Piloto automático (Autopilot)
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Definition
Sistema que controla automáticamente la trayectoria de vuelo de un avión sin la intervención manual continua del piloto.
¿Qué es el piloto automático?
An autopilot (A/P) is an automatic flight control system that manages an aircraft's attitude, heading, altitude, and speed without requiring the pilot to continuously manipulate the flight controls. Rather than replacing pilots, autopilot frees them to monitor systems, communicate with ATC, and plan ahead — particularly on long-haul flights where manual flying for hours would cause fatigue.
Cómo funciona
Modern autopilot systems receive inputs from multiple sensors — inertial reference units, air data computers, GPS receivers, and radio navigation aids — then issue commands to the aircraft's control surfaces via servo actuators. The system continuously compares actual flight path against the desired flight path and corrects deviations. Pilots interact with autopilot through a Mode Control Panel (MCP) or Flight Control Unit (FCU), dialing in target altitude, heading, vertical speed, and airspeed.
- Heading mode: Maintains a selected magnetic heading
- Altitude hold: Locks the aircraft at a specified pressure altitude
- VNAV/LNAV: Follows vertical and lateral profiles computed by the Flight Management System
- Autoland: Coupled with ILS, can execute a fully automatic landing in Category III low-visibility conditions
On Airbus aircraft, autopilot works in conjunction with the fly-by-wire flight envelope protection — the autopilot cannot command maneuvers that exceed structural or aerodynamic limits.
Evolución y sistemas modernos
The first practical autopilot was demonstrated by Lawrence Sperry in 1914 using a gyroscope-stabilized system. By the 1950s, analog autopilots were standard on airliners. Today's digital flight control computers — such as the Boeing 777's AFCS (Automatic Flight Control System) or the Airbus A320's Flight Augmentation Computer — can manage an entire flight from shortly after takeoff to touchdown. The Boeing 747 introduced autoland in revenue service, and modern widebodies like the A350 and 787 feature triple-redundant autopilot channels for fail-operational capability.
Requisitos regulatorios
FAA FAR Part 121 and EASA CS-25 mandate autopilot for extended overwater operations (ETOPS) and certain high-altitude routes. Category IIIb autoland operations require autopilot systems with demonstrated reliability of at least 10⁻⁷ failure probability per flight hour. Pilots must be type-rated on each autopilot variant and conduct periodic manual flying to maintain hand-flying proficiency.
Related Terms
Cabina de pilotaje
La sección del avión donde los pilotos controlan la aeronave, con instrumentos y controles de vuelo.
Revolución Fly-by-Wire
La transformación de los sistemas de control de aeronaves de cables mecánicos e hidráulicos a ordenadores digitales electrónicos, impulsada comercialmente por el Airbus A320 que entró en servicio en 1988.
Sistema de Vuelo Automático
El conjunto de automatización integrada que comprende el piloto automático, el automanette y el director de vuelo, que gestiona la trayectoria de la aeronave y el estado energético desde poco después del despegue hasta el aterrizaje, reduciendo la carga de trabajo de la tripulación y mejorando la precisión.