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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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