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Does anyone have any stats on how often airliners land themselves? I googled a little and couldn't find any.
The discussion revolves around the frequency and statistics of automatic landings by airliners, exploring the complexities of autoland capabilities, regulatory requirements, and operational practices within the aviation industry.
Participants express uncertainty regarding the availability and compilation of autoland statistics, with no consensus on specific requirements or practices across different airlines.
Limitations include the lack of centralized data on autoland operations and the variability in practices among different airlines and aircraft models.
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