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by lcuff
586 days ago
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In this incident, as with Air France flight 447, pilot and co-pilot were holding the controls in opposite directions, and the software averages the input. In this case the warning that the controls were mismatched was not of sufficiently high priority to be issued (other warnings were taking precedence: You're about to crash). This user interface just continues to appall me. With mechanically joined controls, it is impossible to have this happen. I think if I were designing a modern aircraft, I might retain physical linkage for just the reason. |
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It sounds like it makes sense at first glance, but if you think about it a little bit more it actually doesn't make any sense.
The average of two inputs is basically garbage, it doesn't do what either of the pilots want to do and it breaks feedback for both of the pilots.
After watching tons of Mentour Pilot videos (who, by the way, covered [0] this incident) I am convinced that this feature shouldn't exist at all.
And no, I don't think that I'm smarter than people who originally designed this system. I just think that this particular feature was not designed at all. It seems like an afterthought. Like, "hey, there is this corner case that we haven't thought about, what should we do if both pilots input something on the controls? - well, let's just average it, kinda makes sense, right?"
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tIVu0Dpc2o