Milestone Unit Is The 36th Second Generation EVSII
Installed
Gulfstream Aerospace recently marked the entry-into-service of
its 500th revolutionary Gulfstream Enhanced Vision System (EVS).
The milestone comes eight years after the company began offering
the industry-leading flight deck technology to operators of
large-cabin Gulfstream aircraft.
The original Gulfstream EVS, and now the second-generation EVS
II, uses a nose-mounted FLIR (forward-looking infrared) camera,
specially designed by Elbit Systems of America – Commercial
Aviation Kollsman, to generate actual, real-time images of the
aircraft’s surroundings. The system dramatically increases
situational awareness at night and during low-visibility daylight
conditions by allowing pilots to see terrain, runways, taxiways and
approaches that are undetectable by unaided sight. To date, EVS I
is in-service on 464 Gulfstream aircraft, while EVS II is
in-service on 36 Gulfstream aircraft.
Gulfstream EVS I Display
“For more than 50 years, safety has been the prime focus
at Gulfstream,” said Pres Henne, senior vice president,
Programs, Engineering and Test, Gulfstream. “This milestone
reaffirms that. It has been said that the Gulfstream EVS is one of
the greatest strides forward in aviation safety since the
introduction of the instrument landing system in 1929.”
Initially certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
in September 2001, the Gulfstream EVS was the first of its type to
be available on a business-jet aircraft. In late 2007 and early
2008, Gulfstream became the first Original Equipment Manufacturer
(OEM) to have both enhanced and synthetic vision systems —
EVS II and Synthetic Vision-Primary Flight Display (SV-PFD) —
certified at the same time by the FAA, bringing a new and unmatched
level of safety to the flight deck. The EVS II, whose hardware
components are 22 pounds lighter, with four times the computational
power and four times the memory of the original, has an improved
maintenance interface within the Gulfstream PlaneView flight deck
featuring Honeywell Primus Epic avionics.
In July 2009, Gulfstream received FAA certification to use EVS
II on the wide-cabin, high-speed Gulfstream G150. The system is
available for both new and in-service G150 aircraft. With the
addition of the G150, the Gulfstream EVS is now available either as
an option, or in some instances standard, on Gulfstream
GIV/GIV-SP/GV/G150/G300/G350/G400/G450/G500/G550 aircraft. It will
also be available as an option on the new Gulfstream G250 and will
be standard on the new, ultra-large-cabin, ultra-long-range
Gulfstream G650.
Gulfstream G650 Artist's
Rendering
On large-cabin aircraft, the EVS image appears on a Head-Up
Display (HUD) unit. On the G150, the images appear on 12-by-10-inch
LCD Multi-Function Displays (MFDs) and are easily selectable
through the G150 Rockwell Collins Pro Line 21 menu system.
In recognition of its efforts in developing the Gulfstream EVS,
the company received the FAA’s Excellence in Aviation
Research Award for 2004, a 2002 Flight International Aerospace
Industry Award, a 2002 “Diplome D’ Honneur” from
the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, and the 2002 Honeywell
Bendix Award for Aviation Safety.