FlightSafety
International has secured interim Level C validation from the US Federal
Aviation Administration for the first Pilatus PC-24 full-flight simulator.
The approval comes less than a week after the superlight business jet received
European and US type certification after a 30-month flight test campaign
involving three aircraft and over 2,200 flying hours.
European
approval for the FS1000 simulator – which is based at FlightSafety's Dallas,
Texas facility – is expected early next year, while training on the device
should start in January. Pilots from fractional ownership company and PC-24
launch customer PlaneSense will take up the first positions.
The Portsmouth,
New Hampshire-based operator has an order for six of the Williams International
FJ44-4A-powered jets, and is gearing up to take delivery of the first example
in January.
FlightSafety
says its simulation engineers and courseware developers have worked closely
with Pilatus to develop the PC-24simulator
and training programmes. The device is equipped with the "latest advances
in technology" including the VITAL 1100 visual system, electric motion and
control loading, and a new instructor operating station.
The pilot and
maintenance technician training programmes will also use FlightSafety's
integrated training system called Matrix and its graphical flightdeck
simulators for what it calls "instructor-led and self-paced
learning".
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you )
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