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On Jun 19, 4:15*pm, wrote:
In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote: If history is any indicator, technology becomes cheaper as time moves forward, so whatever it is, it will probably be smaller, cheaper, faster, more reliable, better-featured, disposable (it breaks, no reason to cry as much), etc. None of the technology involved in building airplanes has gotten much cheaper in real dollars since airplanes were invented. There are only so many existing materials you can build an airplane from and they are all mature. The only significant difference is the avionics does more for the same cost. Which implies that, if it does the same (if doing the same is an option), then the cost is less. Perhaps true commoditization has not penetrated the aviation market. There are many ground-based vehicles (cars) that technologically more sophisticated than a new low-end Cessna but cost much less. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 19, 4:15?pm, wrote: In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote: If history is any indicator, technology becomes cheaper as time moves forward, so whatever it is, it will probably be smaller, cheaper, faster, more reliable, better-featured, disposable (it breaks, no reason to cry as much), etc. None of the technology involved in building airplanes has gotten much cheaper in real dollars since airplanes were invented. There are only so many existing materials you can build an airplane from and they are all mature. The only significant difference is the avionics does more for the same cost. Which implies that, if it does the same (if doing the same is an option), then the cost is less. It isn't an option. There is no market for 12 channel comm radios. There are many ground-based vehicles (cars) that technologically more sophisticated than a new low-end Cessna but cost much less. And cars are not built in quatities of a few hundred tops a year nor does every little piece in them have to be certified. Well, there are a couple of low volume cars that cost about the same as a low end Cessna, to be totally accurate. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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On 2008-06-19, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
3. Do you think electronics should retain a peripheral role ? (Garmin, etc) but not be used in control paths (fly-by-wire)? Fly by wire is pretty pointless on the kinds of planes we fly, it's adding complexity where none is needed and steel cables and pulleys are pretty reliable in airplanes, and pushrods to the swash plate in a helicopter seem very reliable too. Changing those to electronics would have pretty much zero benefit in a light airplane or helicopter (and some significant disadvantages). Control electronics does exist for GA, it's called an autopilot, and they've been around for a long time (some more sophisticated than others). Some engines are also available with FADEC. -- From the sunny Isle of Man. Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. |
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In rec.aviation.piloting Dylan Smith wrote:
On 2008-06-19, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: 3. Do you think electronics should retain a peripheral role ? (Garmin, etc) but not be used in control paths (fly-by-wire)? Fly by wire is pretty pointless on the kinds of planes we fly, it's adding complexity where none is needed and steel cables and pulleys are pretty reliable in airplanes, and pushrods to the swash plate in a helicopter seem very reliable too. Changing those to electronics would have pretty much zero benefit in a light airplane or helicopter (and some significant disadvantages). Exactly. Lapin seems to be fixated on using technology simply because it exists, as opposed to using technology to solve an existing problem or to make life easier. He also seems to be incapable of understanding that roughly zero people will spend extra for something who's cost doesn't provide the benefits to justify that cost. Control electronics does exist for GA, it's called an autopilot, and they've been around for a long time (some more sophisticated than others). Some engines are also available with FADEC. Yep, and as in general they aren't needed but rather just make life easier, there are only a small percentage of people willing to pay for them. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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On Jun 20, 5:16*am, Dylan Smith wrote:
