Software Upgrade to Existing Honeywell Safety Equipment Available in 2009
Runway Excursions Represent 96% of Total Runway-related Accidents
ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- NBAA -- Honeywell
(NYSE: HON) announced today that it has developed a software upgrade to its
Runway Awareness and Advisory System that will alert pilots if their approach
to an airport is not within a safe tolerance envelope of speed and glide path.
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A stable approach is one where the aircraft approaches the runway within a
safe tolerance of the optimum speed and glide path. Approaches outside this
tolerance, usually too high or too fast, can result in hard landings, aircraft
overshooting the end of the runway or other anomalies that damage the
aircraft, cause passenger injury or even loss of life.
'Runway excursions represent 96 percent of the total runway related
accidents and have cost the industry millions of dollars over the last 10
years,' said Bob Smith, Vice President of Advanced Technology. 'This
stabilized approach technology upgrade will be a quick and easy installation
that will significantly lower the probability of runway excursions and is a
cost-effective and near-term solution to a problem many in the industry see as
one of the biggest remaining safety concerns: runway overruns and hard
landings.'
Designed to enhance flight crew situational awareness, the Honeywell
system is a software function that uses an aircraft's Global Positioning
System (GPS) position, landing gear position, landing flaps position, aircraft
speed, vertical speed, approach profile and Honeywell's runway database
information to provide verbal announcements to the flight crew if the stable
approach criteria are not met. Under normal landing conditions, no advisories
would be heard.
Honeywell's stabilized approach technology capitalizes on the Honeywell
worldwide terrain and runway database, which has proven itself for over 800
million flight hours, and will be available as a software upgrade in mid-2009.
The system has been in simulator and flight testing and is expected to be
certified by the FAA and EASA by the end of 2008.
In 2004, Honeywell also developed the Runway Awareness and Advisory System
(RAAS) as a software upgrade to the Honeywell worldwide terrain database.
RAAS provides improved situational awareness to help break the chain of events
that can lead to a runway incursion, by providing timely aural advisories to
the flight crew during taxi, takeoff, final approach, landing and rollout on
runways and taxiways. RAAS is installed on more than 1,600 business aviation
and commercial transport aircraft.
Honeywell International is a $38 billion diversified technology and
manufacturing leader, serving customers worldwide with aerospace products and
services; control technologies for buildings, homes and industry; automotive
products; turbochargers; and specialty materials. Based in Morris Township,
N.J., Honeywell's shares are traded on the New York, London and Chicago Stock
Exchanges. For additional information, please visit http://www.honeywell.com.
Based in Phoenix, Arizona, Honeywell's aerospace business is a leading
global provider of integrated avionics, engines, systems and service solutions
for aircraft manufacturers, airlines, business and general aviation, military,
space and airport operations.
This release contains forward-looking statements as defined in Section 21E
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, including statements about future
business operations, financial performance and market conditions. Such
forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties inherent in
business forecasts as further described in our filings under the Securities
Exchange Act.
SOURCE Honeywell