Title :
The adverse impact of flight management systems on long range international airline operations
Author_Institution :
United Airlines, Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract :
United Airlines began using Flight Management Systems (FMS) in 1982. The FMS-equipped aircraft operated initially in the domestic environment. Eventually, FMS-equipped aircraft operated on very long segments, such as Los Angeles to Hong Kong, which often required operation of the aircraft at multiple limits such as maximum takeoff weight, maximum fuel capacity, and/or specified fuel reserves. These limits are not fully considered by the current generation FMS in attempting to optimize the speed schedule. Software enhancements to this speed schedule logic could bring economic benefits to airlines flying these operationally challenging flights
Keywords :
aerospace computing; air traffic control; aircraft control; economics; management information systems; velocity control; United Airlines; economics; flight management; flight plan; fuel reserves; long range international airline; maximum fuel capacity; maximum takeoff weight; software enhancements; speed schedule logic; Air traffic control; Aircraft propulsion; Costs; Environmental economics; Flexible manufacturing systems; Logic; Military aircraft; Payloads; Temperature distribution; Velocity control;
Conference_Titel :
Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 1996., 15th AIAA/IEEE
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3385-3
DOI :
10.1109/DASC.1996.559182