On 2008-06-19, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: 3. Do you think electronics should retain a peripheral role ? (Garmin, etc) but not be used in control paths (fly-by-wire)? Fly by wire is pretty pointless on the kinds of planes we fly, it's adding complexity where none is needed and steel cables and pulleys are pretty reliable in airplanes, and pushrods to the swash plate in a helicopter seem very reliable too. Changing those to electronics would have pretty much zero benefit in a light airplane or helicopter (and some significant disadvantages). I disagree. For XC flights, a computer can do a far better job optimizing fuel efficiency, for example, by controlling control surfaces dynamically during flight. A computer can also minimize the effects of turbulence, by reactively changing the same control surfaces dynamically. A computer can take any of many objectives defined by pilot: 1. Minimum time in flight. 2. Minimum fuel consumption. 3. Altitude stabilization. 4. Minimum susceptibility to turbulence. 5. Maximum visibility of surroundings. etc... And make the flight conform to those requirements, and warn if it can not. That very same computer could communicate flight plan to ground, store minute details of entire flight on hard disk and automatically move them to home computer for recap.... Control electronics does exist for GA, it's called an autopilot, and they've been around for a long time (some more sophisticated than others). Some engines are also available with FADEC. These systems are massively expensive, and there is much redundancy. For example, the entire radio stack could be eliminated by a software radio, which controls fed through LCD monitor. The software radi costs $1000. The computer would be one of same 2 computers used for other functions. The possibilities are essentially endless. GA is at the beginning, not the end, of discovering them. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
For XC flights, a computer can do a far better job optimizing fuel efficiency, for example, by controlling control surfaces dynamically during flight. A computer can also minimize the effects of turbulence, by reactively changing the same control surfaces dynamically. Can you actually cite some numbers and studies or are you just making this stuff up? It was proven back in the 30's or 40's that after an airplane flies into a pocket of turbulence, it's too late for either a pilot or a computer to make much difference. The *only* way to fix the problem is with a 20-30 foot boom ahead of the aircraft structure that can sense and react to the turbulence ahead of time. As to fuel economy, perhaps you can tell me how a computer could tune the radio and get winds aloft readings and pick the best altitude for cruise? Since it can't, it is unlikely that it could do a better job than a pilot. OTOH, if you have some concrete evidence to the contrary, I'd love to see it. |
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On Jun 20, 11:41*am, Jim Stewart wrote:
Le Chaud Lapin wrote: For XC flights, a computer can do a far better job optimizing fuel efficiency, for example, by controlling control surfaces dynamically during flight. *A computer can also minimize the effects of turbulence, by reactively changing the same control surfaces dynamically. Can you actually cite some numbers and studies or are you just making this stuff up? Not sure what you mean. I haven't given any numbers, so there are no numbers to site. ![]() If you are asking if I could show that a computer can do a better job of increasing fuel efficient, that is intuitively obvious. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_by_wire#Fly-by-wire If you Google "fly by wire fuel efficiency stability", there will be many links saying the same thing - a computer can do a much better job than human pilot for these things. It was proven back in the 30's or 40's that after an airplane flies into a pocket of turbulence, it's too late for either a pilot or a computer to make much difference. *The *only* way to fix the problem is with a 20-30 foot boom ahead of the aircraft structure that can sense and react to the turbulence ahead of time. Hmm... Well, generally speaking, if a pilot possesses knowledge of how to handle aircraft, that knowledge can be programmed into the control computer, and whatever it is, a computer can react with greater speed and precision than a pilot could, while remaining within specified constraints. And a computer doesn't get nervous. As to fuel economy, perhaps you can tell me how a computer could tune the radio and get winds aloft readings and pick the best altitude for cruise? *Since it can't, it is unlikely that it could do a better job than a pilot. *OTOH, if you have some concrete evidence to the contrary, I'd love to see it. I cannot not, because no one (that I know of, is doing that yet). There are many ways to d this, using old technology, or the NextGen stuff that FAA is raving about. OLD TECHNOLOGY: With a software radio of appropriate bandset, it is possible to tune to any of tunable frequency of the radio stack. With some powerful software radios, like the ones at http://www.vanu.com, it would is possible to tune to all channels at once (and have power left over to do whatever). COTS software could be used to sample the radio read- back and convert to to digital form. This can be done not only for, ATIS, but any radio source. Note that a software radio, because it contains a DSP, can be used for most of the antiquated signls (VOR). The signal processing power required to process such signals is not suprisingly very low. Once the information is digital form, the rest is easy. But there is more. 1.Unlike a pilot, a computer will never become annoyed by sampling winds aloft on XC flight to hunt for optimal altitude in real-time, the whole time. 2. A computer can also take the information an put up a real-time 3D rendering of such winds aloft on the $200 17-inch LCD panel that you bought from Viewsonic for your cockpit. 