FlightCom – July 2019

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News


owenheckRath

OLD FAITHFUL


OUT TO


PASTURE


D

ATA gathered using the aircraft helped engineers
create Honeywell’s Enhanced Ground Proximity
Warning System (EGPWS), Traffic Alert and
Collision Avoidance System, and IntuVue RDR-4000
Weather Radar System. The company says testing of
the IntuVue RDR-4000 included “flying the Convair under and
directly into thunderstorms over the Everglades and off the coast
of Florida” while EGPWS testing involved flying “directly toward
mountainous terrain to test that the warning signals in the EGPWS
were activating when the aircraft was too close to dangerous terrain
features.”
“You have to have confidence in your aircraft to be around
mountains, thunderstorms and volcanos, because you’re flying so
close to terrain, you’ll experience a lot of turbulence. Thankfully,
the Convair is a heavy-duty aircraft and has very reliable engines,”
said Honeywell Aerospace chief test pilot Randy Moore. “I always
thought of it like a 1952 Chevy pickup. That’s what the Convair was
like.” Moore has flown the company’s 580 since 2004.
Honeywell’s Convair 580 has a long and well-documented
history. Certified on January 15, 1952, it will finally be retired to a
planned aviation museum in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.

T

HE software update is designed to address faults
with the aircraft’s Manoeuvring Characteristics
Augmentation System (MCAS) that are widely
considered to have significantly contributed to the fatal
accidents of Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines
Flight 302. Boeing says it has also developed new training and
education materials that are now being reviewed by the FAA, global
regulators and airlines “to support return-to-service and longer-
term operations.”
According to Boeing, it is now addressing FAA requests for
additional information, which “include detail on how pilots interact
with the airplane controls and displays in different flight scenarios.”
From there, Boeing and the FAA will schedule the certification
test flight and Boeing will submit final certification documentation
for the new software. “We’re committed to providing the FAA and
global regulators all the information they need, and are making
clear and steady progress to getting it right,” said Boeing CEO
Dennis Muilenburg.
The Boeing 737 MAX has been grounded since March.

Honeywell Aerospace has finally


retired its Convair 580 test aircraft


after 67 years of service, 103,000


landings and 67,000 total flight


hours, according to a recent company


announcement.


In what is hoped will be the penultimate
interchange in this ongoing saga, Boeing
recently announced that it has completed
development of updated software for the 737
MAX, as well as concluding the associated
simulator testing and completing the
company’s engineering test flight.


Old Faithful Convair 580 retires.


MAX SAGA


NEARING AN END?


The MAX grounding
saga appears to be
reaching a conclusion.
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