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Cockpit

A cockpit or flight deck[1] is the area, on the front part of an aircraft or spacecraft, from which a pilot controls the aircraft.

Cockpit of an Airbus A319 during landing
Cockpit of an IndiGo A320
Cockpit of an Antonov An-124
Cockpit of an A380. Most Airbus cockpits are glass cockpits featuring fly-by-wire technology.
Robin DR400
1936 de Havilland Hornet Moth. Note the bifurcated split stick control column.
View of a cockpit seen from outside of a British Airways Boeing 747-400

The cockpit of an aircraft contains flight instruments on an instrument panel, and the controls that enable the pilot to fly the aircraft. In most airliners, a door separates the cockpit from the aircraft cabin. After the September 11, 2001 attacks, all major airlines fortified their cockpits against access by hijackers.[2][3]

Etymology edit

The word cockpit seems to have been used as a nautical term in the 17th century, without reference to cock fighting. It referred to an area in the rear of a ship where the cockswain's station was located, the cockswain being the pilot of a smaller "boat" that could be dispatched from the ship to board another ship or to bring people ashore. The word "cockswain" in turn derives from the old English terms for "boat-servant" (coque is the French word for "shell"; and swain was old English for boy or servant).[4] The midshipmen and master's mates were later berthed in the cockpit, and it served as the action station for the ship's surgeon and his mates during battle. Thus by the 18th century, "cockpit" had come to designate an area in the rear lower deck of a warship where the wounded were taken. The same term later came to designate the place from which a sailing vessel is steered, because it is also located in the rear, and is often in a well or "pit".[5][6][7]

However, a convergent etymology does involve reference to cock fighting. According to the Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology, the buildings in London where the king's cabinet worked (the Treasury and the Privy Council) were called the "Cockpit" because they were built on the site of a theater called The Cockpit (torn down in 1635), which itself was built in the place where a "cockpit" for cock-fighting had once stood prior to the 1580s. Thus the word Cockpit came to mean a control center.[8]

The original meaning of "cockpit", first attested in the 1580s, is "a pit for fighting cocks", referring to the place where cockfights were held. This meaning no doubt influenced both lines of evolution of the term, since a cockpit in this sense was a tight enclosure where a great deal of stress or tension would occur.[6]

From about 1935,[9][citation needed] cockpit came to be used informally to refer to the driver's cabin, especially in high performance cars,[10] and this is official terminology used to describe the compartment[11] that the driver occupies in a Formula One[12] car.

In an airliner, the cockpit is usually referred to as the flight deck, the term deriving from its use by the RAF for the separate, upper platform in large flying boats where the pilot and co-pilot sat.[13][clarification needed][14][clarification needed] In the USA and many other countries, however, the term cockpit is also used for airliners.[3]

The seat of a powerboat racing craft is also referred to as the cockpit.[15]

Ergonomics edit

The first airplane with an enclosed cabin appeared in 1912 on the Avro Type F; however, during the early 1920s there were many passenger aircraft in which the crew remained open to the air while the passengers sat in a cabin. Military biplanes and the first single-engined fighters and attack aircraft also had open cockpits, some as late as the Second World War when enclosed cockpits became the norm.

The largest impediment to having closed cabins was the material used to make the windows. Prior to Perspex becoming available in 1933, windows were either safety glass, which was heavy, or cellulose nitrate (i.e.: guncotton), which yellowed quickly and was extremely flammable. In the mid-1920s many aircraft manufacturers began using enclosed cockpits for the first time. Early airplanes with closed cockpits include the 1924 Fokker F.VII, the 1926 German Junkers W 34 transport, the 1926 Ford Trimotor, the 1927 Lockheed Vega, the Spirit of St. Louis and the passenger aircraft manufactured by the Douglas and Boeing companies during the mid-1930s. Open-cockpit airplanes were almost extinct by the mid-1950s, with the exception of training planes, crop-dusters and homebuilt aircraft designs.

