Originally Posted by Shannow
Problem with the big red button...and automation...
As I've explained in the autonomous vehicle threads, and with respect to automation in control systems in (lets say complex things like power stations) is that removing the driver from...driving...means that when the whoop hits the fan and after a number of alarms, and unexpected control system reaction to a few stabs at the controls, the driver has to all of a sudden review the entire system and see what world they are currently driving in in terms of positioning and control response...to work out a rational corrective action, or what could be in fact a serious mechanical failure that thye have to diagnose.
It's not as easy as Elon Musk saying .... driver, it's your turn now.
In this case, a big red automation-off button would switch to a reversion manual control mode. For example, the JAS 39 Gripen has one, where pilot stick operates the stabilators proportionately (and canards feather). In the case of a 737 or A330, one button to turn off auto-trim and auto-pilot and activate proportional ('Direct' Law), which is functionally simple enough to look like a B-17 direct cable set-up. One button instead of having to remember which circuit breakers and other switches to flip while the may-day is happening and you're plunging from the sky trying to flip through emergency checklists..... (i.e., Trump: "I don't want Albert Einstein to be my pilot.")
If you watch the docu-drama https://www.smithsonianchannel.com/shows/air-disasters/free-fall/802/3467449 for example, a big red button to kill all automation aids would have been nice to have during the ruckus. In the reenactment, the pilot turns the autopilot off, yet Airbus flight automation is still there, not in 'Direct Law' there. (AoA from a bad ADIRU is still corrupting the system.)
....Sort it out on the ground.....
You'd be without stall protection and a little wobbly without pitch rate damping (not bad), nothing any pilot can't handle in rare emergencies. They are easily hand flown and landed.
Essentially turns the pilot flying into Charles Lindbergh trying to get to Paris. His computers failed too.
Jimmy Stewart could do it...
Problem with the big red button...and automation...
As I've explained in the autonomous vehicle threads, and with respect to automation in control systems in (lets say complex things like power stations) is that removing the driver from...driving...means that when the whoop hits the fan and after a number of alarms, and unexpected control system reaction to a few stabs at the controls, the driver has to all of a sudden review the entire system and see what world they are currently driving in in terms of positioning and control response...to work out a rational corrective action, or what could be in fact a serious mechanical failure that thye have to diagnose.
It's not as easy as Elon Musk saying .... driver, it's your turn now.
In this case, a big red automation-off button would switch to a reversion manual control mode. For example, the JAS 39 Gripen has one, where pilot stick operates the stabilators proportionately (and canards feather). In the case of a 737 or A330, one button to turn off auto-trim and auto-pilot and activate proportional ('Direct' Law), which is functionally simple enough to look like a B-17 direct cable set-up. One button instead of having to remember which circuit breakers and other switches to flip while the may-day is happening and you're plunging from the sky trying to flip through emergency checklists..... (i.e., Trump: "I don't want Albert Einstein to be my pilot.")
If you watch the docu-drama https://www.smithsonianchannel.com/shows/air-disasters/free-fall/802/3467449 for example, a big red button to kill all automation aids would have been nice to have during the ruckus. In the reenactment, the pilot turns the autopilot off, yet Airbus flight automation is still there, not in 'Direct Law' there. (AoA from a bad ADIRU is still corrupting the system.)
....Sort it out on the ground.....
You'd be without stall protection and a little wobbly without pitch rate damping (not bad), nothing any pilot can't handle in rare emergencies. They are easily hand flown and landed.
Essentially turns the pilot flying into Charles Lindbergh trying to get to Paris. His computers failed too.

![[Linked Image] [Linked Image]](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/ea/cb/ba/eacbba2cc9eebc7f29374f68413b31c6.jpg)
Jimmy Stewart could do it...
Last edited: