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The weak link

 
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user9253



Joined: 28 Mar 2008
Posts: 1921
Location: Riley TWP Michigan

PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 5:44 am    Post subject: The weak link Reply with quote

Bob Nuckolls said, "Perhaps dual wing levelers are in order? I'd bet that a BIG
chunk of the accidents due to poor pilot visibility and/or
workload distractions for single-pilot IFR would have been
averted (if) electrons had the stick. I'll suggest that most
IFR capable airframes would be better outfitted for ventures
into poor visibility if there were NO displays on the panel
and dual, heading-slaved wing levelers installed. The wing
levelers are probably lighter and more reliable than a suite
of panel mounted gyros and more capable than pilot's trying
to manage an airplane . . . .
"

I agree wholeheartedly. Flying IFR, if we can trust our lives to electronics to take information from sensors and display that information, then why can't we trust electronics to actually operate the controls? The human being is the weak link in the system. Have you ever noticed the control movements when the autopilot is on, compared to when a human is in control? Some planes have dual EFISs. I suggest that it would be better to have dual autopilots with dual servos. The recreational IFR pilot is better off monitoring the system as a whole, watching for component failure, making sure that the altitude and heading are correct, handling radio communications, looking for traffic, and etc.
Joe Gores
[quote][b]


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mjpereira68(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 3:20 pm    Post subject: The weak link Reply with quote

On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 6:25 AM, Joe<fran5sew(at)banyanol.com> wrote:
Quote:
Bob Nuckolls said, "Perhaps dual wing levelers are in order?  I'd bet that a
BIG
   chunk of the accidents due to poor pilot visibility and/or
   workload distractions for single-pilot IFR would have been
   averted (if) electrons had the stick.  I'll suggest that most
   IFR capable airframes would be better outfitted for ventures
   into poor visibility if there were NO displays on the panel
   and dual, heading-slaved wing levelers installed. The wing
   levelers are probably lighter and more reliable than a suite
   of panel mounted gyros and more capable than pilot's trying
   to manage an airplane . . . .."

I agree wholeheartedly.  Flying IFR, if we can trust our lives to
electronics to take information from sensors and display that information,
then why can't we trust electronics to actually operate the controls?  The
human being is the weak link in the system.  Have you ever noticed the
control movements when the autopilot is on, compared to when a human is in
control?  Some planes have dual EFISs.  I suggest that it would be better to
have dual autopilots with dual servos.  The recreational IFR pilot is better
off monitoring the system as a whole, watching for component failure, making
sure that the altitude and heading are correct, handling radio
communications, looking for traffic, and etc.
Joe Gores

Joe,

Having software manage your flight controls doesn't eliminate the
human "weak link" it just moves it from the pilot (who's own butt is
on the line) and transfers it to computer programmers, the vast
majority of which only understand a small part of the total program on
large projects (which is unavoidable). They have the privilege of not
being in the aircraft when their products fail (unless they're
working for a major aircraft manufacturer and suffer an incredible
case being in the wrong place at the wrong time).

Don't cast me as a luddite, I have a ton of IT experience. And
honestly all that experience makes me appreciate the concept of having
a hunk of spinning iron as a backup. In fact, since efis is dependant
on electricity, It'd be nice if that spinning gyro was based on vacuum
(or an electrically driven one with it's own internal battery that
*only* drives the motor).

c'ya,
Michael

Quote:



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mprather(at)spro.net
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PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 4:15 pm    Post subject: The weak link Reply with quote

Quote:

<mjpereira68(at)gmail.com>


snip

Quote:
> communications, looking for traffic, and etc.
> Joe Gores

Joe,

Having software manage your flight controls doesn't eliminate the
human "weak link" it just moves it from the pilot (who's own butt is
on the line) and transfers it to computer programmers, the vast
majority of which only understand a small part of the total program on
large projects (which is unavoidable). They have the privilege of not
being in the aircraft when their products fail (unless they're
working for a major aircraft manufacturer and suffer an incredible
case being in the wrong place at the wrong time).

Don't cast me as a luddite, I have a ton of IT experience. And
honestly all that experience makes me appreciate the concept of having
a hunk of spinning iron as a backup. In fact, since efis is dependant
on electricity, It'd be nice if that spinning gyro was based on vacuum
(or an electrically driven one with it's own internal battery that
*only* drives the motor).

c'ya,
Michael


One benefit the computer programmer has is the opportunity to ponder bad
things happening while sitting at a desk (on the ground), drinking a
favored beverage. On the other hand, the pilot gets to ponder these bad
things while riding through said bad things (which are often quite
distracting). Sometimes the pilot doesn't make the right decision and
doesn't get to take another shot at it. The computer programmer can (with
the help of peers) consider all sorts of malfunctions.

One other thought.. The act of using GPS data to correct for roll/yaw
gyro drift is a far cry (much simpler task) from the tasks currently being
accomplished by the current crop of EFISs. Simpler tasks mean simpler
code, and a much easier device to debug. What amounts to be a single axis
autopilot could be done in very few lines of code.
Matt-


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 23, 2009 5:02 am    Post subject: The weak link Reply with quote

At 07:10 PM 7/21/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
>

One benefit the computer programmer has is the opportunity to ponder bad
things happening while sitting at a desk (on the ground), drinking a
favored beverage. On the other hand, the pilot gets to ponder these bad
things while riding through said bad things (which are often quite
distracting). Sometimes the pilot doesn't make the right decision and
doesn't get to take another shot at it. The computer programmer can (with
the help of peers) consider all sorts of malfunctions.

One other thought.. The act of using GPS data to correct for roll/yaw
gyro drift is a far cry (much simpler task) from the tasks currently being
accomplished by the current crop of EFISs. Simpler tasks mean simpler
code, and a much easier device to debug. What amounts to be a single axis
autopilot could be done in very few lines of code.

Absolutely! This is why the design goals I suggested
for the GPS aided wing leveler has the gps receiver
built in along with the rate sensors. No wiring other
than to power it up, hook up an antenna and pushbuttons.
If a valid gps signal isn't present, the system won't
drive. If 14v isn't present, it won't drive. Software has but
one task only . . . hold gps course of the moment
which is modified by simple push-button commands -or-
offered by external flight planning accessory over the
serial bus. VERY simple code in a one-chip microprocessor.
total parts count is very low . . . i.e. failure rates
driven by complexity go way down.

If you push all the fancy maneuvering software and
hardware out to a plug-n-play device like a palm-
computer, then the guy who keeps the airplane right
side up and pointed the right direction is not distracted
nor are his design goals plagued with CPU "business".
Let somebody else with equally constrained design goals
write the software that does the fancy steering . . .
but in a device that can be unplugged or turned off
without influencing the performance of the wing-leveler.

This distributed processing, minimalist hardware approach
offers an opportunity for a small, light, low cost
end product, and reduces probability of high-risk software.
A dual wing-leveler package has two control gps receivers
cross-checked with data from a third panel mounted receiver.

Probability for an system failure to endure unattended
by the pilot is low and plan-a/plan-b tolerance to failure
is high.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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