An airplane has, for the first time, automatically landed itself after an in-flight emergency, according to the system’s manufacturer.

Two people emerged unscathed from the Beechcraft Super King Air 200 after it stopped on the runway at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport near Denver, according to video posted by emergency responders.

The twin-engine turboprop landed under the control of Garmin’s Autoland system, which the company says is now installed on about 1,700 airplanes. “This was the first use of Autoland from start-to-finish in an actual emergency,” Garmin said in a statement.

  • brygphilomena@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 hours ago

    If it finds an airport with an ILS runway, and it has even remotely up to date aviation charts with minimum altitudes what obstructions does it need to avoid?

    Uncontrolled airports probably aren’t where this system is programmed to fly into in an emergency. Not only would that be more difficult to program, but I suspect there wouldn’t be emergency crews to assist with whatever the emergency was either.