Hacker15e
Who am I? Where are my pants?
Freighters will be first to go pilotless. UPS and FedEx would love to have the technology right now and get rid of us. The saving grace and stumbling block for passenger carriers will be flight attendants. I don't think they want to be spending their career in a speeding metal tube with no one in the pointy end and who will take care of the pax? Just my opinion.
The pax will need someone to cater to them on long haul flights and help them in case of an emergency so they won't be replaced any time soon. So, hug your flt attendant!
Fortunately, my career will be in my rear view mirror when Global Hawks start flying packages!
Again, the problem here is the assumption that remote piloting is somehow less expensive than human pilots. After all, the whole purpose of replacing pilots with robots is to save money and increase productivity, right? Unfortunately, it is a seriously incorrect belief. The folks that think this haven't ever actually looked at the real aggregate costs of operating these things beyond line of sight.
The BLOS connection (satellite time) alone for a single day's sortie in the aircraft I'm currently working on costs more than a regional pilot's annual salary. That cost doesn't even touch all the other infrastructure and maintenance costs, and given the technology buying, caring, and feeding that technology is not at all an inexpensive prospect.
Maybe someday RPA technology and the satellite bandwidth on which to run it will be cheaper than a pilot, but it sure as heck isn't anywhere close today.