3. A computer could also store all winds aloft data for past 5 years of flying on massive 1TB hard disk, that , again, cost $500. 4. A computer can take ATIS readings from local airport and destination airport, plus METARs, etc...all over $20 USB Wi-Fi dongle, one of 7 or 8 that you keep on board, simply because, at $20 a piece, you can afford it. 5. A computer can give you spoken back conditions of target area, remind you at 10-minute intervals with spoken voice fuel remaining in both time and volume. 6. With new Wi-Fi equipment to be released soon, a computer can let you talk to your grandaugther while in flight, via dash-mounted web- cam, and of course, your $30 disposable-but-very-high-quality Logitech headset. 7. A computer would let you take another $40 detachable web cam, and mount it with sucition cups, or more permanently, as you prefer, so you godaughter and son can see what you see as you fly over ground. 8. Some pilots might mount several such cameras around aircraft for various views to help with boredom in flight, or other reasons. There are 100's, if not 1000's of features, that a general-purpose computer + inexpensive, commoditized accessories, can add to flying. What is notable is that the cost of the $1000 PC does not increase. Only the software and accessories change. -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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On Jun 20, 12:15 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
There are 100's, if not 1000's of features, that a general-purpose computer + inexpensive, commoditized accessories, can add to flying. I want to know which aircraft components can be "commoditized," and what that means. Does it mean that ordinary industrial or automotive bits are used in building the airplane? Where can I get such commoditized cheap parts for my airplane? It needs new wheels and brakes, which can't be replaced by car brakes because they're all too big and heavy, it needs a new engine but that engine has to weigh 178 pounds or less, it needs new radios that can tune in aircraft fequencies. Can I buy those at JC Penney or Canadian Tire? What is notable is that the cost of the $1000 PC does not increase. Only the software and accessories change. Of course, since billions of them are out there and many, many millions more are sold every year. Not like airplanes at all. We have some 172s and a 182 and a couple of Citabrias. These airplanes all came with electromechanical voltage regulators, where a small electromagnet pulls open the field current contacts to limit alternator output. The 172s and 182 are all 1970s models and ran for years and years and thousands of hours on those primitive make-and- break buzzer-type regulators, and when they did quit we'd buy new ones. Now, the manufacturer makes regulators that look the same and have the same part number, but the make-break contact setup has been replaced with an electronic control circuit. No moving parts. And those regulators last as little as a week and no more than a year or two and cost every bit as much as the old style. What did we gain there? We fly in Canada where it can get really, really cold. The epoxy cases on computer chips or transistor cases contract and crack at -40 and moisture from the air gets in there and shorts them and they're dead. Finished. This can happen when the unit is parked outside, as they often are. Next time the pilot goes to use his airplane the radio doesn't want to work right because the synthesized tuner, which replaced a bank of switched crystals, is wandering all over the place because its frequency counter chip is pooched. What did we gain there? That radio weighs as much as the old crystal unit did and lasted one fifth as long as the old one. What else would we use to encapsulate a chip that wouldn't shrink and crack at -40? The LCD displays on these things quit at -25 degrees. The liquid crystal freezes. Useless. Narco uses a special gas discharge display in many of their avionics, and that stupid thing burns out regularly. $350 for each side of a NavComm. The old mechanically tuned radios keep on going. What did we gain there? I'm not against electronics. I've worked on electronic devices since I was 14 years old, which was 41 years ago. It's just that the "advances" we've been sold aren't ready yet and cost MORE than the older ones did and are LESS reliable. We really haven't moved ahead much at all and I would not trust my primary flight controls to a single set of FBW controls. Airliners use three systems, just like heavy trucks have three separate braking systems (but only one drum/ shoe per wheel) and such redundancy adds a lot of cost and weight. Those 1/8" cables and their pulleys are going to be around for a long time yet, believe me, and it's not because we don't want electronics, it's because we can't trust them that much. My Power Mechanics teacher in high school told us kids that 90% of all car problems would be