The air force will complete the installation of a simulator system for the C-130H transport aircraft next year in an attempt to enhance the flight safety of the plane, defense sources said yesterday.
The C-130H simulator system will cost NT$1 billion. The construction process takes a total of four years, and began in 2000.
The system, to be placed at an air base in Pingtung, is expected to enhance the flight safety of the C-130H fleet by providing trainees with simulated emergency and unusual flight conditions.
It is also expected to greatly reduce the costs that the air force spends on training pilots for the C-130Hs.
In the past, the air force had to send pilots to the US for the C-130H training on a yearly basis. The US training cost the air force tens of millions of NT dollars each year. The air force bought in the C-130H in 1986 to replace the aging C-119 aircraft. The air force now has around 20 C-130Hs.
C-130Hs' safety records show that there has been only one plane crash over the past 16 years. On Oct. 10, 1997, the No. 1310 C-130H crashed to the ground in its second attempt to land at Taipei's Sungshan airport. Five crew members were killed as a result.
Although it might be a little late to introduce a simulator system for the C-130Hs, military analyst Chang Li-teh (
"Before the simulator system was an option, C-130H pilots did not have the chance to experience what it would be like to fly under emergency and unusual conditions on a regular basis," he said.
Meanwhile, the air force also has plans to build a simulator system for the F-5E, a project scheduled to be completed in two years which will begin next year.
The F-5E simulator construction project will cost NT$47 million, much less than the C-130H equivalent. It will be developed by the Chunshan Institute of Science and Technology (CSIST) of the military.
The F-5E simulator, to be installed at an air base in Taitung, is aimed at training F-5E pilots' air-to-surface attack capabilities.
The F-5E, which has been sidelined since the operation of new fighter planes such as the F-16 A/B, is not to be retired until 2010.
The simulator construction project is only part of the effort to extend the service of the F-5E.
The air force launched a radar upgrade project at the beginning of this year for the F-5E at a cost of NT$500 million.
Costa Rica sent a group of intelligence officials to Taiwan for a short-term training program, the first time the Central American country has done so since the countries ended official diplomatic relations in 2007, a Costa Rican media outlet reported last week. Five officials from the Costa Rican Directorate of Intelligence and Security last month spent 23 days in Taipei undergoing a series of training sessions focused on national security, La Nacion reported on Friday, quoting unnamed sources. The Costa Rican government has not confirmed the report. The Chinese embassy in Costa Rica protested the news, saying in a statement issued the same
Taiwan’s Liu Ming-i, right, who also goes by the name Ray Liu, poses with a Chinese Taipei flag after winning the gold medal in the men’s physique 170cm competition at the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation Asian Championship in Ajman, United Arab Emirates, yesterday.
Temperatures in New Taipei City’s Sindian District (新店) climbed past 37°C yesterday, as the Central Weather Administration (CWA) issued heat alerts for 16 municipalities, warning the public of intense heat expected across Taiwan. The hottest location in Taiwan was in Sindian, where the mercury reached 37.5°C at about 2pm, according to CWA data. Taipei’s Shilin District (士林) recorded a temperature of 37.4°C at noon, Taitung County’s Jinfeng Township (金峰) at 12:50 pm logged a temperature of 37.4°C and Miaoli County’s Toufen Township (頭份) reached 36.7°C at 11:40am, the CWA said. The weather agency yesterday issued a yellow level information notice for Taipei, New
A year-long renovation of Taipei’s Bangka Park (艋舺公園) began yesterday, as city workers fenced off the site and cleared out belongings left by homeless residents who had been living there. Despite protests from displaced residents, a city official defended the government’s relocation efforts, saying transitional housing has been offered. The renovation of the park in Taipei’s Wanhua District (萬華), near Longshan Temple (龍山寺), began at 9am yesterday, as about 20 homeless people packed their belongings and left after being asked to move by city personnel. Among them was a 90-year-old woman surnamed Wang (王), who last week said that she had no plans