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Books > Professional & Technical > Transport technology > Aerospace & aviation technology > Aviation skills / piloting
Can modern science tell us what happened to Amelia Earhart? The
International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) has
spent fifteen years searching for the famous lost pilot using
everything from archival research and archaeological survey to
side-scan sonar and the analysis of radio wave propagation. In this
spellbinding book, four of TIGHAR's scholars offer tantalizing
evidence that the First Lady of the Air and her navigator Fred
Noonan landed on an uninhabited tropical island but perished before
they could be rescued. Do they have Amelia's shoe? Parts of her
airplane? Are her bones tucked away in a hospital in Fiji? Come
join their fascinating expedition and examine the evidence for
yourself The new paperback edition brings the search up to the
present, including tantalizing evidence of campfires and charred
bones found on remote Nikumaroro. Visit the Authors' Web page for
more information.
The conflict in the skies above the combat zones of World War II
bred a new legion of heroes. Boys became men in weeks, and many
became commanders and leaders before the age of 25. These young
pilots were flying for their lives on every dangerous sortie and in
every type of aircraft. Over 100 of these young men are included in
this compact reference to the history and record of Allied and
enemy aces of World War II.
"Despite everything I felt very lucky to have flown Corsairs, they
were the best you know even though it took me sometime to realise
this when so many friends died flying them." (Colin Facer, Corsair
pilot, HMS Illustrious) The Vought-Sikorsky Corsair was one of the
most potent fighters of the Second World War. It was also one of
the most flawed. Conceived by Rex Beisel, Vought's Chief Designer
during 1938, the US Navy condemned it as being too dangerous for
carrier operations and refused to certify it safe for use at sea.
With the British Aero Industry unable to build fighters with
sufficient range and potentcy for carrier use the Admirtalty sought
alternatives. With the Lend Lease programme, created by President
Roosevelt, in place they could acquire weapons from American
factories. In practice, this meant standing in line behind the US
Navy, Marines and Army for service, but it still opened up new
opportunities to be exploited. So, with newly built Corsairs being
stockpiled and the promise of an improved version on the way, the
RN saw a opening worthy of development and exploited it. By the end
of the war the Fleet Air Arm had acquired more than 2,000 Corsairs
to equip its squadrons. But the risks identified by the USN were
largely ignored by the Royal Navy and far too many men and aircraft
were lost in accidents as a result. Yet in the hands of experienced
carrier pilots its virtues were only too apparent and, in due
course, they achieved great things. Eventually, the US Navy noted
this "success" and certified the Corsair for use on their carriers
too, but the aircraft never entirely lost its reputation as a
"widow maker." This book describes the Corsair's development and
tells the sad, but inspiring story of the young men who struggled
and suffered to make the Corsair a going concern in the most
vicious unforgiving war one can imagine. To do this the author met
and corresponded with ninety or more veterans from America,
Britain, New Zealand and Canada. Their recollections made this book
possible and through their vivid memories we can experience what it
felt like to be barely of age, a civilian called to arms and a
fighter pilot.
Decision making pervades every aspect of life: people make hundreds
of decisions every day. The vast majority of these are trivial and
without a right or wrong answer. In some respects there is also
nothing extraordinary about pilot decision making. It is only the
setting that is different - the underlying cognitive processes are
just the same. However, it is the context and the consequences of a
poor decision which serve to differentiate aeronautical decision
making. Decisions on the flight deck are often made with incomplete
information and while under time pressure. The implications for
inadequate performance is much more serious than in many other
professions. Poor decisions are implicated in over half of all
aviation accidents. This volume contains key papers published over
the last 25 years providing an overview of the major paradigms by
which aeronautical decision making has been investigated.
Furthermore, decision making does not occur in isolation. It is a
joint function of the flight tasks; knowledge; equipment on the
flight deck and other stressors. In this volume of collected
papers, works from leading authors in the field consider all these
aspects of aeronautical decision making.
Aviation remains one of the most active and challenging domains for
human factors and applied psychology. Since 1981, the biennial
International Symposium on Aviation Psychology (ISAP) has been
convened for the purposes of (a) presenting the latest research on
human performance problems and opportunities within aviation
systems, (b) envisioning design solutions that best utilize human
capabilities for creating safe and efficient aviation systems, and
(c) bringing together scientists, research sponsors, and operators
in an effort to bridge the gap between research and application.