electrical, and in those many years since he's been proven right over and over again. The FAA is not against innovation and improvement. In the early '70s a guy named Ken Rand took a set of Taylor Monoplane blueprints (I once had one of those airplanes) and made some changes and came up with the KR-1. It was the same size but much lighter and slicker and went 50% faster, all using styrofoam and polyester fabric and epoxy resins, and the idea caught on and Burt Rutan refined it and built some astounding airplanes, paving the way for a host of new designs. Lots of folks thought is was crap, and the composite airplane still has lots of shortcomings (hard to repair, temperature extremes are hard on it, resins are toxic, and lightning passing through it tends to blow it to tiny bits) but we now have certified airplanes like the Cirrus and composite propellers and composite tails on airliners along with composite flaps and so forth, and the new 787 is almost all composite. The FAA is happy with it and the 787, due to its enormous strength, will have much better differential pressure for higher cruise altitudes with lower cabin altitudes, so that its worst fuel mileage will be better than the A380's best. Stop dreaming about alternate propulsion methods and fancy FBW systems and go invent and build them and if they make sense they'll sell and you'll become rich and famous. Aviation is as market- driven as anything else, and we're not resistant to innovation that saves us money or makes us safer. But we WON'T buy something that doesn't work as well as what we have now. Period. Dan |
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On Jun 20, 12:15 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 20, 11:41 am, Jim Stewart wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: For XC flights, a computer can do a far better job optimizing fuel efficiency, for example, by controlling control surfaces dynamically during flight. A computer can also minimize the effects of turbulence, by reactively changing the same control surfaces dynamically. Can you actually cite some numbers and studies or are you just making this stuff up? Not sure what you mean. I haven't given any numbers, so there are no numbers to site. ![]() If you are asking if I could show that a computer can do a better job of increasing fuel efficient, that is intuitively obvious. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_by_wire#Fly-by-wire If you Google "fly by wire fuel efficiency stability", there will be many links saying the same thing - a computer can do a much better job than human pilot for these things. It was proven back in the 30's or 40's that after an airplane flies into a pocket of turbulence, it's too late for either a pilot or a computer to make much difference. The *only* way to fix the problem is with a 20-30 foot boom ahead of the aircraft structure that can sense and react to the turbulence ahead of time. Hmm... Well, generally speaking, if a pilot possesses knowledge of how to handle aircraft, that knowledge can be programmed into the control computer, and whatever it is, a computer can react with greater speed and precision than a pilot could, while remaining within specified constraints. And a computer doesn't get nervous. As to fuel economy, perhaps you can tell me how a computer could tune the radio and get winds aloft readings and pick the best altitude for cruise? Since it can't, it is unlikely that it could do a better job than a pilot. OTOH, if you have some concrete evidence to the contrary, I'd love to see it. I cannot not, because no one (that I know of, is doing that yet). There are many ways to d this, using old technology, or the NextGen stuff that FAA is raving about. OLD TECHNOLOGY: With a software radio of appropriate bandset, it is possible to tune to any of tunable frequency of the radio stack. With some powerful software radios, like the ones athttp://www.vanu.com, it would is possible to tune to all channels at once (and have power left over to do whatever). COTS software could be used to sample the radio read- back and convert to to digital form. This can be done not only for, ATIS, but any radio source. Note that a software radio, because it contains a DSP, can be used for most of the antiquated signls (VOR). The signal processing power required to process such signals is not suprisingly very low. Once the information is digital form, the rest is easy. But there is more. 1.Unlike a pilot, a computer will never become annoyed by sampling winds aloft on XC flight to hunt for optimal altitude in real-time, the whole time. 2. A computer can also take the information an put up a real-time 3D rendering of such winds aloft on the $200 17-inch LCD panel that you bought from Viewsonic for your cockpit. 3. A computer could also store all winds aloft data for past 5 years of flying on massive 1TB hard disk, that , again, cost $500. 4. A computer can take ATIS readings from local airport and destination airport, plus METARs, etc...all over $20 USB Wi-Fi dongle, one of 7 or 8 that you keep on board, simply because, at $20 a piece, you can afford it. 5. A computer can give you spoken back conditions of target area, remind you at 10-minute intervals with spoken voice fuel remaining in both time and volume. 