Honeywell Aerospace and Boeing have demonstrated
how an airplane can use Honeywell’s next-generation, precision
navigation and landing technology to perform safe and successful airport runway approaches and landings in weather conditions with
a ceiling allowing no decision height and a minimum runway visual
range of as low as 150 feet or Category III.
Airports that experience frequent visibility
issues such as low cloud cover or fog will be able to implement
future Honeywell SmartPath versions that enable these CAT III landings to reduce delays and diversions due to bad
weather.
“Today’s airspace is crowded and on track to be
even more crowded in the next 10 years. Airlines and airports need
a more efficient and modern system to handle the influx of planes
during approach and landing, specifically when the weather gets
bad and pilots are operating in CAT III conditions,” said Bob
Smith, chief technology officer, Honeywell Aerospace. “Honeywell
has invented and tested a precision landing system that will not
only alleviate crowded approaches and landings at airports, but
will also give pilots the ability to land when they can’t see the
runway, keeping airports and flights running efficiently.”
Using Honeywell’s SmartPath Ground-Based
Augmentation System (GBAS), Boeing used its ecoDemonstrator 787, a
flight test airplane that in 2014 served to assess more than 25
technologies to reduce aviation’s environmental footprint, to
complete 12 CAT III approaches and landings at Boeing’s test
facility in Moses Lake, Washington.
The aircraft also used
Honeywell’s Integrated Navigation Receiver (INR), a navigation
receiver that integrates the instrument landing signal, VHF
omnidirectional range marker beacon and GBAS landing system
navigation signals into a compact and more efficient unit.
“Using the capability of today’s aircraft and
the precision of global-based navigation, airlines can now land in
very low-visibility weather conditions,” said Jeanne Yu, director
of Environmental Performance at Boeing Commercial Airplanes. “This
improves operational efficiency, saves fuel and reduces carbon
dioxide emissions.”
To successfully complete the CAT III approaches,
which involve performing landings automatically in difficult
conditions including fog, clouds, rain or other weather phenomena,
Honeywell upgraded the software of the 787 INR and SLS-4000
SmartPath GBAS to support the additional CAT III monitoring and
availability requirements.
Honeywell,
Boeing
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