7th Bomb Wing
DYESS AIR FORCE BASE, Texas – When Air
Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton A. Schwartz says every airman is an innovator,
he’s talking about airmen like Air Force Capt. Kyle Alderman.
The young C-130 pilot’s pet project has
become the Air Force standard.
Alderman consolidated multiple map
displays -- including killbox keypads, satellite and drop zone imagery and
probability ellipses -- into one heads-up digital map, giving C-130J Hercules
aircrews one-look situational awareness and enhanced digital map capabilities.
"The J-model already had the
capability to display map information; however, when we would operate in
Afghanistan or in large-scale exercises, there was so much tactical
information, we needed multiple maps and displays," Alderman said.
"It was very task-saturating for pilots to sort through several items
while still trying to operate the aircraft, especially at night or in hostile
environments."
Alderman noticed the issue in early 2010
while attending C-130J school at Little Rock Air Force Base, Ark., and began
researching and educating himself on the programming the aircraft would need to
make his "digi-map" possible. He found some geospatial software and
figured out that he could build his own map that the plane could read while
incorporating the several displays into one consolidated moving map.
"Once I was able to create the
format I needed, I got it on the plane, saw that it worked, proved it was
possible and then tried to get it approved through the Air Force," he
said.
Shortly after putting the finishing
touches on his project, Alderman deployed and decided to take the new software
with him.
"I showed my deployed commander
that we can give our pilots the capability to display this information in a
consolidated format," he said. "He loved it and pushed it up the
chain of command, which exponentially increased the process."
After the new software was tested on
aircraft and proven effective in January 2011, Alderman's innovative project
was flown for the first time during combat operations that summer.
Alderman said he just wanted to
contribute any way he could to the mission.
"If I can save one brain byte and
let the pilots focus on something else during their mission because they could
see the information quickly on the digital map, it was well worth the time
spent trying to get it designed and approved," he said.
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