Though rooted in the presentations of the 17th ISAP, held in 2013
in Dayton, Ohio, Advances in Aviation Psychology is not simply a
collection of selected proceeding papers. Based upon the potential
impact on emerging trends, current debates or enduring issues
present in their work, select authors were invited to expand on
their work following the benefit of interactions at the symposium.
The invited authors include the featured keynote and plenary
speakers who are all leading scientists and prominent researchers
that were selected to participate at the symposium. These
contributions are supplemented by additional contributors whose
work best reflects significant developments in aviation psychology.
Consequently the volume includes visions for the next generation of
air management and air traffic control, the integration of unmanned
(i.e. remotely piloted vehicles) into operational air spaces, and
the use of advanced information technologies (e.g. synthetic task
environments) for research and training. This book is the first in
a series of volumes to be published in conjunction with each
subsequent ISAP. The aim of each volume is not only to report the
latest findings in aviation psychology but also to suggest new
directions for advancing the field.
Covered in this unique volume are: Inflight Simulation
Aircraft;VISTA/NF-16D; Variable Stability B-26; NC-131H Total
In-Flight Simulator; Gulfstream Shuttle Training Aircraft; ASTRA
Hawk; University of Tennessee Navions; P-2 Variable Stability
Aircraft; S-76 Shadow; NT-33A; Tu-154M; VFW-617 ATTAS; Calspan
Learjets; Jetstar GPAS. Testbed Aircraft; A-5A Vigilante SST; A6-A
CCW; B-47 Fly-by-Wire; A-7 DIGITAC; B-52 CCV/LAMS; Carrier Testbeds
XC-8AACLS; Convair-990 LSRA; C-130 RAMTIP; Falcon ATLAS; F-4
Fly-by-Wire; F-5D Skylancer Testbed; F-8 Supercritical Wing; F-8
Digital Fly-by-Wire; F-15 AECS; F-15 ASAT; F-15 IFFC/ABICS/ICAAS;
F-15 HIDEC; F-15 STOL/MTD. ACTIVE; F-15 Streak Eagle; F-16 AFTI;
F-16 CCV, FLOTRAK; F/A-18 EPAD; F/A-18 HARV; F/A-18 SRA; JF-100
Variable Stability Testbed; F-102 Low L/D; F-104 Low L/D; F-104
Aerospace Trainer; F-100/106 Turbulance Testing; F-111 AFTI/TACT
Testbed; Air Force Transport Testbeds; Ice Testing Aircraft; KC-135
Winglet; NASA/Langley Commercial Testbeds; L-100 High Technology
Testbed; PA-30 Twin Commanche Testbed; Sabreliner Supercritical
Wing; SR-71 Testbed; Boeing 737 TCV; Boeing 720 CID; X-21 LFC;
YF-23 Loads; Miscellaneous Testbeds. Prototype Aircraft; YA-7F(A-7
Plus); F-16XL; F-16/79/101; P-51 Mustang-Based Enforcer; Gunships;
F-15E Strike Eagle Demonstrator; F-18; A-37.
A fully illustrated study of the Nakajima Ki49 ‘Helen’, the
twin-engined bomber of the Pacific War, from Japanese aviation expert
George Eleftheriou.
The Nakajima Ki-49 Donryu (‘Dragon Eater’), codenamed ‘Helen’ by the
Allies, was a twin-engined Japanese bomber designed to undertake
daylight attacks without the protection of escort fighters.
Consequently, while it was officially known as the Army Type 100 Heavy
Bomber, its formidable defensive armament and armour were so heavy that
they restricted the Ki-49 to payloads comparable to those of smaller
medium bombers.
While only five heavy bomber sentai (regiments) were equipped with the
‘Helen’, the over 800 Ki-49s built between 1941 and 1944 saw extensive
action in Burma, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, northern India and
north Australia.
In an act of desperation, a small number of ‘Helens’ were even
employed, unsuccessfully, as kamikaze aircraft against US Navy warships
operating off the Philippines and Okinawa.
In this fascinating book, George Eleftheriou provides a comprehensive
account of the units that saw action flying the ‘Helen’, based on
original Japanese sources. Also featuring high-quality photographs
never published before, specially commissioned colour profile artwork,
official unit histories and veteran accounts, this title is a must-have
for Japanese aircraft enthusiasts.
