http://www.gillesvidal.com/blogpano/cockpit1.htm


1SeventyZ wrote:Bob, I agree with you about the sad reality of technology and the waning physical role of the pilot in the cockpit. I also think though that there may be some silver lining to the more autonomous, technologically advanced aircraft coming out now.
In my opinion, in every aircraft, C-140 to A-380, the primary role of the pilot is that of decision maker. Piloting skill and technique should be assumed, but the decisions that are made, and the situational awareness in the IFR environment, are the real things that bring everyone home safely. The human consciousness can only digest and execute so many decisions at a time in a given situation, so why not make it easier on pilot at every juncture? Take some load off.
I realize you know this, and I don't presume to enlighten a 35,000 hr captain to the concept of human factors, but I'd just like to interject that probably hundreds or thousands of engineers have objectively studied this environment and the statistics of accidents. The consensus seems to be toward more automation. Consider orbital missions and the thousands of systems and tasks that 2 men would have to manage to pull that off...it just wouldn't happen.
I hope the design trend continues toward something that aims to alleviate interruptive tasks for the pilot while keeping him in the role of sovereign decision maker.
I definitely disagree though with a cockpit that lacks direct controls. There has to be a failsafe, something a pilot can revert to in the event that automation of systems fail. Those early tests of the A320 were tragic.
z3skybolt wrote:You should see my old video of manually flown airliners in an earlier era. The cockpits were incredibly free of chatter and the airmanship was surperb. I might add that the accident rates were no higher back then either.
Bob
1SeventyZ wrote:Good points. Interesting to hear it from someone who's seen it through the decades.
z3skybolt wrote:....demonstrated a couple years later when the Air France chief A-320 pilot did a demonstration fly by at an airshow. When he firewalled the throttle and tried to go around.....having improperly "programed" the computers....the aircraft refused to climb and decided to slowly decend into the trees; ending up in a fireball. All the while the Air France captain was pushing on the throttles, pulling on the stick and trying to climb.
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