Posted on 08/12/2019 6:20:55 AM PDT by robowombat
Navy Reverting DDGs Back to Physical Throttles, After Fleet Rejects Touchscreen Controls
By: Megan Eckstein August 9, 2019 10:46 AM
SAN DIEGO The Navy will begin reverting destroyers back to a physical throttle and traditional helm control system in the next 18 to 24 months, after the fleet overwhelmingly said they prefer mechanical controls to touchscreen systems in the aftermath of the fatal USS John S. McCain (DDG-56) collision.
The investigation into the collision showed that a touchscreen system that was complex and that sailors had been poorly trained to use contributed to a loss of control of the ship just before it crossed paths with a merchant ship in the Singapore Strait. After the Navy released a Comprehensive Review related to the McCain and the USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62) collisions, Naval Sea Systems Command conducted fleet surveys regarding some of the engineering recommendations, Program Executive Officer for Ships Rear Adm. Bill Galinis said.
When we started getting the feedback from the fleet from the Comprehensive Review effort it was SEA 21 (NAVSEAs surface ship lifecycle management organization) that kind of took the lead on doing some fleet surveys and whatnot it was really eye-opening. And it goes into the, in my mind, just because you can doesnt mean you should category. We really made the helm control system, specifically on the [DDG] 51 class, just overly complex, with the touch screens under glass and all this kind of stuff, Galinis said during a keynote speech at the American Society of Naval Engineers annual Fleet Maintenance and Modernization Symposium. So as part of that, we actually stood up an organization within Team Ships to get after bridge commonality.
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Galinis said that bridge design is something that shipbuilders have a lot of say in, as its not covered by any particular specification that the Navy requires builders to follow. As a result of innovation and a desire to incorporate new technology, we got away from the physical throttles, and that was probably the number-one feedback from the fleet they said, just give us the throttles that we can use.
Galinis told USNI News after his speech that were already in the contracting process, and its going to come on almost as a kit thats relatively easy to install. [NAVSEA] would do it its not something that the ship would do but it doesnt need to be done during a CNO availability, we think it could be done during a smaller one. Obviously, we have to work our way through that, but thats the vision.
NAVSEA spokeswoman Colleen ORourke told USNI News that the Navy is designing and planning to install physical throttles on all DDG-51 class ships with the Integrated Bridge and Navigation System (IBNS), the ship control console with the touch-screen throttle control. The first throttle installation is scheduled for summer of 2020, after the hardware and software changes have been developed and fully tested to ensure the new configuration is safe, effective, and has training in place. The first in-service ship planned to receive the install is DDG-61; the first new construction ship planned to receive the install is DDG-128. A contract award to support these efforts is planned for this fiscal year.
During a later panel, Galinis said that PEO Ships is also looking at variance in bridge designs and systems within ship classes primarily the LHA/LHD amphibious assault ships, and to a lesser extent the LPD-17 amphibious transport docks but he added that PEO Ships isnt trying to achieve fleet-wide commonality at this time.
Where we do have some variance (within ship classes) and what changes we should make to improve the functionality of standing bridge are the focus of this ongoing engineering effort, he said.
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Also during the panel, Navy chief engineer and NAVSEA deputy commander for ship design, integration and engineering Rear Adm. Lorin Selby said that the move to achieve greater commonality is not just limited to where helm control systems are installed in the bridge, but how functions appear on the screens of the control systems, and anything else that would contribute to confusion for a sailor moving from one ship to another within the same class.
When you look at a screen, where do you find heading? Is it in the same place, or do you have to hunt every time you go to a different screen? So the more commonality we can drive into these kind of human-machine interfaces, the better it is for the operator to quickly pick up what the situational awareness is, whatever aspect hes looking at, whether its helm control, radar pictures, whatever. So were trying to drive that, Selby said.
He added that NAVSEA meets once a month to talk about progress on any of the hundreds of recommendations that came out of the Comprehensive Review and the related Strategic Readiness Review that touch NAVSEA. That progress is reported up from NAVSEA to the vice chief of naval operations, who is overseeing monitoring progress implementing CR and SRR recommendations.
Some of the recommendations will require more substantive changes to address, such as the helm control system backfit effort. Others are much simpler but just require the thought by engineers to make sure ship operators have access to systems they need in an intuitive way.