Flight Lieutenant David Moore Crook DFC's original _Spitfire Pilot_
ranks among the finest first-hand accounts published during the
Second World War, particularly for a Battle of Britain airman. It
rightly remains a sought-after classic. A Spitfire pilot during the
epic aerial battles of the summer of 1940, 'DMC' became a decorated
ace. However, he did not survive the war: his Spitfire inexplicably
crashed into the sea off the Scottish coast on 18 December 1944\. A
married man and father, he remains missing. First published under
wartime conditions in 1942, _Spitfire Pilot_ was not heavily
censored - unlike Squadron Leader Brian Lane DFC's similar
first-hand account _Spitfire! The Experiences of a Fighter Pilot_,
published the same year. DMC's book was based on his entries in two
Stationary Office lined notebooks, hastily scribbled between
sorties, and using his pilot's flying log book for reference. In
1990, the renowned Battle of Britain historian Dilip Sarkar traced
DMC's widow, Dorothy, who enthusiastically supported the idea of
re-publishing _Spitfire Pilot_. She duly uncovered bound copies of
DMC's original manuscript, which she passed to Dilip. _The Real
Spitfire Pilot_ is, therefore, DMC's original, completely
uncensored and unedited words, shared here for the first time. It
provides a totally authentic window on the past, providing a unique
glimpse at the lives - and deaths - of real Spitfire pilots in our
Finest Hour. With an introduction and conclusion by Dilip Sarkar,
and illustrated with previously unseen photographs, this is
destined to become another classic.
Taking an integrated, systems approach to dealing exclusively with
the human performance issues encountered on the flight deck of the
modern airliner, this book describes the inter-relationships
between the various application areas of human factors, recognising
that the human contribution to the operation of an airliner does
not fall into neat pigeonholes. The relationship between areas such
as pilot selection, training, flight deck design and safety
management is continually emphasised within the book. It also
affirms the upside of human factors in aviation - the positive
contribution that it can make to the industry - and avoids placing
undue emphasis on when the human component fails. The book is
divided into four main parts. Part one describes the underpinning
science base, with chapters on human information processing,
workload, situation awareness, decision making, error and
individual differences. Part two of the book looks at the human in
the system, containing chapters on pilot selection, simulation and
training, stress, fatigue and alcohol, and environmental stressors.
Part three takes a closer look at the machine (the aircraft),
beginning with an examination of flight deck display design,
followed by chapters on aircraft control, flight deck automation,
and HCI on the flight deck. Part four completes the volume with a
consideration of safety management issues, both on the flight deck
and across the airline; the final chapter in this section looks at
human factors for incident and accident investigation. The book is
written for professionals within the aviation industry, both on the
flight deck and elsewhere, for post-graduate students and for
researchers working in the area.
Taking an integrated, systems approach to dealing exclusively with
the human performance issues encountered on the flight deck of the
modern airliner, this book describes the inter-relationships
between the various application areas of human factors, recognising
that the human contribution to the operation of an airliner does
not fall into neat pigeonholes. The relationship between areas such
as pilot selection, training, flight deck design and safety
management is continually emphasised within the book. It also
affirms the upside of human factors in aviation - the positive
contribution that it can make to the industry - and avoids placing
undue emphasis on when the human component fails. The book is
divided into four main parts. Part one describes the underpinning
science base, with chapters on human information processing,
workload, situation awareness, decision making, error and
individual differences. Part two of the book looks at the human in
the system, containing chapters on pilot selection, simulation and
training, stress, fatigue and alcohol, and environmental stressors.
Part three takes a closer look at the machine (the aircraft),
beginning with an examination of flight deck display design,
followed by chapters on aircraft control, flight deck automation,
and HCI on the flight deck. Part four completes the volume with a
consideration of safety management issues, both on the flight deck
and across the airline; the final chapter in this section looks at
human factors for incident and accident investigation. The book is
written for professionals within the aviation industry, both on the
flight deck and elsewhere, for post-graduate students and for
researchers working in the area.
A facsimile reprint of the pilots handbook for the F4U-5, -5N,
-5NL, and -5P.
Facsimile reprint of the orignial flight handbook for the F-86D and
TF-86D.
