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Monday, February 11, 2008

New Simulators for Controller Training

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will install new air traffic tower simulators at 19 locations around the country to help train new air traffic controllers in an operational environment. The new simulators will be deployed over the next 18 months at airport towers nationwide. The FAA will install an additional six simulators at the FAA Academy in Oklahoma City. The FAA has been using tower simulators for training in Chicago, Miami, Phoenix and Ontario, CA since 2006. Late last year, the FAA awarded a contract to Adacel Systems of Orlando, FL to provide another 24 simulators. Adacel developed the FAA’s original four prototype systems. The Tower Simulation System (TSS) includes a large, graphic depiction of the airfield and the area around the airport and can be adjusted to depict different weather conditions and times of the day. The screen showing the airfield wraps around the student’s position to replicate windows of an actual air traffic tower. The simulator provides synthetic voice response and voice recognition to allow the student to direct and receive responses as they would in the tower. At the same time, the voice recognition system interprets the student’s commands and translates them into actual aircraft movements depicted on the screen of the airfield layout. The simulator system does not interact with actual air traffic control operational systems and poses no threat to service interruption. The system creates an entirely new environment that operates away from and independently of ongoing air traffic operations. It realistically replicates operations that enable training in an absolutely safe environment.