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Can a plane land automatically? How often does the autopilot land?

Yes a plane can land by itself using a system that is often referred to as “autoland”. The pilots can program the auto pilot to carry out the landing automatically whilst the pilots monitor the aircraft. However there are limitations to when the autoland system can be used.

The Boeing 737 (the world’s most successful airliner) is limited to a maximum crosswind of 25kts (15kts for many airlines) when carrying out an automatic landing (Category 3 / CAT III approach). The autopilot is usually used to land in low visibility conditions when there are typically little or no winds (fog will seldom form if it’s very windy!). As soon as the wind picks up, the average pilot is far better at coping with the conditions than the auto pilot.

Automatic landings probably account for less then 3% of all landings on commercial flights. Many pilots actually think it’s much easier to land the aircraft manually, as monitoring the auto pilot in the autoland stage of flight is itself very demanding with a very high level of vigilance required at all stages.

Automatic landings require a high level of automation monitoring that needs retraining every six months for professional pilots. Autolands can only be performed under strict conditions that require the certification of both the aircraft (often downgraded to no autoland capability due to technical issues), both of the pilots and the airport itself.

The pilots are still required to configure the aircraft and control it’s speed. Any number of relatively minor technical issues can compromise many fail-passive auto land systems, requiring a missed approach to be carried out and then a possible diversion to an airport which is clear of fog or low cloud.

Can a plane take off automatically?

No.

To dispel the myth; the vast majority of commercial aircraft (including all Boeing’s and Airbus’s) have no automatic take-off capability – all take offs must be completed manually by the pilots with the auto pilot usually engaged at around 1,000 ft above aerodrome level.

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