Crew Resource Management (CRM) training was first introduced in the
late 1970s as a means to combating an increased number of accidents
in which poor teamwork in the cockpit was a significant
contributing factor. Since then, CRM training has expanded beyond
the cockpit, for example, to cabin crews, maintenance crews, health
care teams, nuclear power teams, and offshore oil teams. Not only
has CRM expanded across communities, it has also drawn from a host
of theories from multiple disciplines and evolved through a number
of generations. Furthermore, a host of methodologies and tools have
been developed that have allowed the community to better study and
measure its effect on team performance and ultimately safety.
Lacking, however, is a forum in which researchers and practitioners
alike can turn to in order to understand where CRM has come from
and where it is going. This volume, part of the 'Critical Essays on
Human Factors in Aviation' series, proposes to do just that by
providing a selection of readings which depicts the past, present,
and future of CRM research and training.
Most aviation accidents are attributed to human error, pilot error
especially. Human error also greatly effects productivity and
profitability. In his overview of this collection of papers, the
editor points out that these facts are often misinterpreted as
evidence of deficiency on the part of operators involved in
accidents. Human factors research reveals a more accurate and
useful perspective: The errors made by skilled human operators -
such as pilots, controllers, and mechanics - are not root causes
but symptoms of the way industry operates. The papers selected for
this volume have strongly influenced modern thinking about why
skilled experts make errors and how to make aviation error
resilient.
In the well-established aviation system, the importance of sound
human factors practice, based on good aviation psychology research,
is obvious from those incidents and accidents resulting from its
neglect. This carefully structured book presents an up-to-date
review of the main areas in the field of Aviation Psychology. It
contains current thinking mainly from Europe, but with input from
Australia and North America, from specialists involved in research,
training and operational practice. Spanning six parts, the book
covers: Human Engineering, Occupational Demands, Selection of
Aviation Personnel, Human Factors Training, Clinical Psychology,
Accident Investigation and Prevention. Looking at the six parts -
in human engineering, the reader learns about human-centered
automation as well as human factors issues in aircraft
certification. Results derived by job analysis methods are
presented in the next part and serve as basic information in the
design of selection and training programs. In selection,
computerized testing or behaviour-oriented assessments are
challenging approaches for personnel recruitment. Cost-benefit
analyses in selection reveal convincing results, enabling
organizations to save huge amounts of inappropriate training
investment by the application of proper selection tests. The
NOTECHS method is described which helps to assess CRM capabilities
in training and can also be used to measure training effects in
systematic validation studies. Although operational personnel in
aviation are usually able to cope with stress more efficiently than
other occupational groups, individual problems might develop as
reactions to traumatic influences. Either a psychological
evaluation or a proper treatment or both is then required as
described in the 'Clinical Psychology' part of the book. The
readership includes: aviation psychologists and flight surgeons,
training, selection and recruitment specialists, instructor pilots,
CRM facilitators, personnel managers, accident investigators,
safety pilots, air traffic controllers, aircraft engineers and
those dealing with human-machine interfaces.
It has seldom been more critical for the aviation industry to
evaluate the future employee talent pool. Projected skills
shortages, new security concerns, and the cost of training have
generated a pressing need for aviation training professionals to
find and develop new and diverse talent - capable of safe, informed
and accurate communication. This intelligent and topical new book
provides succinct and authoritative research-based information to
assist decision-makers plan the changes required to training
facilities, materials and methods, and in the reinforcement and
assessment of the training environment itself. It will spark
considerable interest among airline management personnel,
collegiate flight training programs, military training contractors,
and governmental agencies and serve as a text for collegiate
aviation programs and as a valuable knowledge base reference for
practitioners. Including comprehensive data on future world
workforce composition and demographic projections for the next
decade, it examines the key issues of increasing cultural diversity
and the measures required in the training of women and minorities.
Topics covered include: culture and inter-group relationships;
values and orientation in mixed crews; non-native English speakers;
gender, leadership, and training; learning styles and preferences;
mentoring and role models; learning style preferences and training
outcomes; and nonverbal communication.
