Does having a glass cockpit translate to reduced operating costs for the aircraft over a period of time? I know freight companies operate on slim profit margins, so I'm wondering if glass could improve that margin after the ROI is achieved, if there is one at all.
If everyone is learning to fly glass in the coming years and they eventually apply at a job where they only have dials, then perhaps that old cheap company should drop some cash and pay for a training program to teach people how to use their old equipment.
Now if they can find applicants that are fine with the steam gauges then it won't be a problem... When those steam gauge pilots start getting harder to find then I am guessing training costs will go up or they will agree it is time to get some glass cockpits in their planes.
For me, I don't see it as an issue, I switch back and forth all the time between the two. Sounds more like an issue for the employer than the prospective pilot.
Gotta train people to fly your company's equipment.

Seeing as a new Baron with glass essentially has the same engines as an old Baron with traditional instruments, I doubt a company operating on a slim profit margin would go for the new plane. They probably wouldn't be able to absorb the cost initially anyway.
I don't think so. Or at least I don't see how. We fly single pilot in old turbine airplanes that commuters (remember those?) flew with two pilots. (One even sets a record for flight time in that type of airplane every time it flies). We don't have GPS (except for a few special ones), and many don't have autopilots. Glass is not even a fraction of a thought here yet, and I hope it isn't for a very long time- it would be a bad use of money for sure. If anything, GPS, a basic autopilot, or even some sort of basic terrain avoidance (considering the abundance of rocks around where we fly) would come first. No company in their right mind is going to convert airplanes with 20,000-50,000(?) hours on them to glass.
Subsequent questions, then - would it be smart for a manufacturer to subsidize retrofitting some of the aircraft to deploy the systems to allow operators to ease the burden?
And as a freight dawg (I love that term) wouldn't you prefer flying with a glass cockpit for all of the extra data and decreased workload?
As to my original question about operating costs, I was wondering more along the lines of maintenance. During the poll about Garmin vs. Avidyne the consensus was that the costs of glass were less to manufacture/deliver were less than a six-pack. So I was wondering if any of those cost savings translated at the operator level.
Further, I don't know if any NTSB statistics could indicate an improved safety record as a correllation with glass avionics. I have no idea if such data exists or even if such a hypothesis is valid. It would SEEM to make sense, but at the layman's view, I don't know.
It appears that glass is coming; the more practical question is how do you - as pilots - and those of us who are aspiring pilots - position ourselves for what looks like a sea change?
Or is that overestimating the situation?
I hate the glass idea for training aircraft. I think it's stupid! Students should be learning to fly the a/c with outside references, not with some shiny LCD screen. Until all aircraft are glass, no flight school should be restricting VFR and even IFR training environments to glass.
Steam gauges should be tought in primary IFR learning environments...students can always learn to fly glass down the road. I think it'd be a lot easier to transition from steam guage to glass than glass to steam guage.
I hate the steam gauges idea for training aircraft. I think it's stupid! Students should be learning to fly the a/c with outside references, not with some clunky dial.
Glass cockpits should be taught in primary IFR learning environments...students can always learn to fly the old gauges down the road. I think it'd be a lot easier to transition from glass to steam than steam to glass.
The arguments can be made either way.
What I don't understand is why it seems cool to be the pilot that flies the oldest equipment out there? Sometimes it seems that if you are shooting an NDB approach to mins in a 70s model airplane you are looked upon as the ultimate hottness.
Personally, I would rather be the one flying the glass cockpit with weather radar, TIS and all the goodies while using the autopilot on an ILS and enjoying my time.
Do you want to drive a 60s model bug or a brand new Beamer? I don't see the difference really?
I hate the steam gauges idea for training aircraft. I think it's stupid! Students should be learning to fly the a/c with outside references, not with some clunky dial.
Glass cockpits should be taught in primary IFR learning environments...students can always learn to fly the old gauges down the road. I think it'd be a lot easier to transition from glass to steam than steam to glass.
The arguments can be made either way.
What I don't understand is why it seems cool to be the pilot that flies the oldest equipment out there? Sometimes it seems that if you are shooting an NDB approach to mins in a 70s model airplane you are looked upon as the ultimate hottness.
Personally, I would rather be the one flying the glass cockpit with weather radar, TIS and all the goodies while using the autopilot on an ILS and enjoying my time.
Do you want to drive a 60s model bug or a brand new Beamer? I don't see the difference really?
Ok, I can understand those points of view for sure... If you are getting into flying to be a freight dog then without a doubt I agree older airplanes are the way to go. I am yet to meet a student that told me on day one that he wants to fly old airplanes at night though. From what I have seen at my flight school, the two types of students out there are either the future airline pilot, or the guy who has a good job and always wanted to learn how to fly and is at a point in life where they can try it now.
I like a good old airplane, the problem is from what I have seen, the older the plane, the more mx it needs and the more downtime it has. I am yet to have a G1000 clunk out on me. In the end it isn't really how new the plane is though, it's how good of a mx program it has going with it and how good the pilots treat it.
Ok, I can understand those points of view for sure... If you are getting into flying to be a freight dog then without a doubt I agree older airplanes are the way to go. I am yet to meet a student that told me on day one that he wants to fly old airplanes at night though. From what I have seen at my flight school, the two types of students out there are either the future airline pilot, or the guy who has a good job and always wanted to learn how to fly and is at a point in life where they can try it now.
I like a good old airplane, the problem is from what I have seen, the older the plane, the more mx it needs and the more downtime it has. I am yet to have a G1000 clunk out on me. In the end it isn't really how new the plane is though, it's how good of a mx program it has going with it and how good the pilots treat it.
I would much rather be in the position where I have the skills to get a job ANYWHERE, as opposed to preparation geared specific to the airline route.