Cockpit windows may be equipped with a sun shield. Most cockpits have windows that can be opened when the aircraft is on the ground. Nearly all glass windows in large aircraft have an anti-reflective coating, and an internal heating element to melt ice. Smaller aircraft may be equipped with a transparent aircraft canopy.

In most cockpits the pilot's control column or joystick is located centrally (centre stick), although in some military fast jets the side-stick is located on the right hand side. In some commercial airliners (i.e.: Airbus—which features the glass cockpit concept) both pilots use a side-stick located on the outboard side, so Captain's side-stick on the left and First-officer's seat on the right.

Except for some helicopters, the right seat in the cockpit of an aircraft is the seat used by the co-pilot. The captain or pilot in command sits in the left seat, so that they can operate the throttles and other pedestal instruments with their right hand. The tradition has been maintained to this day, with the co-pilot on the right hand side.[16]

The layout of the cockpit, especially in the military fast jet, has undergone standardisation, both within and between aircraft, manufacturers and even nations. An important development was the "Basic Six" pattern, later the "Basic T", developed from 1937 onwards by the Royal Air Force, designed to optimise pilot instrument scanning.

Ergonomics and Human Factors concerns are important in the design of modern cockpits. The layout and function of cockpit displays controls are designed to increase pilot situation awareness without causing information overload. In the past, many cockpits, especially in fighter aircraft, limited the size of the pilots that could fit into them. Now, cockpits are being designed to accommodate from the 1st percentile female physical size to the 99th percentile male size.

In the design of the cockpit in a military fast jet, the traditional "knobs and dials" associated with the cockpit are mainly absent. Instrument panels are now almost wholly replaced by electronic displays, which are themselves often re-configurable to save space. While some hard-wired dedicated switches must still be used for reasons of integrity and safety, many traditional controls are replaced by multi-function re-configurable controls or so-called "soft keys". Controls are incorporated onto the stick and throttle to enable the pilot to maintain a head-up and eyes-out position – the Hands On Throttle And Stick or HOTAS concept. These controls may be then further augmented by control media such as head pointing with a Helmet Mounted Sighting System or Direct voice input (DVI). Advances in auditory displays allow for Direct Voice Output of aircraft status information and for the spatial localisation of warning sounds for improved monitoring of aircraft systems.

The layout of control panels in modern airliners has become largely unified across the industry. The majority of the systems-related controls (such as electrical, fuel, hydraulics and pressurization) for example, are usually located in the ceiling on an overhead panel. Radios are generally placed on a panel between the pilot's seats known as the pedestal. Automatic flight controls such as the autopilot are usually placed just below the windscreen and above the main instrument panel on the glareshield. A central concept in the design of the cockpit is the Design Eye Position or "DEP", from which point all displays should be visible.

Most modern cockpits will also include some kind of integrated warning system.

In a 2013 comparative study of a number of novel methods for cockpit-user interaction, touchscreen produced the largest number of "best scores".[17]

Flight instruments edit

 
A later analogue cockpit (1970s) of a Hawker Siddeley Trident airliner

In the modern electronic cockpit, the electronic flight instruments usually regarded as essential are MFD, PFD, ND, EICAS, FMS/CDU and back-up instruments.

MCP edit

A Mode control panel, usually a long narrow panel located centrally in front of the pilot, may be used to control heading, speed, altitude, vertical speed, vertical navigation and lateral navigation. It may also be used to engage or disengage both the autopilot and the autothrottle. The panel as an area is usually referred to as the "glareshield panel". MCP is a Boeing designation (that has been informally adopted as a generic name for the unit/panel) for a unit that allows for the selection and parameter setting of the different autoflight functions, the same unit on an Airbus aircraft is referred to as the FCU (Flight Control unit).

PFD edit

The primary flight display is usually located in a prominent position, either centrally or on either side of the cockpit. It will in most cases include a digitized presentation of the attitude indicator, air speed and altitude indicators (usually as a tape display) and the vertical speed indicator. It will in many cases include some form of heading indicator and ILS/VOR deviation indicators. In many cases an indicator of the engaged and armed autoflight system modes will be present along with some form of indication of the selected values for altitude, speed, vertical speed and heading. It may be pilot selectable to swap with the ND.

