moves might seem logical in the aftermath of this crash, but
industry experts warn that the technology is fraught with problems.
Besides, no matter how tragic the deaths of the 149 other passengers and
crew were, it was an anomaly. Each year, more than 3 billion people
around the globe step aboard some 34 million flights. The number of
crashes purposely caused by commercial pilots in the last three decades:
fewer than 10.
“Would this really be the wisest investment of our air safety
dollars?” asks Patrick Smith, a commercial airline pilot for 25 years
and author of “Cockpit Confidential.”
Smith says that even the newest jets would need an expensive
reengineering of their key systems. And that doesn’t even tackle any of
the concerns over terrorists hacking into the communications link and
taking over the jet.
Despite those major technical — and psychological — hurdles, the concept isn’t so farfetched.
There was a time when riding an elevator without an operator seemed
unimaginable. Today, we don’t think twice about stepping into an empty
elevator. Airports around the world have trams without drivers, as do
some subways systems. Even cars are starting to take some of that
control away from us: the latest models will automatically brake if
there is a sudden hazard.
The military already has pilots remotely flying drones that are on
the other side of the earth. But making that jump for passenger jets is
simply unnerving.
Planes don’t operate in the confined space of an elevator shaft or
train tracks. And flying has always seemed unnatural. When jets make odd
noises or hit a rough patch of turbulence, we eagerly wait for that
soothing voice of the pilot to tell us that everything is ok.
“The real reason a person wants another human in the cockpit is
because they want to believe there’s somebody in the front who shares
their own fate and thus if anything goes wrong, they will do everything
they can to save their own lives,” says Mary Cummings, a former U.S.
Navy fighter pilot who is now a Duke University professor studying
autonomous flight.
That’s why Cummings and other aviation experts see cargo planes being
the first aircraft to fly over the U.S. without pilots. First, the big
cargo companies would go from two pilots to one with a team of pilots
remotely assisting from the ground. Then all operations would shift to
the ground.
Airlines would save on pilot training, salaries, retirement costs and
hotel and travel expenses. Plus, ground-based pilots would be able to
hand off flights from one to another, allowing them to work normal eight
hour shifts even if their jet is in the air for 12 hours.
Cummings says such a shift could occur in 10 or 15 years.
“In my mind, it’s a done deal,” she says. “The business case is so strong.”
Pilots are getting further and further removed from their aircraft.
In the past, pilots would pull back on the yoke which was connected
to a cable that ran the length of the plane. That cable would move flaps
on the tail called elevators, causing the plane to climb. Today, there
is no cable. When the pilot moves the yoke a computer sends a signal to
the rear of the plane, moving the elevators.
The majority of aircraft maneuvers outside of takeoff and landing are
already automated. Even when a pilot wants to change course, they
program the new directions into the plane’s computer instead of making
the turns themselves.
If that weren’t removed enough, Airbus is exploring a windowless
cockpit. The aircraft manufacturer is experimenting with a system of
cameras and screens that would give pilots a wider, more-detailed view,
although one step removed from reality.
Todd Humphreys, a University of Texas professor of aerospace
engineering, says it isn’t hard to go one step further and have the
pilots watching those same screens from a room on the ground.
“Anything you can control with knobs or buttons, without getting out
of your seat, can be done equally well — or even better — on the
ground,” Humphreys says.
Humphreys argues that ground-based pilots wouldn’t have to deal with
time zone changes and jetlag, uncomfortable airport hotels or even the
dehydration that comes after long flights.
Since most flights don’t have a problem, “pilots only face extreme
challenges once in a blue moon,”
Humphreys says, and might not be most apt to handle an emergency. Instead, he says you could have a team of specialized experts in the room with all the remote pilots who could jump in and assist with any emergency, actually reducing the amount of pilot error.
Humphreys says, and might not be most apt to handle an emergency. Instead, he says you could have a team of specialized experts in the room with all the remote pilots who could jump in and assist with any emergency, actually reducing the amount of pilot error.
Pilots mostly disagree with that, saying they need to make
split-second decisions. Take US Airways Flight 1549 which famously
landed on the Hudson River. Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger had
seconds to decide what to after both engines were disabled by a bird
strike. And how would pilot thousands of miles away handle a fire in the
cockpit?
Ultimately, it will come down to passengers. Are travelers more
worried about the rare rogue pilot killing them or stepping onto a plane
without any pilot?
No comments:
Post a Comment