With
traditional flight training devices, only two of the pilot's five senses - sight
and sound - are engaged. The Fidelity MOTUS device takes this to a new level with
its proprietary six-degree-of-freedom motion base, providing both the vestibular
sensory input sensed by pilots in actual flight as well as the turbulence functions
necessary to "load" a pilot for a realistic training session. But even
then the pilot doesn't "feel" the aircraft in the flight controls.
Dynamic
Control Loading allows the pilot to incorporate fully many of the different
"feel" aspects of flight training.
The change
in required input to the flight controls depending on airspeed – for instance,
as the airspeed decreases, correspondingly different control input will be required
to cause a desired result.
In many rotorcraft and in some
modern fixed-wing applications, force trim adjustment allows the pilot to place
the flight controls in the desired state…and leave them. The controls maintain
the position desired by the pilot.
Modern autopilot systems,
particularly in helicopter simulation, move the cyclic in response to A/P commands.
Many regulatory standards (FAA & JAA) require a specified
static and dynamic feel of the controls to achieve desired approval levels.
With the advent of "follow trim" in many aircraft, the
dynamic control loader also has to be a subtle control positioner following the
logic and resolution appropriate to the aircraft being simulated.
Fidelity
has developed great expertise in these and other areas relating to dynamic control
loading. With this dynamic control loading capability on top of its six degree-of-freedom
motion base and LCD Mosaic Wall™ external visual display, Fidelity is closing
the gap between inexpensive flight simulation devices and Letter-Level flight
simulators costing $15-25 million more.
Fidelity
Flight Simulation Spring Garden Technology Center 1476 Spring Garden Ave.
Pittsburgh, PA 15212 USA Phone 412.321.3280 Fax 412.321.2229