ND edit

A navigation display, which may be adjacent to the PFD, shows the route and information on the next waypoint, wind speed and wind direction. It may be pilot selectable to swap with the PFD.

EICAS/ECAM edit

The Engine Indication and Crew Alerting System (EICAS), used by Boeing and Embraer, or the Electronic Centralized Aircraft Monitor (ECAM), used by Airbus, allow the pilot to monitor the following information: values for N1, N2 and N3, fuel temperature, fuel flow, the electrical system, cockpit or cabin temperature and pressure, control surfaces and so on. The pilot may select display of information by means of button press.[citation needed]

FMS/MCDU edit

The flight management system/control and/or display unit may be used by the pilot to enter and check for the following information: flight plan, speed control, navigation control, etc.

Back-up instruments edit

In a less prominent part of the cockpit, in case of failure of the other instruments, there will be a battery-powered integrated standby instrument system along with a magnetic compass, showing essential flight information such as speed, altitude, attitude and heading.

Aerospace industry technologies edit

In the U.S. the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have researched the ergonomic aspects of cockpit design and have conducted investigations of airline industry accidents. Cockpit design disciplines include Cognitive science, Neuroscience, Human–computer interaction, Human Factors Engineering, Anthropometry and Ergonomics.

Aircraft designs have adopted the fully digital "glass cockpit". In such designs, instruments and gauges, including navigational map displays, use a user interface markup language known as ARINC 661. This standard defines the interface between an independent cockpit display system, generally produced by a single manufacturer, and the avionics equipment and user applications it is required to support, by means of displays and controls, often made by different manufacturers. The separation between the overall display system, and the applications driving it, allows for specialization and independence.

See also edit

Notes edit

  • The Aircraft Cockpit – from stick-and-string to fly-by-wire, by L. F. E. Coombes, 1990, Patrick Stephens Limited, Wellingborough.
  • Control In The Sky: The Evolution and History of The Aircraft Cockpit, by L. F. E. Coombes, 2005, Pen and Sword Books Limited, Barnsley.

References edit

  1. ^ Wragg, David W. (1973). A Dictionary of Aviation (first ed.). Osprey. p. 133. ISBN 9780850451634.
  2. ^ . Faa.gov. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2014-03-26.
  3. ^ a b Godfey, Kara (25 May 2017). "FLIGHTS REVEALED: Pilot reveals what REALLY goes on in a cockpit...and it may surprise you". The Express. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  4. ^ Roderick Bailey Forgotten Voices of D-Day: A New History of the Normandy Landings, p. 189, at Google Books
  5. ^ "Cockpit". Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1976.
  6. ^ a b Oxford English Dictionary online, .
  7. ^ S. A. Cavell Midshipmen and Quarterdeck Boys in the British Navy, 1771–1831, p. 12, at Google Books
  8. ^ Robert Barnhart, Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology, New York: Harper Collins, 1995.
  9. ^ "World Wide Words: Cockpit".
  10. ^ David Levinson and Karen Christensen Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present, p. 145, at Google Books
  11. ^ "Cockpit safety". Formula1.com. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
  12. ^ Richards, Giles (22 July 2017). "FIA defends decision to enforce F1 halo cockpit protection device for 2018". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  13. ^ "Sunderland flying boat replica cockpit unveiled". bbc.co.uk. 21 April 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  14. ^ By David D. Allyn Yardarm and Cockpit Hardcover, p. 225, at Google Books
  15. ^ Bob Wartinger A Driver's Guide to Safe Boat Racing (2008), p. 17, at Google Books
  16. ^ Charles F. Spence (1994). The Right Seat Handbook: A White-Knuckle Flier's Guide to Light Planes. McGraw Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-060148-2.
  17. ^ Stanton, N. A., Harvey, C., Plant, K. L. and Bolton, L., 2013, "To twist, roll, stroke or poke. A study of input devices for menu navigation in the cockpit", Ergonomic Abstracts, Vol. 56 (4), pp. 590–611

