Energy management is essential in low-energy flight conditions. Changes in fixed-wing aircraft configuration affect performance and energy boundaries, and improved insight therein should allow pilots to better predict potentially dangerous situations, maintain suitable safety mar
...
Energy management is essential in low-energy flight conditions. Changes in fixed-wing aircraft configuration affect performance and energy boundaries, and improved insight therein should allow pilots to better predict potentially dangerous situations, maintain suitable safety margins, and more effectively react to unforeseen events. This paper presents the design and experimental evaluation of a vertical situation display with enhancements portraying changes in the flight performance envelope. Sixteen pilots were tasked to fly approach and go-around scenarios with both a baseline and an enhanced display, with some of the scenarios including unexpected failures in configuration changes. Results show that the new display makes pilots maintain larger margins in velocity, thus spending less time below the advised minimum speed limit in final approach. However, these larger velocity margins also led to larger errors with respect to target velocities. Failures in configuration changes were more quickly discovered with the new display, although these results could not be substantiated due to a lack of statistical significance. However, pilots did report feeling better able to predict dangerous situations. Overall, pilots preferred the novel display; no significant differences in workload were found.