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Does anyone have any stats on how often airliners land themselves? I googled a little and couldn't find any.
russ_watters said:Does anyone have any stats on how often airliners land themselves? I googled a little and couldn't find any.
Roger that. If anyone were to assemble it at a top-level, it would have to be the FAA, specifically the AFS-410 office. They are both the policy setters for these kinds of special flight ops, as well as the national "policy police" for them. I know they often look at operator's CAT III ops data, so like I say they would be the door to knock on.FredGarvin said:So chances are that the info is spread out over many fleets but probably not assembled to the top level like Russ is looking for?
I assume you mean on the aircraft side, and not the ILS ground station side. As far as I know, the only "required" place for an ILS approach to be logged (they can include manually-flown, of course) is in the pilot's own logbook. But on the ground side I don't believe there is a logging requirement for anything other that uptime or downtime of the transmitter and if it ever switches over from primary to backup channels.FredGarvin said:I would think that ILS operations would have to log this kind of stuff in as well.
Wow - welcome aboard. One nice thing about this board is somehow we get a lot of uncommon specialties here...RainmanAero said:First, since I am new here, let me establish my credibility so you don't think I'm some yo-yo flapping my yapper. I am a commercial aircraft flight control design engineer who worked on MD-11 and B-717 autoland design and development, and I also worked for FedEx for 5 years as their CAT IIIb autoland engineering expert. So I am quite familiar with airline automatic landing programs and how the FAA certifies them operationally.
I hope this helps. Feel free to ask any follow-up questions.
Rainman