The training of pilots at major US air carriers has changed little over the years. These courses often begin in learning each and every sub-system of the particular airplane to be flown. The training course culminates in a series of training sessions in a full-motion, full-mission flight simulator. Most US airlines now incorporate one final simulator training session known as LOFT, Line Oriented Flight Training, where rather than going through a series of disconnected, isolated, flight maneuvers, the session is conducted as a flight from a departure airport to a destination airport. Flying for an Air Line, one is a Line Pilot, flying the "line." And so the LOFT session in the simulator is supposed to represent the reality of line operations and thus prepare the trainee to fly the line. But if the ultimate goal of the training is to produce a pilot who is ready to safely and efficiently fly the line, shouldn't all training be "line oriented"? This paper describes an approach to structuring airline flight training such that all training is "line oriented." This approach represents an opportunity to translate many of the training principles offered by Healy and her colleagues into training specifications.
The Comprehensive LOFT
SWISS International Air Lines Ltd. Training Center ; 2019 ; Zurich, Switzerland
2019-07-01
Sonstige
Keine Angabe
Englisch
Engineering Index Backfile | 1932
|NTRS | 1970
|Engineering Index Backfile | 1940
NTIS | 1965
|Emerald Group Publishing | 1948