A side-stick or sidestick controller is an aircraft control stick that is located on the side console of the Aviator, usually on the righthand side, or outboard on a two-seat flightdeck. Typically this is found in aircraft that are equipped with fly-by-wire control systems.Crane, Dale: Dictionary of Aeronautical Terms, third edition, page 463. Aviation Supplies & Academics, 1997.
The throttle controls are typically located to the left of a single pilot or centrally on a two-seat flightdeck. Only one hand is required to operate them; two-handed operation is neither possible nor necessary.
It is also used in new helicopter models such as the Bell 525.
While the inputs are added up, the sum is clamped to the value of the maximum possible deflection a single side-stick; but this still means that when both side-sticks are deflected 50% in the same direction, the resulting effective input will be that of a fully deflected side-stick. Also, because the inputs are added, any deflection of the other side-stick in the opposite direction will in effect be subtracted, resulting in the inputs partially cancelling each other out. For example, if two inputs have opposite directions but equal magnitudes, the sum will be zero, and the flight control surfaces will not move.
In addition to visual indications, detection of more than a single side-stick deflection greater than 2° from neutral without the priority takeover button being held down results in an aural "DUAL INPUT" warning repeated every five seconds. This aural warning has the lowest priority, and is overridden by a warning of higher priority, such as from the EGPWS, posing a potential risk. Examples of this occurring include the 2009 crash of Air France Flight 447 (an Airbus A330 flying from Rio de Janeiro to Paris), the 2010 crash of Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771 an Airbus A330 from flying Johannesburg to TripoliPage 81 "Conclusions" Final Report of AFRIQIYAH Airways Aircraft, Airbus A330-202, 5A-ONG Crash, Occurred at Tripoli (LIBYA)on 12/05/2010 Published February 2013. and the 2014 crash of Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 (an Airbus A320 flying from Surabaya to Singapore)..
In aircraft with passive side-sticks, on the other hand, they move independently from each other, and do not offer any haptic feedback on what the other pilot is inputting. This can lead to "dual input" situations, which should be avoided .
Such an active side-stick can also be used to increase adherence to a safe flight envelope by applying force feedback when the pilot makes a control input that would bring the aircraft closer to (or beyond) the borders of the safe flight envelope. This reduces the risk of pilots entering dangerous states of flight outside the operational borders while maintaining the pilots' final authority and increasing their situational awareness.
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