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News Link • Military

Airbus reveals EPIIC fighter cockpit of the future

• https://newatlas.com, By David Szondy

It's 2035 and somewhere in the skies one of Europe's 6th Generation fighter aircraft is on patrol. If we could look through the canopy and over the pilot's shoulder, the scene would look very different to someone whose experience of cockpits comes from watching Top Gun or, in my case, thumbing a worn copy of the Biggles Omnibus.

Instead of clusters of dials or banks of screens, the cockpit looks quite bare. Aside from the throttles and joystick, which wouldn't look out of place in an old Tornado, there isn't much in the way of actual controls. There aren't even as many displays as one would expect. It all looks rather spartan.

At the same time, the feel of the place seems off. The pilot glances from place to place and the aircraft responds. He makes gestures and talks to thin air – and the thin air talks back. Sometimes it seems like the plane is reading the pilot's mind as he looks intently at blank panels as if they held some sort of meaning.

It's all a bit creepy.

However, there's a reason behind this creepiness because we can't see what the pilot sees or feel what he feels. In fact, every second he's being fed a carefully curated stream of data by sight, sound, touch, and even direct to the brain, that keeps him informed of everything relevant to the mission or the safe operation of the craft.

When airplanes first took to the skies beginning in 1908, their cockpits were pretty basic affairs with little more than a throttle, joystick, compass, altimeter, and airspeed indicator. If you were really lucky, you might even have a hook to hang your pocket watch on.

Today, the cockpit is a nightmare, with hundreds of instruments and displays all jockeying for the pilot's attention. Hundreds of hours of training are required to learn which dials or screens are really important and which are only sort of important, which lights are urgent, and which beep or buzz requires your full attention. Now.

That's bad enough in a civilian aircraft, but in a fighter plane there's far more information to process and that can change in a split second as battles change and plans get chucked into the bin like so much used tissue.

However, we're talking about today. In 10 years when fighter pilots are dealing with incredibly complex fighters equipped with AI and acting as a command nexus for hypersonic missiles, laser weapons, and autonomous drone swarms, it'll be far worse.


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