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General Aviation Flight Test of Advanced Operations Enabled by Synthetic VisionA flight test was performed to compare the use of three advanced primary flight and navigation display concepts to a baseline, round-dial concept to assess the potential for advanced operations. The displays were evaluated during visual and instrument approach procedures including an advanced instrument approach resembling a visual airport traffic pattern. Nineteen pilots from three pilot groups, reflecting the diverse piloting skills of the General Aviation pilot population, served as evaluation subjects. The experiment had two thrusts: 1) an examination of the capabilities of low-time (i.e., <400 hours), non-instrument-rated pilots to perform nominal instrument approaches, and 2) an exploration of potential advanced Visual Meteorological Conditions (VMC)-like approaches in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC). Within this context, advanced display concepts are considered to include integrated navigation and primary flight displays with either aircraft attitude flight directors or Highway In The Sky (HITS) guidance with and without a synthetic depiction of the external visuals (i.e., synthetic vision). Relative to the first thrust, the results indicate that using an advanced display concept, as tested herein, low-time, non-instrument-rated pilots can exhibit flight-technical performance, subjective workload and situation awareness ratings as good as or better than high-time Instrument Flight Rules (IFR)-rated pilots using Baseline Round Dials for a nominal IMC approach. For the second thrust, the results indicate advanced VMC-like approaches are feasible in IMC, for all pilot groups tested for only the Synthetic Vision System (SVS) advanced display concept.
Document ID
20140010732
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Technical Publication (TP)
Authors
Glaab, Louis J.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Hughhes, Monica F.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Parrish, Russell V.
(Raytheon Co. Hampton, VA, United States)
Takallu, Mohammad A.
(Lockheed Martin Corp. Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 18, 2014
Publication Date
July 1, 2014
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Report/Patent Number
NASA/TP-2014-218279
L-20203
NF1676L-15539
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 284848.02.04.07.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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