SrFnFly227
Well-Known Member
What will be particularly interesting is whether the corporate manufacturers attempt to get single pilot certification for new airframes based on the capabilities of the software/avionics. If we see a G750 Single Pilot type rating become an option then the writing's on the wall.
I don't think you'll ever see a single pilot Gulfstream. The plane is designed to fly for entirely too long for only one person to sit up front with no ability to get up and stretch or relieve a biological need.
You will however see more and more mid size and below aircraft certified to be single pilot. The Phenom 100/300 is one example. The Citation Mustang and M2 are of course two more examples, but Cessna has a pretty long history of single pilot waivers for their planes.
Getting around the biological needs of one person will be a large hurdle IMO. In the airline world, you make a dispatcher capable of taking over the plane for short periods of time. One dispatcher could handle multiple planes, the same way they do now. In the private world however, where true dispatchers/flight followers are a rarity, there is a problem for single pilot ops once you get past a 2-3 hour range.