LionElJonson wrote:Broomstick wrote:eion wrote:As an example, the Space Shuttle uses 5 onboard computers. 4 redundant computers and one independent computer that was created without the involvement of the first design team. Similar safety precautions can easily be observed for commercial aircraft.
Sure... the only obstacle being
money. Historically, airlines have a bad habit of cost-cutting a little too much at times.
The aviation industry (or, at least, the regulators thereof)
love redundancy. If something is vitally important for the safety of the plane, odds are the planes got two or three of them. It's the safest way to travel for a reason, and that's not just because they analyze every accident for ways to make aviation safer. It's also because for every accident, there'll be a chain of four or five failures before things get to the point the plane goes down.
Well, yes, understood. Nonetheless, while the
industry as a whole is in love with redundancy there have been some rather notable exceptions to that rule. The US had a rather
spectacular DC-10 crash over Chicago a couple decades ago, for example, that was triggered in part by maintenance being pressured to perform their job quicker and cheaper, leading to an engine falling off an airplane and severing hydraulic lines and various other problems. And that's a
major player, one of the operations that usually do things right and have the funds to pay for what's needed. Smaller operators... it's a problem. Aviation is expensive, the temptation to save money is always there. Even the wealthiest players tend to resist new regulations and new requirements on a basis of cost.
Computers are also able to react much faster than humans, and monitor far more information than humans. I can easily foresee scenarios where a computer would outreach a human pilot.
Oh, sure - no question. The thing is, for
unforeseen occurrences for which the computer has no programming humans might be the better option. Hence, we still have them on board.
Yeah, and even if they could be piloted from the ground, the FAA and similar organizations will still probably require human pilots on board in case the radio fails and then the aircraft undergoes an emergency.
Until we can get on-board AI that functions well in emergencies, yes, that is probably the case.
True. So called zero-zero landings are already a reality. Such systems are still maintenance intensive, though. VERY useful, but they do cost money and require all parts of the system to function without flaw.
My understanding from my aviation professor (who's an ex-Air Force instructor) is that you're required by regulation to be able to visually see the runway before you attempt to land. That might just be an Australian rule, though.
My understanding is from speaking with US pilots who have been trained to do them. Right now, that's either military or some of the very high-end civilian air liners. Not only does the pilot(s) have to be trained and current, but the proper machinery has to be installed both on the airplane and on the ground, both of which require frequent maintenance. That means that while possible they aren't particularly common. For the most part, what you say is true - the pilot has to, at some point, be able to see the ground (what we aviation folks call "decision height").
On factor that hardware-lovers often fail to consider is that the airplane+runway is NOT a closed system. It's one think to run computer simulations and wank on about automated landings - quite another to deal with the real world where runways aren't always pristine. Could be anything from debris on the runway (what took down the Concorde, although that was a takeoff, not a landing) to flocks of birds to
people on the runway when they aren't supposed to be there, whether that's a ground support vehicle that got lost or failed to properly follow directions or some crazy naked guy running around the airport (happened at Chicago Midway about three years ago. In
February. Naked guy running around on the runways in knee-high snowdrifts. Yes, alcohol and drugs were involved). With the normal visual requirements of instruments landings such aberrations may well be spotted along with the runway. On a zero-zero landing you can't, by definition, see where you're going. Yes, radar helps considerably, but it's only been relatively recently we've had anything that starts to make scanning the runway ahead practical.
Any pilot at any level of aviation will have multiple stories of aborting landings due to something being the runway that shouldn't. Ask me about the go-karts in Wisconsin sometime.
Anyhow - I fly under US FAA regs due to an accident of geography - that's where I live. Australia, as you point out, has its own rules and it may be that such landings are not (yet) permitted there. It could be a reason as simple as your airports not having the hardware installed.