New Delhi: A new navigation procedure that would straighten up the flight path of an aircraft and make air traffic management smoother is being tested at Cochin airport by prominent Indian carriers, along with its developer Airbus.
The 'Required Navigation Performance' (RNP) was first tested last week when an Airbus A-320 of no-frill carrier IndiGo used it to approach and land at the airport in Kerala. The entire process was successfully validated earlier on Airbus simulators.
Jet Airways would soon demonstrate this procedure at the same airport using a Boeing 737-800, an Airbus spokesperson said here, adding it was validated using Airbus flight simulators.
The procedure, developed by Airbus subsidiary Quovadis , would benefit both Cochin International Airport authorities and airlines by reducing the flight path by almost 40 nautical miles, thereby saving fuel, and make air traffic management easier, especially in areas with reduced or no radar coverage, the spokesperson said.
It uses on-board systems and the satellite-based Global Positioning System, giving a go by to the conventional ground-based navigation installations.
13/12/10 PTI/Economic Times
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Tuesday, December 14, 2010
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Carriers testing procedure for smoother air traffic management
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
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