6. With new Wi-Fi equipment to be released soon, a computer can let you talk to your grandaugther while in flight, via dash-mounted web- cam, and of course, your $30 disposable-but-very-high-quality Logitech headset. 7. A computer would let you take another $40 detachable web cam, and mount it with sucition cups, or more permanently, as you prefer, so you godaughter and son can see what you see as you fly over ground. 8. Some pilots might mount several such cameras around aircraft for various views to help with boredom in flight, or other reasons. There are 100's, if not 1000's of features, that a general-purpose computer + inexpensive, commoditized accessories, can add to flying. What is notable is that the cost of the $1000 PC does not increase. Only the software and accessories change. -Le Chaud Lapin- Just a gimmick addict, I think you are. If you want to fly, fly. if you want to take pictures or listen to music or do a lot of other things that distract you from paying attention so that you don't collide with other airplanes or get lost on a cross-country, then find some other means of travel, like in an airliner. Super-complex airplanes operated by computers that allow the dumbest and most inattentive people into the air are just a disaster waiting to happen, and they'd be so expensive that none of us would be flying if we had to buy them. We fly the airplanes we fly because we can afford them and because we want to FLY, not play with computers and pretend to be pilots. Piloting involves learning some challenging skills, which is why most of us do it. Restoring an old car or truck like I did also involves a wide range of skills, which is why I did it. I could go buy a new car that has so many safety gimmicks, like antiskid brakes, but that involves nothing more than spending money and there's absolutely no challenge to that. Besides, things like antskid brakes are well known to make dumber drivers who just stand on the brakes and trust the vehicle to prevent a skid into the snowbank, and soon enough that driver, because he no longer has to learn the feel of the surface, gets onto a slippery-enough surface that the system cannot save him and he crashes good and proper. Along the freeways here during snowstoms the vehicles in the ditch or upside- down are ALL newer cars and SUVs. The drivers of non-antiskid cars have to watch what they're doing and it makes them more aware of the conditions. Safety systems, indeed. Computers still cannot replace the human brain and won't be able to do all that that brain can do for a long time, if ever. So use your head. Go learn to fly and stop trolling just to infuriate us. We'll be asking how the lessons are going. Dan |
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In rec.aviation.piloting Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Jun 20, 5:16?am, Dylan Smith wrote: On 2008-06-19, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: 3. Do you think electronics should retain a peripheral role ? (Garmin, etc) but not be used in control paths (fly-by-wire)? Fly by wire is pretty pointless on the kinds of planes we fly, it's adding complexity where none is needed and steel cables and pulleys are pretty reliable in airplanes, and pushrods to the swash plate in a helicopter seem very reliable too. Changing those to electronics would have pretty much zero benefit in a light airplane or helicopter (and some significant disadvantages). I disagree. Because apparently you know nothing about real flying. For XC flights, a computer can do a far better job optimizing fuel efficiency, for example, by controlling control surfaces dynamically during flight. A computer can also minimize the effects of turbulence, by reactively changing the same control surfaces dynamically. A computer can take any of many objectives defined by pilot: 1. Minimum time in flight. 2. Minimum fuel consumption. 3. Altitude stabilization. 4. Minimum susceptibility to turbulence. 5. Maximum visibility of surroundings. Total, utter nonsense. etc... And make the flight conform to those requirements, and warn if it can not. That very same computer could communicate flight plan to ground, store minute details of entire flight on hard disk and automatically move them to home computer for recap.... Control electronics does exist for GA, it's called an autopilot, and they've been around for a long time (some more sophisticated than others). Some engines are also available with FADEC. These systems are massively expensive, and there is much redundancy. For example, the entire radio stack could be eliminated by a software radio, which controls fed through LCD monitor. The software radi costs $1000. The computer would be one of same 2 computers used for other functions. Yeah, for one Amateur Radio grade software radio with you supplying the computer. The possibilities are essentially endless. GA is at the beginning, not the end, of discovering them. Especially for someone who gets their ideas from comic books. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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