External links edit

  • A380 cockpit
  • Cockpit pictures of aircraft in the Indian Air Force

cockpit, this, article, about, flight, deck, aircraft, other, uses, disambiguation, cockpit, flight, deck, area, front, part, aircraft, spacecraft, from, which, pilot, controls, aircraft, source, source, source, source, source, source, source, airbus, a319, du. This article is about the flight deck of an aircraft For other uses see Cockpit disambiguation A cockpit or flight deck 1 is the area on the front part of an aircraft or spacecraft from which a pilot controls the aircraft source source source source source source source Cockpit of an Airbus A319 during landing source source source source source source Cockpit of an IndiGo A320 Cockpit of an Antonov An 124Cockpit of an A380 Most Airbus cockpits are glass cockpits featuring fly by wire technology Robin DR4001936 de Havilland Hornet Moth Note the bifurcated split stick control column View of a cockpit seen from outside of a British Airways Boeing 747 400The cockpit of an aircraft contains flight instruments on an instrument panel and the controls that enable the pilot to fly the aircraft In most airliners a door separates the cockpit from the aircraft cabin After the September 11 2001 attacks all major airlines fortified their cockpits against access by hijackers 2 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Ergonomics 3 Flight instruments 3 1 MCP 3 2 PFD 3 3 ND 3 4 EICAS ECAM 3 5 FMS MCDU 3 6 Back up instruments 4 Aerospace industry technologies 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe word cockpit seems to have been used as a nautical term in the 17th century without reference to cock fighting It referred to an area in the rear of a ship where the cockswain s station was located the cockswain being the pilot of a smaller boat that could be dispatched from the ship to board another ship or to bring people ashore The word cockswain in turn derives from the old English terms for boat servant coque is the French word for shell and swain was old English for boy or servant 4 The midshipmen and master s mates were later berthed in the cockpit and it served as the action station for the ship s surgeon and his mates during battle Thus by the 18th century cockpit had come to designate an area in the rear lower deck of a warship where the wounded were taken The same term later came to designate the place from which a sailing vessel is steered because it is also located in the rear and is often in a well or pit 5 6 7 However a convergent etymology does involve reference to cock fighting According to the Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology the buildings in London where the king s cabinet worked the Treasury and the Privy Council were called the Cockpit because they were built on the site of a theater called The Cockpit torn down in 1635 which itself was built in the place where a cockpit for cock fighting had once stood prior to the 1580s Thus the word Cockpit came to mean a control center 8 The original meaning of cockpit first attested in the 1580s is a pit for fighting cocks referring to the place where cockfights were held This meaning no doubt influenced both lines of evolution of the term since a cockpit in this sense was a tight enclosure where a great deal of stress or tension would occur 6 From about 1935 9 citation needed cockpit came to be used informally to refer to the driver s cabin especially in high performance cars 10 and this is official terminology used to describe the compartment 11 that the driver occupies in a Formula One 12 car In an airliner the cockpit is usually referred to as the flight deck the term deriving from its use by the RAF for the separate upper platform in large flying boats where the pilot and co pilot sat 13 clarification needed 14 clarification needed In the USA and many other countries however the term cockpit is also used for airliners 3 The seat of a powerboat racing craft is also referred to as the cockpit 15 Ergonomics editThe first airplane with an enclosed cabin appeared in 1912 on the Avro Type F however during the early 1920s there were many passenger aircraft in which the crew remained open to the air while the passengers sat in a cabin Military biplanes and the first single engined fighters and attack aircraft also had open cockpits some as late as the Second World War when enclosed cockpits became the norm The largest impediment to having closed cabins was the material used to make the windows Prior to Perspex becoming available in 1933 windows were either safety glass which was heavy or cellulose nitrate i e guncotton which yellowed quickly and was extremely flammable In the mid 1920s many aircraft manufacturers began using enclosed cockpits for the first time Early airplanes with closed cockpits include the 1924 Fokker F VII the 1926 German Junkers W 34 transport the 1926 Ford Trimotor the 1927 Lockheed Vega the Spirit of St Louis and the passenger aircraft manufactured by the Douglas and Boeing companies during the mid 1930s