| > What is your definition of manual intervention? I was thinking of autopilot disengaging, but that's not really important here. I'll go along with what you just said. > Pilots get updated instructions from the tower - the GPS path of the flight within 10 m is not programmed from the beginning not in the beginning... so it is later? > due to weather issues, turbulence, traffic at the terminal ends, etc. Uhm, "traffic at terminal ends" suggests the real problem is that the correct path is not known in the beginning, or that autopilot might not be able to avoid collision on its own... which is quite a bit different from the plane being unable to locate itself accurately and follow the correct path even if it were known a priori. Are we even discussing the original issue at this point? > Autopilot landings require a Cat III approach. I have no idea what that means. I'm not sure what gave you the impression that I know what that means either. > The autopilot when landing is not using GPS for final approach. > The person you're trading comments with has said twice that GPS is not responsible for the autolanding portion of the flight. > You twice try to refute it. And then in your last paragraph you do exactly what he says the software engineers here do and you take offense to! I think you didn't read my last comment carefully because, as I already said, I understood this. My problem is whether GPS is accurate/reliable enough to lead the plane to the place where the next system can take over, which to me implies GPS is already certified to be accurate and reliable enough to get the plane near the correct runway. Read it again. There shouldn't be a single sentence there where I "refute" the microwave transmissions or claim GPS is actually used on the final approach. > If you have a system that is designed to cut out the human component, it has to be all or nothing. Wha..? Autopilot isn't perfect either, and can disengage in various situations that it can't handle, but they approve it and pilots manage to use it just fine. When it's GPS's turn, suddenly it has to be 100% perfect? And when did I ever suggest you have to cut out the human component? For goodness's sake all I'm asking for is a little display with a map that shows where the plane thinks it's going. That's "cutting out the human component" to you? |
Any commercial aircraft with a glass cockpit, which at this point is ~all of them, already has one of these.