Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Jetmakers mull single-pilot concept

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THE number of flight crew fell to two when the Boeing 757 changed the way the cockpit was designed in the 1980s. Now, jetmakers are studying what it would take to go down to a single pilot, starting with cargo flights.

The motivation is simple: saving airlines a fortune in pilot salaries and training costs if the change can be rolled out to passenger jets after it is demonstrat­ed safely in the freight business.

But with the disappeara­nce of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 and a deliberate crash by a Germanwing­s pilot in the last few years, earning public trust and ensuring safety is key. The issues loom large as single-pilot flying concepts are fleshed out at the Singapore Airshow this week.

“We are studying that, and where you will first see that is probably in cargo transport, so the passenger question is off the table,” Boeing research and rechnology vice-president Charles Toups said of onepilot operations.

It would take a “couple of decades” to persuade passengers to take a single- pilot jet, he said, adding that gaining public support for the concept would be a stepby-step process.

Singapore Technologi­es Engineerin­g’s ST Aerospace demonstrat­ed to delegates how a cockpit could be modified for one pilot when the firm converts passenger jets to freighters.

“The interest is global,” said ST Aerospace’s chief operating officer, Jeffrey Lam. “I think some (cargo operators) are watching each other; quite certainly if one jumps on board, you would expect the others to not want to fall behind because there’s a lot of cost savings here.”

Kevin Shum, directorge­neral of Singapore’s

Civil Aviation Authority, said flight technology was advanced enough to create a one-pilot cockpit in as little as five years.

“But it is a question of the human factors,” he said, citing incapacita­tion, distractio­n and fatigue as the biggest problems that would give regulators pause for thought.

“That I think will probably take a bit more time to work through.” – Reuters/African News Agency (ANA)

 ?? PICTURE: SUPPLIED ?? Jetmakers are studying what it would take to go down to a single pilot, starting with cargo flights.
PICTURE: SUPPLIED Jetmakers are studying what it would take to go down to a single pilot, starting with cargo flights.

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