Open cockpit airplanes were almost extinct by the mid 1950s with the exception of training planes crop dusters and homebuilt aircraft designs Cockpit windows may be equipped with a sun shield Most cockpits have windows that can be opened when the aircraft is on the ground Nearly all glass windows in large aircraft have an anti reflective coating and an internal heating element to melt ice Smaller aircraft may be equipped with a transparent aircraft canopy In most cockpits the pilot s control column or joystick is located centrally centre stick although in some military fast jets the side stick is located on the right hand side In some commercial airliners i e Airbus which features the glass cockpit concept both pilots use a side stick located on the outboard side so Captain s side stick on the left and First officer s seat on the right Except for some helicopters the right seat in the cockpit of an aircraft is the seat used by the co pilot The captain or pilot in command sits in the left seat so that they can operate the throttles and other pedestal instruments with their right hand The tradition has been maintained to this day with the co pilot on the right hand side 16 The layout of the cockpit especially in the military fast jet has undergone standardisation both within and between aircraft manufacturers and even nations An important development was the Basic Six pattern later the Basic T developed from 1937 onwards by the Royal Air Force designed to optimise pilot instrument scanning Ergonomics and Human Factors concerns are important in the design of modern cockpits The layout and function of cockpit displays controls are designed to increase pilot situation awareness without causing information overload In the past many cockpits especially in fighter aircraft limited the size of the pilots that could fit into them Now cockpits are being designed to accommodate from the 1st percentile female physical size to the 99th percentile male size In the design of the cockpit in a military fast jet the traditional knobs and dials associated with the cockpit are mainly absent Instrument panels are now almost wholly replaced by electronic displays which are themselves often re configurable to save space While some hard wired dedicated switches must still be used for reasons of integrity and safety many traditional controls are replaced by multi function re configurable controls or so called soft keys Controls are incorporated onto the stick and throttle to enable the pilot to maintain a head up and eyes out position the Hands On Throttle And Stick or HOTAS concept These controls may be then further augmented by control media such as head pointing with a Helmet Mounted Sighting System or Direct voice input DVI Advances in auditory displays allow for Direct Voice Output of aircraft status information and for the spatial localisation of warning sounds for improved monitoring of aircraft systems The layout of control panels in modern airliners has become largely unified across the industry The majority of the systems related controls such as electrical fuel hydraulics and pressurization for example are usually located in the ceiling on an overhead panel Radios are generally placed on a panel between the pilot s seats known as the pedestal Automatic flight controls such as the autopilot are usually placed just below the windscreen and above the main instrument panel on the glareshield A central concept in the design of the cockpit is the Design Eye Position or DEP from which point all displays should be visible Most modern cockpits will also include some kind of integrated warning system In a 2013 comparative study of a number of novel methods for cockpit user interaction touchscreen produced the largest number of best scores 17 Flight instruments edit nbsp A later analogue cockpit 1970s of a Hawker Siddeley Trident airlinerIn the modern electronic cockpit the electronic flight instruments usually regarded as essential are MFD PFD ND EICAS FMS CDU and back up instruments MCP edit A Mode control panel usually a long narrow panel located centrally in front of the pilot may be used to control heading speed altitude vertical speed vertical navigation and lateral navigation It may also be used to engage or disengage both the autopilot and the autothrottle The panel as an area is usually referred to as the glareshield panel MCP is a Boeing designation that has been informally adopted as a generic name for the unit panel for a unit that allows for the selection and parameter setting of the different autoflight functions the same unit on an Airbus aircraft is referred to as the FCU Flight Control unit PFD edit The primary flight display is usually located in a prominent position either centrally or on either side of the cockpit It will in most cases include a digitized presentation of the attitude indicator air speed and altitude indicators usually as a tape display and the vertical speed indicator It will in many cases include some form of heading indicator and ILS VOR deviation