Surveillance des Données de Vol (FDM: Flight Data Monitoring)
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Definition
Un programme de sécurité proactif qui enregistre et analyse systématiquement les données de vol de routine des systèmes de l'aéronef afin d'identifier les risques opérationnels, les dépassements et les tendances non sécuritaires avant qu'ils n'escaladent en incidents ou accidents.
What Is Flight Data Monitoring?
Flight Data Monitoring (FDM) — also known as Flight Operational Quality Assurance (FOQA) in the United States — is a structured safety program in which airlines analyze recorded flight data from every routine flight to detect unsafe practices, technical anomalies, and procedural deviations before they result in accidents. The program transforms raw flight recorder data into actionable safety intelligence.
How It Works
Digital Flight Data Recorders (DFDRs) capture hundreds to thousands of flight parameters — airspeed, altitude, control surface positions, engine parameters, gear state, and autopilot engagement — at sample rates of 1–64 Hz depending on parameter criticality. After each flight, data is downloaded either physically via Quick Access Recorder (QAR) media or wirelessly through Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS) transmission.
Dedicated FDM software (such as SAGEM SFIM, Teledyne MPLS, or Safety Line OptiClimb) processes each flight against a library of pre-defined events called "exceedances" — for example, a hard landing exceeding 2.0 g vertical acceleration, unstabilized approach below 500 ft AGL, or overspeed above VMO. Statistical trending over thousands of flights reveals systemic issues invisible from single-incident analysis.
FAA Advisory Circular AC 120-82 encourages FOQA programs for U.S. operators. EASA mandates FDM under EU-OPS 1.037 for operators of aircraft above 27,000 kg (59,500 lb) MTOW. Programs use de-identified data shared with safety departments — pilots are typically protected from punitive use of FDM data under just culture policies — enabling open reporting of exceedances.
Key Components
- Quick Access Recorder (QAR): Separate from the crash-protected flight data recorder; provides easy post-flight data download.
- Ground Replay Station: Workstation running FDM analysis software, event libraries, and trend dashboards.
- Event Library: Airline-defined exceedance thresholds calibrated to aircraft type, route, and operational environment.
- Safety Review Board: Cross-functional team reviewing flagged events and approving corrective actions.
- Wireless ACARS Download: Real-time or near-real-time data transfer enabling rapid response to in-flight anomalies.
Aircraft Examples
- Major airlines globally: Programs typically cover 100% of revenue flights; Air France pioneered European FDM programs from the 1990s.
- Boeing 737 & Airbus A320 fleets: Industry FDM benchmarking studies show hard landing rates of less than 0.5 per 1,000 flights in mature programs versus 2–3 in programs without FDM.
- Low-cost carriers: FDM instrumental in achieving safety records comparable to legacy carriers despite higher daily utilization rates of 12–14 flight hours per aircraft.
Related Terms
Administration fédérale de l'aviation (FAA)
L'agence fédérale américaine responsable de la réglementation et de la supervision de tous les aspects de l'aviation civile, y compris la certification des aéronefs, les licences de pilotes et la gestion de l'espace aérien.
Agence de l'Union européenne pour la sécurité aérienne (EASA)
L'agence de l'Union européenne responsable de la réglementation de la sécurité aérienne civile, de la certification des aéronefs et de la supervision de la sécurité dans les États membres.
Boîte noire (FDR/CVR)
Enregistreurs de vol conçus pour résister aux accidents — l'enregistreur de données de vol (FDR) et l'enregistreur phonique du poste de pilotage (CVR) — capturant les données de performance et les communications de l'équipage pour les enquêtes accidents.
Transpondeur
Émetteur-récepteur radio embarqué répondant automatiquement aux interrogations radar au sol.