BOOKS
BOOK LINKS

Search the full text of our books:

Powered by Google™

BROWSE BY SUBJECT



Blind Landings
Low-Visibility Operations in American Aviation, 1918–1958

Search the full text of this book:

Powered by Google™
Table of Contents
Erik M. Conway

$45.00 hardcover
978-0-8018-8449-8 (28 ctn qty)
2006 256 pp. 14 halftones, 9 line drawings
Add hardcover to shopping cart


Description

When darkness falls, storms rage, fog settles, or lights fail, pilots are forced to make "instrument landings," relying on technology and training to guide them through typically the most dangerous part of any flight. In this original study, Erik M. Conway recounts one of the most important stories in aviation history: the evolution of aircraft landing aids that make landing safe and routine in almost all weather conditions. Discussing technologies such as the Loth leader-cable system, the American National Bureau of Standards system, and, its descendants, the Instrument Landing System, the MIT-Army-Sperry Gyroscope microwave blind landing system, and the MIT Radiation Lab's radar-based Ground Controlled Approach system, Conway interweaves technological change, training innovation, and pilots' experiences to examine the evolution of blind landing technologies. He shows how systems originally intended to produce routine, all-weather blind landings gradually developed into routine instrument-guided approaches. Even so, after two decades of development and experience, pilots still did not want to place the most critical phase of flight, the landing, entirely in technology's invisible hand. By the end of World War II, the very concept of landing blind therefore had disappeared from the trade literature, a victim of human limitations.

Reviews

"Compact but quite readable book; it should interest all airline passengers who wonder how pilots land safely in an environment where they can barely see their hands before their faces."—Choice

"A key piece in the patchwork of the history of aviation."—Christian Gelzer, Journal of Transport History

Author Information

Erik M. Conway is a historian at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, and author of High-Speed Dreams: NASA and the Technopolitics of Supersonic Transportation, 1945–1999, also published by Johns Hopkins.


The Johns Hopkins University Press | 2715 North Charles Street | Baltimore, Maryland 21218 | (410) 516-6900 | webmaster@jhupress.jhu.edu