indicators In many cases an indicator of the engaged and armed autoflight system modes will be present along with some form of indication of the selected values for altitude speed vertical speed and heading It may be pilot selectable to swap with the ND ND edit A navigation display which may be adjacent to the PFD shows the route and information on the next waypoint wind speed and wind direction It may be pilot selectable to swap with the PFD EICAS ECAM edit The Engine Indication and Crew Alerting System EICAS used by Boeing and Embraer or the Electronic Centralized Aircraft Monitor ECAM used by Airbus allow the pilot to monitor the following information values for N1 N2 and N3 fuel temperature fuel flow the electrical system cockpit or cabin temperature and pressure control surfaces and so on The pilot may select display of information by means of button press citation needed FMS MCDU edit The flight management system control and or display unit may be used by the pilot to enter and check for the following information flight plan speed control navigation control etc Back up instruments edit In a less prominent part of the cockpit in case of failure of the other instruments there will be a battery powered integrated standby instrument system along with a magnetic compass showing essential flight information such as speed altitude attitude and heading Aerospace industry technologies editIn the U S the Federal Aviation Administration FAA and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA have researched the ergonomic aspects of cockpit design and have conducted investigations of airline industry accidents Cockpit design disciplines include Cognitive science Neuroscience Human computer interaction Human Factors Engineering Anthropometry and Ergonomics Aircraft designs have adopted the fully digital glass cockpit In such designs instruments and gauges including navigational map displays use a user interface markup language known as ARINC 661 This standard defines the interface between an independent cockpit display system generally produced by a single manufacturer and the avionics equipment and user applications it is required to support by means of displays and controls often made by different manufacturers The separation between the overall display system and the applications driving it allows for specialization and independence See also edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp Transport portalIndex of aviation articles Bridge nautical Cab locomotive Command center Control roomNotes editThe Aircraft Cockpit from stick and string to fly by wire by L F E Coombes 1990 Patrick Stephens Limited Wellingborough Fighting Cockpits 1914 2000 by L F E Coombes 1999 Airlife Publishing Limited Shrewsbury Control In The Sky The Evolution and History of The Aircraft Cockpit by L F E Coombes 2005 Pen and Sword Books Limited Barnsley References edit Wragg David W 1973 A Dictionary of Aviation first ed Osprey p 133 ISBN 9780850451634 Press Release FAA Sets New Standards for Cockpit Doors Faa gov Archived from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2014 03 26 a b Godfey Kara 25 May 2017 FLIGHTS REVEALED Pilot reveals what REALLY goes on in a cockpit and it may surprise you The Express Retrieved 30 August 2017 Roderick Bailey Forgotten Voices of D Day A New History of the Normandy Landings p 189 at Google Books Cockpit Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea Oxford Oxford University Press 1976 a b Oxford English Dictionary online Cockpit S A Cavell Midshipmen and Quarterdeck Boys in the British Navy 1771 1831 p 12 at Google Books Robert Barnhart Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology New York Harper Collins 1995 World Wide Words Cockpit David Levinson and Karen Christensen Encyclopedia of World Sport From Ancient Times to the Present p 145 at Google Books Cockpit safety Formula1 com Retrieved 2019 04 02 Richards Giles 22 July 2017 FIA defends decision to enforce F1 halo cockpit protection device for 2018 The Guardian Retrieved 30 August 2017 Sunderland flying boat replica cockpit unveiled bbc co uk 21 April 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2017 By David D Allyn Yardarm and Cockpit Hardcover p 225 at Google Books Bob Wartinger A Driver s Guide to Safe Boat Racing 2008 p 17 at Google Books Charles F Spence 1994 The Right Seat Handbook A White Knuckle Flier s Guide to Light Planes McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 060148 2 Stanton N A Harvey C Plant K L and Bolton L 2013 To twist roll stroke or poke A study of input devices for menu navigation in the cockpit Ergonomic Abstracts Vol 56 4 pp 590 611External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aircraft cockpits nbsp Look up cockpit in Wiktionary the free dictionary A380 cockpit Cockpit pictures of aircraft in the Indian Air Force Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cockpit amp oldid 1193870910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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