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The Dangers of Automation in Airliners - Accidents Waiting to Happen (Hardcover)
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The Dangers of Automation in Airliners - Accidents Waiting to Happen (Hardcover)
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Automation in aviation can be a lifesaver, expertly guiding a plane
and its passengers through stormy weather to a safe landing. Or it
can be a murderer, crashing an aircraft and killing all on board in
the mistaken belief that it is doing the right thing. Lawrence
Sperry invented the autopilot just ten years after the Wright
brothers' first flight in 1903. But progress was slow for the next
three decades. Then came the end of the Second World War and the
jet age. That's when the real trouble began. Aviation automation
has been pushed to its limits, with pilots increasingly relying on
it. Autopilot, auto-throttle, auto-land, flight management systems,
air data systems, inertial guidance systems. All these systems are
only as good as their inputs which, incredibly, can go rogue. Even
the automation itself is subject to unpredictable failure. Can
automation account for every possible eventuality? And what of the
pilots? They began flight training with their hands on the throttle
and yoke, and feet on the rudder pedals. Then they reached the
pinnacle of their careers - airline pilot - and suddenly they were
going hours without touching the controls other than for a few
minutes on takeoff and landing. Are their skills eroding? Is their
training sufficient to meet the demands of today's planes?
_Accidents Waiting to Happen_ delves deeply into these questions.
You'll be in the cockpits of the two doomed Boeing 737 MAXs, the
Airbus A330 lost over the South Atlantic, and the Bombardier Q400
that stalled over Buffalo. You'll discover exactly why a Boeing 777
smacked into a seawall, missing the runway on a beautiful summer
morning. And you'll watch pilots battling - sometimes winning and
sometimes not - against automation run amok. This book also
investigates the human factors at work. You'll learn why pilots
might overlook warnings or ignore cockpit alarms. You'll observe
automation failing to alert aircrews of what they crucially need to
know while fighting to save their planes and their passengers. The
future of safe air travel depends on automation. This book tells
its story.
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