The book constitutes a valuable guide to the implementation of the
CNS/ATM system towards ensuring safe, efficient and orderly
evolution of international air transport. It uses a pragmatic
approach in addressing the major legal, institutional, technical,
political and economic aspects underlying the Global Navigation
Satellite System, which is expected to play a fundamental role in
aviation safety and air navigation world-wide. The book also
examines, through well-reasoned analysis and research, the various
controversial and relevant issues which will dominate the system in
the years to come. The author demonstrates a profound grasp of the
subject-matter through a sustained absorption of technical,
institutional and legal principles applying to this complex
subject. This is brought to bear in the coherent structure and
logical organisation of the chapters which makes the book an
invaluable tool for the aviation community, scholars and national
and international regulatory authorities. It will also be immensely
useful for practitioners who work towards further development and
implementation of the CNS/ATM system. There has been no comparable
work previously published.
Advances in simulation technology have enabled an interesting
amount of training and instruction to be conducted on training
simulators instead of on real systems. However, experiences with
the procurement and use of training simulators has not always been
as successful, often owing to a lack of knowledge of didactics and
of training programme development, and also to inadequate simulator
specifications. The Handbook of Simulator-based Training represents
the first comprehensive overview of the European state of the art
in simulator-based training. It also comprises a well-founded and
systematic approach to simulator-based training and the
specification of simulator requirements. The multi-disciplinary
research project described in this book combines the expertise of
specialists in human factors, information systems, system design
and engineering from 23 research and industrial organizations from
five countries - France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, the UK.
The authors have synthesized and documented the project results to
ensure that this handbook provides not only many valuable
guidelines, but more importantly a common frame of reference. It
will be a key resource for the many specialists who are concerned
with simulator-based training: researchers, engineers, and users;
military training institutes and training system development
departments; military staff responsible for the procurement of
training devices and simulators; the simulator industry; the
training research community; and the human factors and ergonomics
community.
Drawing on rare, historical photography and specially commissioned
artwork, Matthew Willis explores the heroic feats of the few Royal
Navy's obsolescent biplanes that stood between the state-of-the-art
Axis warships and their objectives. Focusing on the technical
specifications of both opponents, using original records, and
detailed armament and cockpit views, this book explores the key
attributes and drawbacks of the disadvantaged Royal Navy
torpedo-bombers against the mighty Regia Marina and Kriegsmarine
destroyers and raiders, covering a wide range of sea battles, from
the more famous attacks such as the strike on the Bismarck, the
tragic events of the Channel Dash or the clash with the Italian
battle fleet at Taranto, to less covered sea battles such as the
Battle of Matapan. Despite their powerful weaponry and heavy armour
protection, the Axis warships proved vulnerable to a skillfully and
audaciously flown torpedo-bomber, thanks to innovative commanders
exploiting every possible advantage. Including rare personal
recollections from the airmen who flew the torpedo-bombers and
historical accounts from the Axis warship crews, this book
describes each and every facet of this dramatic duel.
Each volume in this new series is a collection of seminal articles
on a theme of central importance in the study of transport history,
selected from the leading journal in the field. Each contains
between ten and a dozen articles selected by a distinguished
scholar, as well as an authoritative new introduction by the volume
editor. Individually they will form an essential foundation to the
study of the history of a mode of transport; together they will
make an incomparable library of the best modern research in the
field.
Using first-hand accounts and brand-new artwork, this book brings
to life the realities of flying the Bf 109 in combat during the
very first battles of World War II. The Bf 109 was one of the
principal fighter aircraft types in the Luftwaffe's inventory
during the opening months of World War II and it was central to
many of Germany's early victories, before coming up against the
unbeatable RAF during the Battle of Britain. This book presents
first-hand experiences of the pilots who flew the Bf 109E, the
aircraft which first featured a Daimler-Benz DB 601 powerplant, and
which was in the front line in the skies over Poland, the Low
Countries and France, and the older Bf 109D, still in use in the
Polish campaign. The early variants of the Messerschmitt fighter,
the Bf 109E-1, Bf 109E-2 and Bf 109E-3, swept all before them
during the opening wartime campaigns, their successes only fading
at the Battle of France, when the Bf 109's seasoned pilots
encountered modern and well-flown RAF and Armee de l'Air fighters.
In a rigorous and engaging new analysis, Luftwaffe aviation expert
Malcolm V. Lowe examines and assesses the Bf 109 as a fighting
machine from the perspective of the Luftwaffe at the forefront of
the German blitzkrieg. Contemporary photographs and specially
commissioned artwork, including a dramatic battlescene, armament
views, technical diagrams and ribbon diagrams illustrating
step-by-step each battle tactic of the main dogfights explored in
the book, bring the experiences of the Bf 109 pilots vividly to
life.
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