In The Cockpit
In The Cockpit
In The Cockpit
F-35
Lightning II
F-35
Lightning II
Fifth-Generation Fighter
The Constellation was a highly versatile commercial airliner and military transport aircraft, regarded by
many aviation enthusiasts as one of the most beautiful aircraft ever built. The Model 749, the fifth major
Constellation variant, was specifically designed for transoceanic airline operations. It served as the basic
airframe design for President Dwight Eisenhower's VC-121B and the Navy's two PO-1Ws, the first
airborne early warning aircraft. The cockpit reflects technology typical for military and civilian transports
of the period with dedicated displays and indicators and a center console dominated by engine controls.
The Connie had fully powered flight controls.
MB-2
MB-2
The MB-2 was the first US-designed bomber to be procured in quantity. Gen. William (Billy) Mitchell used
the MB-2 in July 1921 to sink three ships in tests off the Virginia Capes. The trials, which included sinking
the captured German battleship Ostfriesland and the former USS Alabama, demonstrated the concept of
aerial bombardment and highlighted the vulnerability of naval vessels to attack from the air. The cockpit
reflected early 1920s technology. The large control wheel was the result of the completely manual,
unboosted cable and pushrod control systems of the era. The open cockpit had no windscreen.
P-38
Lightning
P-38
Lightning
The PBY Catalina was the primary flying boat operated by Allied forces in World War II,
serving on all fronts around the world. It was used for long-range scouting and anti-
submarine patrols, convoy escort, search and rescue missions, and bombing operations.
It is the world’s most produced and most widely used seaplane. This Catalina is the only
non-amphibious PBY-5 known to exist. Mission durations of up to twenty hours were
routine and could be extended to twenty-four hours and were limited only by crew
fatigue. Engine and propeller controls were mounted overhead to provide the shortest
cable routing to the engines.
F-117 Nighthawk
F-117 Nighthawk
The F-117 is the world's first operational stealth aircraft. Through a combination of faceted surfaces,
advanced materials, and other technologies, the Nighthawk is virtually undetectable to radar. With
precision weapons, the F-117 can destroy heavily defended, high-value targets with impunity. Essentially
designed by electrical engineers, the F-117 is inherently unstable and stays airborne through a
sophisticated flight control system. The original cockpit design used many off-the-shelf components,
such as F/A-18 displays. A complete set of standby flight instruments is included as a backup. Plastic
glareshield extensions are used to minimize instrument reflections on the flat canopy side panes.
B-36 "Peacemaker"
B-36 "Peacemaker"
The B-36 was the world's first true intercontinental bomber. Designed in 1941 to strike
European targets from North America when it seemed Britain might fall to Germany,
the B-36 could carry an 86,000-pound payload and had an 8,800-mile range. The
unofficially nicknamed "Peacemaker" served as America's airborne nuclear deterrent
through the 1950s. This B-36J made the type's last flight on 30 April 1959. The
expansive paneled canopy provided excellent exterior visibility. The flight engineer was
tasked primarily with monitoring the "six turning and four burning" engines, that is, six
radial engines turning pusher propellers and four underwing jet engines.
B-36
"Peacemaker"
U-2S Dragon Lady
U-2S Dragon Lady
The second-generation U-2, originally designated U-2R, is based on the original U-2
design but is approximately one-third larger. After a gap of twelve years, the production
line was reopened in 1980 for a second production run. Updated continuously over its
career, the U-2Rs received new engines, a new electrical generation system, and a
digital autopilot in the late 1990s and were redesignated U-2S. The current
Reconnaissance Avionics Maintainability Program, or RAMP, replaces the 1960s-vintage
cockpit design with three multifunction displays, an upfront control and display unit, and
an independent secondary flight display system, showing how technology can unclutter a
cockpit.
U-2S Dragon
Lady
F-16 Fighting Falcon
Over its career, the F-16 Fighting Falcon–or Viper, as it is more commonly known—has been
continuously updated. Nowhere are those changes more evident than in the cockpits of the latest
generation of F-16s, the Block 50/52+, and particularly the Block 60 version shown here. The latest F-16
cockpits feature color multifunction displays and lighting compatible with night vision systems. Onboard
computers process information from sensors and off-aircraft sources and present information to the pilot
with straightforward graphics. Still, the cockpit retains many features that made the F-16 revolutionary
from the beginning, including a frameless bubble canopy, hands-on throttle and sidestick switch
controls, a thirty-degree seatback angle for increased g tolerance, and a head-up display.
F-16 Fighting Falcon
KC-130F
Hercules
The US Marine Corps evaluated the C-130 as a tanker in 1957, just three years after the Hercules was first
flown. In 1963, this KC-130F was used to make twenty-nine touch-and-go landings and twenty-one full-
stop landings on the USS Forrestal (CVA-59) without arresting gear to test the feasibility of a large carrier
onboard delivery aircraft. After a forty-two year career, including service in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and
Iraq, it was retired in 2005. The cockpit layout is typical for the late 1950s, with the center of the
instrument panel dominated by engine instruments and controls, although this cockpit shows that it was
modified over its service career.
KC-130F
Hercules
A-12
The A-12 was the secret, Mach 3+, high-altitude, long-range follow-on to the U-2 reconnaissance
aircraft. It was developed for the CIA under the code name Oxcart. The A-12 was a technological leap–
in aerodynamics, engines, cameras that worked at altitudes above 90,000 feet, fuels, pilot life-support
systems, materials, and manufacturing. The radar scope at the top of the instrument panel required a
hood so the single pilot could view the reconnaissance imagery in daylight. The physical limitations
of the pilot's full pressure suit and helmet account for the placement of the attitude indicator high on
the panel.
A-12
C-141 StarLifter
The C-141 StarLifter was the world's first turbofan-powered transport. StarLifter crews
participated in every military and nearly every humanitarian operation on every continent
for four decades. On 12 February 1973, this aircraft, then a C-141A, was flown to Hanoi,
North Vietnam, in the first mission of Operation Homecoming, the repatriation of former
American prisoners of war. Most of the C-141s were stretched to carry more cargo and
redesignated C-141B. Starting in 1997, sixty-three aircraft, including this one, received an
autopilot and cockpit upgrade, which included glass cockpit instrumentation, a GPS-
enhanced navigation system, and an all-weather flight control system. These upgraded
aircraft were then redesignated C-141Cs.
C-141 StarLifter
Woody