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Pilatus Aircraft
Aircraft

Pilatus PC-24

BAN's World Gazetteer

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Pilatus adds further advancements to PC-24 series
As it is Pilatus' philosophy to continuously improve and offer support over the life of the aircraft, many new features can be retrofitted in earlier serial number PC-24s. The OEM has made cabin and cockpit improvements.
The cabin features new executive seats that provide more comfort, more intuitive controls and lighter weight.
Read this story in our August 2021 printed issue.

Based on customer feedback from over 50,000 hours of fleet operations, Pilatus has incorporated numerous new features into the PC-24s that will come off the production line from this year onward. As it is Pilatus' core philosophy to continuously improve and provide support over the life of the aircraft, many of these new features can be retrofitted in earlier serial number PC-24s.

Starting with the passenger experience, the cabin features new executive seats that provide more comfort, more intuitive controls and lighter weight. They fully recline to a flat position. The seats are attached to the cabin's flat floor with quick-release mechanisms to facilitate rapid seating configuration changes on the ground. In lieu of the standard forward left-hand coat closet, operators may now choose to install a galley with options for a microwave oven, a coffee or espresso maker, a generous work surface, dedicated ice storage and capacity for standard catering units.

For PC-24 flight crews, Pilatus and Honeywell have continued to develop and refine the Advanced Cockpit Environment (ACE). A touchscreen avionics controller replaces the multi-function controller as standard equipment. The touchscreen controller was first introduced in the PC-12 NGX, and has proven to be very well liked for entering and editing flight plan data, changing radio frequencies and controlling the weather radar. It features a slip-resistant design around the bezel for stability and input precision in turbulence.

The PC-24's flight control system now incorporates tactile feedback in both roll and pitch to prevent unintended unusual attitudes. If the aircraft rolls through 51 degrees bank angle, roll limit protection will engage to bring the aircraft back to 31 degrees. If the PC-24 is predicted to exceed the Vmo/Mmo limits, the pitch servo will engage until the aircraft exits the potential overspeed condition. Tactile feedback protection is provided even with the autopilot turned off and can be manually overridden by the pilot with a quick-disconnect button.

The standard autothrottle system also includes a new automatic speed protection function. This function provides both under and overspeed protection by automatically engaging the autothrottle to adjust power so that the aircraft always remains inside the entire speed envelope for all flight phases. Working in conjunction with the autothrottle, the Williams FJ44-4A engine FADEC software has also been fine-tuned to reduce power oscillations in cruise and descent.

A new automatic yaw trim function further reduces flight crew workload during departure and climb phases. This autopilot mode is automatically activated when the yaw damper is engaged and will attempt to hold the aircraft to zero sideslip. If one engine is inoperative or a large thrust asymmetry exists, the automatic yaw trim will attempt to maintain approximately ½ trapezoid indicated sideslip.

The Advanced Cockpit Environment also features the pilot-defined visual approach function. This approach mode allows the pilot in command to easily set up an autopilot and autothrottle coupled visual approach to any runway and precisely track a left-hand, right-hand or straight-in pattern down to the runway threshold. This is a very useful feature for operations into smaller, remote airports, which the PC-24 is designed to use. It increases safety at uncontrolled fields by allowing the pilot to keep attention focused outside the aircraft looking for other traffic.

Among the new avionics features offered on the PC-24 are Honeywell's SmartRunway and SmartLanding advisory functions, which enhance safety and reduce pilot workload with audible callouts for on runway, approach runway, runway end, excessive approach angle, and taxiway and landing advisories. Also available are VHF datalink with AFIS, ACARS graphical weather, basic and advanced satellite graphical weather (S-XM), FMS takeoff and landing data (TOLD), Controller to Pilot Data Link Communications (CPDLC) over the FANS 1/A+ network, KMA-29A Bluetooth 3D audio panel with record and playback functions, and the Honeywell RDR-7000 solid state weather radar with predictive hail and lightning functions.

In addition, Pilatus recently certified and began offering the True Blue Power lithium ion batteries, which provide an 84 lb reduction in empty weight and reduce total life-cycle cost compared to the standard dual Ni-Cad batteries.

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