New Breed of Sims

The next generation of training devices look and feel more like real simulators. Thats a big improvement, but theyre still not perfect.

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Compared to general aviation, the airlines enjoy an enviable safety record. Part of that record can be attributed to the aircraft they operate – all-weather, high-performance machines with robust and redundant systems. Plus they operate mostly into big airports sporting long, obstruction-free runways equipped with the latest safety enhancements.

But perhaps the most significant factor in that safety record is the high-quality simulator training airline flight crewmembers receive from the very first days of their employment that continues regularly throughout their career. These simulators are aircraft type-specific and mimic the aircraft flight and systems characteristics so completely that most airline flight crewmembers qualifying on a new type dont operate the real thing until theyve taken their checkrides and theyre flying the line on revenue trips under the guidance of what is called an initial operating experience instructor.

The advanced simulators the airlines use have six-axis motion bases, wrap-around visual systems and cockpits that are identical to the real thing, right down to the upholstery on the seats.

When you push the thrust levers up for takeoff, youre shoved back into the seat. When you land and deploy the thrust reversers and brakes, youre thrown against the straps of your shoulder harness. When a system fails, all the appropriate lights and aural alerts operate. The airport environment, complete with cars moving down adjacent highways, appears out the windows.

This sophistication comes with a price – about $10 million when you count the delivery, set-up, and building infrastructure. Plus, it takes a cadre of technicians to keep all that hardware working.

The high cost of entry is what has kept high-quality simulator training from being a routine part of general aviation. Two companies – Environmental Tectonics and Fidelity Flight Simulation – have recently introduced flight training devices that include visual systems and motion bases that may start to change that. These devices are targeted toward flight schools and can be purchased for less than the outlay for a new four-seat training aircraft.

Flight training devices are sometimes called sims in the GA world, even though they have little in common with the full-motion, high fidelity versions employed by the airlines. An FTD is a replica of an airplanes instruments, equipment, panels and controls in an open flight deck or an enclosed airplane cockpit.

Unlike a simulator, flight training devices do not have to completely re-create the actual aircraft cockpit. Typically they sit on a desktop or in the corner of the room with the worst lighting. We visited one flight school that had its old FTD wedged into a closet under a set of stairs, which made it even more claustrophobic than a 152 with a 300-pound instructor.

We recently flew the two new FTDs and they both had hybrid cockpits – the flight instrument panel looked like that installed in current GA aircraft but sub-panels containing switches, engine controls, and flight controls were generic. Our main question: Are these bona fide training tools in an FBO environment or high-tech tricks to keep flight instructors working during periods of foul weather?

The Value of Simulators
The use of simulators produces economies of time and money, both of which are valuable commodities in the cash-intensive world of aviation. They provide a better environment for learning, there are no problems with weather or other air traffic, and they dont burn expensive fuel.

Over the past eight years as a Boeing 757 simulator instructor, Ive seen these benefits time and again. Through the power of simulation, I can have a pilot with virtually no large turbojet time ready for a checkride in seven four-hour sessions. This is possible because the pilot brings good airmanship skills and extensive aviation experience to the simulator, where theyre augmented by an intense, time-tested syllabus.

Airlines use simulators for all phases of training, not just cranking out junior flight crew. Through annual recurrent training called Line Oriented Flight Training scenarios, pilots can see and experience the abnormal flying qualities induced by system failures and emergencies that would be far too dangerous to practice in real airplanes. They can also learn first-hand how inadequate manuals and poorly written checklists can lead them astray and recognize the pitfalls of bad habits they have developed along the way.

Even as an instructor, I rarely come out of a simulator without learning something.

Though the operators like the economies involved with simulator training, the most compelling benefit of simulators is the safe environment in which training is conducted. Until the advent of simulators, airlines had a sickening record of accidents during training flights, with several notable fatal accidents. System and power plant failures can be introduced in a way simply not possible when training in the aircraft. The instruction can also reinforce the lessons by pausing the scenario and examining particularly good or bad reactions.

Some regional and commuter airlines still train in the airplane. Shortly after Continental Express introduced the Embraer EMB-145 jet in the late 1990s, that airline lost one of their new multi-million dollar aircraft in a takeoff training accident. There were serious injuries, but fortunately no fatalities.

The Flight Training Devices
For general aviation training, Environmental Tectonics Corp. has developed the GAT-II flight training device. ETC, based in Southhampton, Pa., near Philadelphia, is an established global company with an extensive background of producing motion devices.

Fidelity Flight Simulation, headquartered near Pittsburgh, is a brand-new firm of pilots that saw a niche and is filling it with the Motus 6-Series FTD.

Both FTDs are FAA-certified Level 2 machines that use large computer monitors to display the flight instrument panels. The advantage of this arrangement is the ability to configure the panel to look like the one installed in just about any aircraft. It also reduces maintenance because there are no delicate mechanical instruments.

Computer monitors also serve as the visual systems. The GAT-II actually uses the same monitor for both the instrument panel and the view outside. The Motus uses four separate monitors for a wider field of view and a separate monitor for the flight instrument panel.

Both use generic hardware for the throttle, prop, and mixture controls and for switches that operate radios, aircraft systems and lights.

The GAT-II features a fully enclosed, single-seat cockpit. The enclosed cockpit is a required characteristic of an important ancillary use of this FTD – spatial disorientation training. More about that later.

The Motus has a cockpit that is open at the rear for crew entry and instructor observation. It can be configured for one or two seats and dual controls for training crews of multi-pilot aircraft.

