You will also be able to experience a little vertigo in CAMI’s spatial disorientation simulator. After all is done, you will be able to leave with an endorsement for 14 CFR Part 61.31 (g)(1).
For a class beginning Friday, May 18, 2012, at 8:30 am and a chamber session Friday afternoon select SW1944233 below.
http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event_details.aspx?eid=44233&caller=/SPANS/events/ModifyEventList.aspx
For a class beginning Friday, May 18, 2012, at 1:00 pm and a chamber session Saturday, May, 19, 2012, morning select SW1944239 below.
http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event_details.aspx?eid=44239&caller=/SPANS/events/ModifyEventList.aspx
For a class beginning Saturday, May 19, 2012, at 8:30 am and a chamber session Saturday afternoon select SW1944240 below.
http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event_details.aspx?eid=44240&caller=/SPANS/events/ModifyEventList.aspx For a class beginning Saturday, May 19, 2012, at 1:00 pm and a chamber session Sunday, May 20, 2012, morning select SW194421 below.
http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event_details.aspx?eid=44241&caller=/SPANS/events/ModifyEventList.aspx
For a class beginning Sunday, May 20, 2012, at 8:30 am and a chamber session Sunday afternoon select SW1944246 below.
http://www.faasafety.gov/SPANS/event_details.aspx?eid=44246&caller=/SPANS/events/ModifyEventList.aspx
A little about the portable altitude training system and the spatial disorientation simulator. The Portable Reduced Oxygen Training Enclosure (PROTE) is a
portable altitude training system that simulates altitude by reducing the oxygen percentage of the air. Advances in technology have yielded a new generation of commercially available training devices capable of producing hypoxic environments at ground level (normobaric) by altering the fraction of ambient oxygen, thus avoiding some of the risk factors associated with altitude chamber training.
The system’s operational control is a microprocessor that monitors two oxygen sensors, a carbon dioxide sensor, and an atmospheric pressure sensor. It uses this information to calculate the simulated altitude and, in turn, to control nitrogen-concentrating air units, CO
2 scrubbers, and vents (as needed) to maintain the enclosure at the desired simulated altitude setting. While it is based at CAMI, the PROTE can be taken to locations wherever needed for your personal hypoxia experience.
The GYRO is a device that provides 360-degree continuous yaw motion as well as + or - 15 degree pitch and 30 degree roll which, in conjunction with a computerized imaging system, results in a realistic simulation of flight. The GYRO provides civil aviation pilots, aviation medical examiners, and FAA flight crews with the opportunity to experience vestibular and visual illusions (spatial disorientation) that occur during IFR conditions in an inherently safe environment. The programmed flight in the GYRO does not require an instructor - only an external safety observer. The pilot receives a 2-min orientation and then takes the controls. The 6-min. flight progresses from VFR, with "out-the-window" scenes on a CRT, to IFR conditions.