Author Topic: The Helmet That Gives Air Force Pilots X-Ray Vision  (Read 372 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
The Helmet That Gives Air Force Pilots X-Ray Vision
« on: November 27, 2016, 12:28:35 pm »
The Helmet That Gives Air Force Pilots X-Ray Vision

Now Air Force pilots can pick off bogeys using X-ray vision.

By Alexander George
Nov 24, 2016

    343

Nick Nacca

When Major Will Andreotta began flying for the Air Force in 2006, he had to do a lot of work. He was training on the F-16, a fighter jet first deployed in 1978, and almost everything was analog. "I would tell my wingman to target something, then call over: 'Confirm your this, because I'm seeing that,' " he says.

In comparison, the F-35 that Andreotta flies now is a marvel: It has six external articulating infrared cameras and sensors that send maintenance data to the ground crew. And, as of this year, it comes with a helmet unlike any other in the world—one that synthesizes all the live feeds from the plane's exterior cameras and sensors into a lucid, customizable augmented-reality display. Developed by Rockwell Collins, the company responsible for avionics in the Boeing 787 and for NASA's unmanned aircraft projects, the Gen III Helmet Mounted Display System gives a pilot as much visibility as he would have if the entire cockpit were made of glass. "What I wore on the F-16," Andreotta says, holding up the $400,000 carbon-fiber masterpiece, "was a literal helmet compared to this."

http://www.popularmechanics.com/military/research/a23965/x-ray-vision-helmet-for-air-force-pilots/
« Last Edit: November 27, 2016, 12:29:11 pm by rangerrebew »