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Deleted member 27505
Guest
Peanut Vendor here...
So the report on the Burke battering is out.
With disregard to all the other factors, I'd like to focus on one that has bothered me since well before this accident: Exo- vs. Ego-Centric PFDs.
Rarefied lingo, I admit. Let's simplify and clarify. The Exo presents a fixed horizon with a moving "little airplane". The Ego presents a fixed "little airplane" with a moving horizon.
Seems simple and easy sitting at the desk reading about it, or even sitting in the cockpit looking at it.
I argue it is not simple. Especially when it comes to ingrained, intuitive response and/or stress-laden response. I argue this is probably one of those areas of aviation that should be standardized by law.
Switching from one "mode of virtual reality" to a precisely inverse "mode of virtual reality" seems probable to elicit massive cognitive dissonance and lead almost predictably to unmanageable disorientation even for the most experienced of pilots, leave alone less experienced pilots undergoing stress or overload. Ironically, it seems it could also create exceptionally tricky scenarios for the pilot who is highly experienced in one mode when he is confronted by the other mode.
This mode switch issue seems almost as loaded a proposition as asking a right hander to pitch left.
OK, peanut gallery. Go! Thoughts?
So the report on the Burke battering is out.
With disregard to all the other factors, I'd like to focus on one that has bothered me since well before this accident: Exo- vs. Ego-Centric PFDs.
Rarefied lingo, I admit. Let's simplify and clarify. The Exo presents a fixed horizon with a moving "little airplane". The Ego presents a fixed "little airplane" with a moving horizon.
Seems simple and easy sitting at the desk reading about it, or even sitting in the cockpit looking at it.
I argue it is not simple. Especially when it comes to ingrained, intuitive response and/or stress-laden response. I argue this is probably one of those areas of aviation that should be standardized by law.
Switching from one "mode of virtual reality" to a precisely inverse "mode of virtual reality" seems probable to elicit massive cognitive dissonance and lead almost predictably to unmanageable disorientation even for the most experienced of pilots, leave alone less experienced pilots undergoing stress or overload. Ironically, it seems it could also create exceptionally tricky scenarios for the pilot who is highly experienced in one mode when he is confronted by the other mode.
This mode switch issue seems almost as loaded a proposition as asking a right hander to pitch left.
OK, peanut gallery. Go! Thoughts?
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