Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
    • A-E
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
    • F-L
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
    • M-S
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
    • T-Z
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    • March 2025
    • Dec 2024/Jan 2025
    • Showcase 2025
    • September 2024
    • June 2024
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Subscribe to magazine Subscribe to email newsletter Media Pack
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    1. March 2025
    2. Dec 2024/Jan 2025
    3. Showcase 2025
    4. September 2024
    5. June 2024
    6. March 2024
    7. Archive Issues
    8. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    19th March 2025

    In this issue: March 2025

    Online Magazines By Ben Sampson
    Recent

    In this issue: March 2025

    19th March 2025
    contents and front cover of magazine

    In this issue: December / January 2025

    19th December 2024
    Showcase 2025

    In this issue – Showcase 2025

    6th November 2024
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
Opinion

New aerospace concepts: Is testing ready for them?

Opinion WritersBy Opinion Writers30th June 20174 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
aerospace blog

Garnet Ridgeway says: Once upon a time, aircraft were considered what would now be called a ‘disruptive technology’; they were new, exciting and their application largely untapped. Small, agile startup companies appeared in garages and sheds across the world, and proceeded to overturn the apparently immovable status quo characterized by railways, ocean liners and horse-drawn vehicles.

Fast-forward a century, and the descendants of those pioneering startup aviation enterprises are now fulfilling the role of the corporate giants they once usurped. While this is undeniably a by-product of their success, it is not an environment conducive to innovation; this is not a breeding ground for the next emergent technology. This is not necessarily a deliberate strategy, but a result of the complexity and long lifetimes of modern aerospace products. Corporate inertia is the antithesis of innovation.

Unsurprisingly, the aerospace testing community, which evolved alongside the broader industry, is similarly ill-equipped to respond to emergent technologies. An issue is over-specialization, as the skill sets of testing organizations have become increasingly impressive in capability, but narrower in scope. This funneling effect is further compounded by the division of engineering skills into disparate streams, or ‘stove piping’, leaving testing organizations poorly equipped to deal with a product that differs from something they’ve assessed previously.

So, what can be done? The good news is that the highly specialized skill sets are very much still required when assessing emergent technologies, and although startup organizations may have a more flexible approach, they don’t have access to the advantages that come with organizational inertia, i.e. deep technical competence and stakeholder relationships. The ideal solution is a structure that harnesses the agility and innovation of startups with the capability and legitimacy of established testing organizations. To make an engineering analogy, consider a retrofit digital flight control system, which imposes a ‘soft’ layer on top of the existing system to massively improve the capability of the vehicle through more intelligent use of the existing hardware. The alternative, as history has shown, is to continue funneling and stove piping into irrelevance and oblivion.

Garnet Ridgway has a PhD from the UK’s University of Liverpool. He has designed cockpit instruments for Airbus and currently works for a leading UK-based aircraft test and evaluation organization

Sophie Robinson says: The opportunity to test and evaluate truly new and emerging technologies is often a once-in-a-career opportunity for a flight test engineer – and one which is relished. The flight test community has a proven track record of testing novel technologies successfully, and there is no reason that testing of new technologies should now move outside of that sphere.

Safety culture has become ingrained in flight test over the years, and is what allows novel technologies to be tested effectively. A strong safety culture exists within the flight test community; we know how to test things and do so safely and incrementally – something which is of paramount importance when stepping into potentially unknown territories with new untried technologies.

The flight test community has also spent years developing the processes and methodologies behind test and evaluation, such that they are robust and resilient – and while the technology might be new, the existing protocols and practices are equally as applicable to new technology as they are to scenarios that have been repeated tens, if not hundreds, of times.

The flight test community has also demonstrated repeatedly that it can be practical and adaptable – how many programs have discovered an unexpected or unpredicted result, but managed to adapt to meet the required outcomes? In testing of emerging technologies, these events are more common. The experience to react and adapt to them is of the highest importance in ensuring that the required testing is completed safely and effectively. The flight test community also has the experience, and the ability to pragmatically

apply that experience, to develop standard operating procedures and limitations that are non-existent for new technologies – an appreciation of the nuances and intricacies of developing such important documentation is something that inexperienced testers may lack, to the inevitable detriment of operational capability.

The flight test community benefits from its existing stakeholder relationships between military, industry and operator, which are essential to successful T&E.

The flight test community should keep testing safely and effectively and delivering exceptional capability to end users.

Sophie Robinson works at the front line of aerospace testing as a rotary-wing performance and flying qualities engineer for a leading UK-based aircraft test organization. She also holds a PhD in aerospace engineering from the University of Liverpool

Share. Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Email
Previous ArticleFourth Gulfstream G600 test aircraft makes first flight
Next Article Boundary breaker
Opinion Writers

Related Posts

Materials Testing

Giving green thrusters a boost

15th April 20256 Mins Read
Gerard Van Es, Principal Advisor of Flight Safety and Operations at NLR
Opinion

Academic Insight: Testing to help stop runway overruns

1st April 20254 Mins Read
NDT

Q&A: Daniel Richard, Solutions Development Expert, Eddyfi Technologies

3rd March 202514 Mins Read
Latest Posts

Boom picks Colorado for Symphony engine testing

8th May 2025

T-7A Red Hawk completes successful Escape System Sled Test

8th May 2025

Autonomous Black Hawk helicopter tested for firefighting

7th May 2025
Supplier Spotlights
Our Social Channels
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Getting in Touch
  • Subscribe To Magazine
  • Contact Us
  • Meet the Team
  • Media Pack
Related Topics
  • Aircraft Interiors
  • Business Jet Interiors
FREE WEEKLY NEWS EMAIL!

Get the 'best of the week' from this website direct to your inbox every Wednesday

© 2023 Mark Allen Group Ltd | All Rights Reserved
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.