Both FTDs have motion bases with electrical actuators instead of the hydraulic ones found on most simulators. The Motus system has six axes of motion while the GAT-II has three, but the GAT-II has unlimited 360 yaw motion that facilitates its spatial disorientation training function.

Neither FTD has control loading, which is a fairly complex system that creates the stick-force-per-G of an actual aircraft flying at the same speed and altitude.

Aerodynamic modeling for several aircraft are available for both FTDs and the GAT-II has a helicopter version.

Flying the Motus
Ill get right to the point. These FTDs do not fly just like the airplanes they represent. Without control loading and type-specific cockpits, its simply not possible. However, I think they can make effective training devices, which is exactly what they are. What pilots using these devices will have to do for effective training is to learn to fly these specific training devices and transfer that experience to the aircraft.

I flew the Motus 622P at Corporate Flight Management in Smyrna, Tenn. Corporate Flight chief pilot Leon Custers says his company uses the dual-control simulator for a full range of tasks – initial and recurrent pilot training – in a number of aircraft from a single-engine trainer to twin turboprops.

The Motus 622 looks like a scaled-down boxy version of the airline simulator I teach in. Entry is made from the rear across a small bridge that is raised when the simulator motion is activated, again just like the airline simulator.

Custers had configured the simulator as a Beech Model 58 Baron, an aircraft type in which I have lots of hours. Sure enough, the familiar sight of a late model Baron panel greeted me when I took my seat. But the sub-panel where switches for fuel pumps, starters, lights and other systems was generic and nothing was where I expected it.

We were positioned on the runway with engines running (one of the economies possible with a simulator) and I was soon on takeoff roll. As Custers had warned, the rudder pedal steering was especially sensitive and I weaved down the runway until I reached flying speed. Once airborne, I was in more familiar territory.

The visual system is four large computer monitors mounted above the flight instrument panel and the upward angle at which you have to crane your neck to see outside is a little unnatural, but you can see outside, unlike the Level 6 767 FTD in which I occasionally instruct.

As I expected, the controls of the Motus were like most simulators – quite sensitive. As Custers vectored me for an ILS approach, I made some changes of heading, altitude and airspeed. The pitch attitudes and power settings were close to what I remember them being from my days as a Baron charter pilot.

The Motus reinforced to me the importance of a constant instrument scan when I drifted off heading and altitude while fiddling with OBS knobs and engine controls. I joined the localizer and tracked it inbound. I extended the gear at glideslope intercept but Custers had a surprise for me – one of the mains failed to lock down. Wrapped up in keeping the ILS needles nailed, I failed to notice the lack of three-in-the-green until my right seater pointed it out.

It was a good lesson, but one that wasnt complete. Because the Motus isnt specific to the Baron, I couldnt practice the procedure for manual extension. But you can be sure Ill be watching those lights more closely now, which is the most important lesson.

I broke out lined up on the runway but did a lousy job trying to land. The two-dimensional picture displayed by the computer monitors just did not present the cues I need for landing.

Flying the GAT-II
A few weeks later I flew the GAT-II at the Environmental Tectonics headquarters and manufacturing facility in Pennsylvania. Theyre really into motion. While there I got to see a centrifuge being built for the Royal Air Force and a military training simulator for an Asian air force that rotated on multiple gimbals, enabling 360-degree simulated flight in all axes with a three-g capability.

The GAT-II looks like a short, fat little airplane that pivots atop a steel platform. A large door on the right side allows entry into its single seat cockpit. It was configured as a Cessna 172 and, like the Motus, its flight instrument panel was spot-on accurate but the sub panel was generic.

The visual system is displayed on the same monitor that depicts the flight instrument panel. A bezel over the monitor screen provides some separation between the two.

ETC Aircrew Training Systems Applications Manager Glenn King put me through a profile in the GAT-II similar to my flight in the Motus and I found it had similar handling characteristics, but with somewhat less motion cueing – which was not unexpected because of the Motus six axes of motion versus the three in the GAT-II.

But a motion capability on the GAT-II that is not available on the Motus more than makes up for it, in my book. The continuous 360-degree yaw feature of the GAT-II allows for the introduction of motion cues that induce spatial disorientation.

FAA statistics say 17 percent of general aviation accidents involve spatial disorientation and that 9 out of 10 of these accidents are fatal. King ran a couple of the GAT-IIs spatial disorientation profiles and I was surprised at their effectiveness. I was able to easily recover from them, but I could see how a pilot not equipped to cope could come to grief. Quickly.

After the spatial disorientation profiles, I flew an ILS to a landing and had the same difficulties landing as I did in the Motus. The cues I use just werent there, although Im sure I could get the hang of it.

Pilots training on the Motus and GAT-II will have to get used to some idiosyncrasies, such as non-standard OBS selectors and hybrid cockpits. But these flight training devices have the potential to do for GA what full-blown simulators do for the airlines – provide a platform that can make more effective, economical and safe use of training opportunities.

If your FBO or flight school is still using rickety desktop machines that do little more than scratch out the track youve just flown on an instrument approach, you may want to clue them in that theres a new game in town that may make pilots a little more interested in logging ground trainer time when the weathers down.

The fact that itll make you a safer pilot is some nice icing on the cake.


Also With This Article
Click here to view “Fly It, Yeah, but What About Logging It?”
Click here to view “ETC GAT-II and Fidelity Motus 6.”

-by Bill Kight

Bill Kight owns a Mooney 201 and is a captain and simulator instructor for a large national carrier.

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