PVI Trainer Enhances EW System Training for Mobility Aircrews

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The Pilot Vehicle Interface (PVI) Trainer can run on ordinary tablet computers to enhance existing electronic warfare (EW) instruction for the crews of U.S. air mobility aircraft. (Credit: Sean McNeil, GTRI)
The Pilot Vehicle Interface (PVI) Trainer can run on ordinary tablet computers to enhance existing electronic warfare (EW) instruction for the crews of U.S. air mobility aircraft (credit: Sean McNeil, GTRI).

November 19, 2024 | Originally published by Georgia Tech Research Institute on October 21, 2024

A new training system that can run on ordinary tablet computers is enhancing existing electronic warfare (EW) instruction for the crews of U.S. air mobility aircraft, including the C-130H, C-130J, and C-17 transports. Known as the Pilot Vehicle Interface (PVI) Trainer, the simulation system complements training missions in real aircraft, which can be expensive, and improves access to on-the-ground training.

EW system training is essential to maximizing the survivability of aircrew and aircraft operating in contested environments. Increasing the familiarity of mobility aircrews with these complex systems is a major focus of the Advanced Airlift Tactics Training Center (AATTC), which supports the development of EW systems training capabilities to complement in-classroom instruction, as well as the ability to be loaded onto desktop computers and tablet devices for use outside the classroom.

“There are training opportunities after in-classroom instruction that don’t require hands-on system training or training sorties to gain familiarity with the real equipment and its behaviors,” said Tom Glimmerveen, a senior research engineer at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), which developed PVI Trainer for the AATTC. “Using this inexpensive, computer-based system allows aircrews to become more familiar with EW systems before they fly in a real trainer, and it allows them to continue practicing after the training.”