Ab-Initio Flight Schools
Operational uptime is part of the design. So is the software update cycle.
per year in unrealised training revenue from 10 lost hours/week
Hardware built for high-duty training schedules. Software update cycle owned in-house. QTG qualification without an external technician.
Discuss Your RequirementsCommon challenges in ab-initio simulation operations.
Hardware designed for demonstration rather than continuous training tends to wear faster than expected under daily student throughput. Fidelity drifts gradually, and the gap between what students train on and what they will fly becomes harder to manage.
When software is maintained externally, update cycles follow someone else's roadmap. Regulatory changes, new compliance tools, and instructor workflow improvements wait on a queue that isn't yours to set.
When qualification support depends on a third party's schedule, the time between a fault and returning to full training credit is longer than it needs to be. Each re-qualification event involves external coordination.
Operational hardware. Standalone software. Certification in-house.
Three layers. Software, hardware, and electronics. Built together and maintained by one team.
Hardware built for repeated daily training use. Uptime becomes predictable
EQTG built in. QTG runner removes external technician dependency
Update cycle owned by VOA. No vendor waiting time for compliance
GCTJ320 software standalone. No hardware purchase required to start
Management App: one operator runs the simulator remotely