Naval officers aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln demonstrated for the
first time the ability to remotely take control of an aircraft and land it on
an aircraft carrier’s deck.
Using the ATARI system, or aircraft terminal
approach remote inceptor, landing signal officers demonstrated remote piloting
of the F/A-18E Super Hornet while conducting carrier qualifications and flight
testing aboard the Abraham Lincoln in March. The officers also demonstrated
touch-and-go manoeuvres with the system.
The ATARI technology was developed at NAS Patuxent
River, Maryland by Naval Air Systems Command. It was initially tested on a
Learjet in 2016, performing shore-based low approaches. An undisclosed number
of F/A-18s were fitted with the technology in 2017. The system was deemed ready
for trials at sea by the "Salty Dogs" of Air test and Evaluation
Squadron 23.
"There was some nervousness because the sea
state was so bad," said Lt John Marino, a carrier suitability pilot from
the "Salty Dogs" and the first pilot to land on a flight deck using
ATARI. "Back on the airfield, testing was benign."
The system demonstrated a potential method for
recovering an unmanned aerial vehicle by using the landing signal officer’s
ability to observe and fix glideslope and lineup errors, said the US Navy. It
is not intended to be a primary method for recovering manned aircraft, but
provides a relatively inexpensive backup system.
During testing, the ATARI system operators
controlled an F/A-18 aircraft using a joystick, while a safety pilot sat in the
cockpit as backup. The technology is capable of taking over an aircraft from up
to five miles away.
Testing was conducted over the course of two days in
conjunction with carrier qualifications. ATARI is not scheduled for fleet-wide
implementation as the system’s engineers plan to analyze the data collected
aboard Abraham Lincoln and make adjustments for further at-sea testing.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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