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Pilotless Cockpit?

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Steveair said:
My favorite clip still remains that of the Airbus trying to do a low pass at an airshow and slamming into the trees. I believe the narrator says something along the lines of "this is the first fully automated plane; flown by a computer"

http://www.airdisaster.com/download/af320.shtml
That's where the chainsaw joke comes from.

:)





.
 
ackattacker said:
The number of dimensions has little to do with it.

It has a great deal to do with it. Sure vehicles can be controlled in 1,2 or 3 dimensions. No argument, this is done every day. The control technology is mature. *controlling* the vehicle is a trivial portion of the issue. Deciding *where* to control it to is the issue, and that issue gets much more complicated with every dimension you add.

Think about the "artificial intelligence" algorithms to deal with a detected collision hazard.

In a train there is one response. Stop the train. Very simple algorithm


Ok, now you're in your robotic car, some other robotic car runs a stop light right in fromt of you. What does your robot do? Brake? Steer? some of both? unless you got you driver's licence yesterday, you know that you need a lot more information about the situation. Is there enough room to come to a complete halt in a straight before you hit the other car? If so that may be the best action. What if you don't? Which way should you steer? WIll you hit other oncoming traffic if you steer left? Will steering left avoid the collision? will you go in the ditch or hit a lightpole if you steer right?. WIll a simultaneous maximum braking effort compromise your ability to steer around the other car? What are the road conditions.

Suddenly your collision avoidance algorithm has gone from a very simple, reliable one that any computer student could program in his first week of class, to a very complex one which would have a team of AI programmers working for quite a while. All by adding one dimension.
 
Steveair said:
My favorite clip still remains that of the Airbus trying to do a low pass at an airshow and slamming into the trees. I believe the narrator says something along the lines of "this is the first fully automated plane; flown by a computer"

Ironically you just supported the pilot-less aircraft concept.

That crash was found to be pilot error.
 
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Superunknown said:
Ironically you just supported the pilot-less aircraft concept.

That crash was found to be pilot error.

Not necessarily... many things were found to be quite fishy about that crash. Not the least of which is that that the CVR and FDR went missing for 10 days after the crash and then turned up with significant gaps and syncronization errors. Photographic evidence proves that the FDR submitted to the court was painted differently than the FDR recovered at the scene. Afterwards, airbus quietly made changes to the engine control software (the pilot reported that the engines failed to respond when he applied power)

http://www.airdisaster.com/investigations/af296/af296.shtml
 
ackattacker said:
Not necessarily... many things were found to be quite fishy about that crash. Not the least of which is that that the CVR and FDR went missing for 10 days after the crash and then turned up with significant gaps and syncronization errors. Photographic evidence proves that the FDR submitted to the court was painted differently than the FDR recovered at the scene. Afterwards, airbus quietly made changes to the engine control software (the pilot reported that the engines failed to respond when he applied power)

http://www.airdisaster.com/investigations/af296/af296.shtml

We can discuss "Grassy Knoll" theories all night.

I was just stating the official cause sited.

I think the "altimeter being off" was the crack in the Captains story that didn't pass the sniff test.
 
You pilotless proponents still haven't addressed the bandwidth and transmission media problems. A level of autonomy could be built in, but an external link will probably always be required. And the only current technology is radio. Ponder that the next time you fly into precip and your ability to communicate drops to zero.

This reminds me of the movie "2001: A Space Odyssey". When the movie was made in 1968, we were orbiting the moon. The pace of the space program was mind-boggling, and Kubrick and Clarke predicted manned flight to Jupiter in 2001. We quickly found out that space flight is vastly more expensive and complex than we thought. I think the same can be said of autonomous passenger jets... the complexity ratchets up enormously and exponentially from a GPS-equipped military drone, and what appears imminent and doable is actually a LONG ways away. This is not "The Jetsons".

Cash drives this industry. It will be cheaper for decades to come to equip your 'bus or boeing with a crew. Huge inertia present in ATC would have to be totally overcome and the system gutted and rebuilt from the ground up, all without disturbing the current schedule.

Yes, the technology is concievable. It is doable. The timeline for it, though, is vastly longer than the proponents think. It is not some pilot-macho wishful thinking, it is economic reality.
 
Superunknown said:
Ironically you just supported the pilot-less aircraft concept.

That crash was found to be pilot error.

Gee... lets think about this one. The crash occured in one of the countries that is involved in Airbus... a government subsidized aircraft maker... and the crash was investigated by that same government.... that being the FRENCH.

Pilot error? I push the throttles to full forward and some computer says F-that, we're landing... Not any kind of airplane I want to fly.
 
Steveair said:
Pilot error? I push the throttles to full forward and some computer says F-that, we're landing... Not any kind of airplane I want to fly.

I will go out on a limb and say that automated airplanes will not be "programed" to "show off". The airplane was stabilized in the landing configuration with gear down and full flaps. below 100 feet it was time to land not do a low pass without putting the machine in go around mode.

Again you make my point. If a pilot would not have been in that aircraft it would have made a beautiful landing on the runway.
 

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