Seaman Joseph Brown mans an older verison of helm controls on the bridge of USS Donald Cook (DDG-75) on July 25, 2019. US Navy Photo
John Pope, the executive director for the program executive office for command, control, communications, computers and intelligence (C4I), said the ships have a laptop in the bridge that runs the Automatic Identification System (AIS) receiver. Ship crews have, in the aftermath of the Fitzgerald and McCain collisions, complained that the laptops have a finicky connection to the ship via cables, and that they are located behind other gear and hard to access, and other issues that should be easy to address now that theres a discussion about simplifying the user experience in the bridge.
Were going back and relocating that whole configuration its easy to walk a laptop aboard, but how do you make sure that its being used right, configured correctly, and a sailor can rely on that? Pope said. So thats something we picked up out of the Comprehensive Review.
Best to go with tried and true interface.
Which is great, unless that something is a bunch of murderous hoodlums strung across the road, bent on stopping cars and killing occupants in mid-riot.
Why did anyone think this was a good idea in the first place?
How were they supposed to control the ship when the power went out? In my own service experience, this was not an unusual occurrence.
I would suggest that eating a Big Mac can also put your life at risk.
Plus dem Mac screens is all covered with billions of people`s
germs coz they NEVER CLEAN the screeens!
To me, this is a good example of a verified reason to go back to “a hands on Navy.”
Why one or the other? If one fails, there’s another option.
“Most new cars slam on brakes before hitting something. I say embrace technology and make it work for you. Ditching these systems is kind of nutty at this stage.”
In combat sometimes you want to hit something with your ship......
Also, if everything is electronically controlled in can be hacked. Who wants to see the American Navy’s ships sunk by being hacked and run aground?
I work in IT and over automization can be an issue and confusing, shitty, and nearly useless user interfaces abound.
Or when your fingers are wet with sweat, sea water or blood. Ever try to do the "slide-unlock" thing on your smartphone when your hands are sweaty? I've missed many a call, madly swiping at the slide thing, totally ignored by the touchscreen. I know that marine-rated touchscreens are more tolerant of moisture than the average smartphone, but when you want to be sure that a control input happens *now* there are better designs.
p
I don’t like the touchscreen on my car radio. Actually I think it’s a step back in automotive safety. Now I have to take my eyes off the road to see if I am pressing on the correct area on the screen. With knobs and buttons, I could just feel where my fingers needed to be to work the controls.
That would take all the fun out of things.
I don't like it on my iPad, and I love my iPad. And I hate it on any sort of security input system. Try putting in a string of 8-12 letters/numbers/symbols correctly on a touchscreen. Odds of an error on any touch is 1 in 10, so the odds of an error approach or exceed 100%.
Indeed. I have been in situations on the road where an “accident avoidance” system would have killed me.
Regarding touch-screen systems for throttle control: there is often so much valium (delay) programmed into the system to prevent “hunting” that your inputs get muddled by the program, and up becomes down.
I have seen computer programs fighting each other, one set of instructions trying to increase output while a second set of instructions is trying to decrease that output, on the same device.
Using touch screens as the sole control interface in the command & control system on a warship just seems downright dumb. Water damage, battle damage, drop your coffee...
Then, as others have mentioned, there are times you don’t want to have to take your eyes off whatever you are doing to alter your control settings. Touchscreens become a distraction rather than any sort of aid.
Maybe -- just maybe -- someone is beginning to take into account the principle of, "If it ain't broke -- don't 'fix' it"..
BTW, I haven't been able to determine if this helm/throttle (touchscreen) "fix" was implemented on the Fitzgerald. I didn't see it mentioned anywhere -- and, would still bet on "cockpit error due to panic reaction"...
Never conned anything larger than a cabin cruiser, but, to me, having the feel of the throttle levers in my hand is an element of control I definitely wouldn't want to relinquish. Can't imagine replacing that "hands-on" control with a stupid, zero feedback touch screen!
The navy is making the same mistake in the future. See Star Trek Next Generation documentries.... all touch screens : )
Oh man, I am with you.
Wtf, a ship that sleek and fast SHOULD have a cool throttle!
Ugh my new car has it and I despise it. Cant permanently disable it, either.
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