Technology

Honeywell’s IntuVue RDR-7000 radar system awarded FAA approval

With the installation of RDR-7000 smaller aircraft in regional and business aviation segments and commercial helicopters will be able to detect turbulence upto 60 nautical miles ahead
With the installation of RDR-7000 smaller aircraft in regional and business aviation segments and commercial helicopters will be able to detect turbulence upto 60 nautical miles ahead

17 July 2020: IntuVue RDR-7000, the most recent addition to Honeywell’s family of weather radar products and an upgraded version of RDR-4000 recently received a Technical Standard Order from the Federal Aviation Administration, making it official for commercial use. Currently Honeywell is working to complete supplemental type certificates (STCs) for 15 different platforms to install the RDR-7000 on customer aircraft by the end of 2020.

With the installation of RDR-7000 smaller aircraft in regional and business aviation segments and commercial helicopters will be able to detect turbulence upto 60 nautical miles ahead. The 3D radar is fully automated, scanning from zero up to 60,000 feet, and up to 320 nautical miles in front of the aircraft. Additionally, it can predict wind shear up to five nautical miles ahead and the presence of hail and lightning up to 160 nautical miles in front of the aircraft with up to 93 per cent accuracy.

“Larger business and passenger jets have benefitted from IntuVue for years, and soon those same capabilities will be available on many more platforms,” said Mike Ingram, vice president, Avionics, Honeywell Aerospace. “Pilots of these smaller aircraft will have the same 3D capabilities, full automation and predictive weather insights to help them make critical decisions to navigate weather ahead of and around the aircraft.”

Since the last decade Honeywell’s IntuVue RDR-4000 weather radar has been giving the pilots additional insight into storms, allowing them to see a fuller, clearer picture of weather ahead. The RDR-7000 is available for aircraft models including the Dassault Falcon 900C/EX/LX, Bombardier’s Global 5000/Express, Cessna’s Citation X and several other Citation models, as well as Learjet 40 and 45 aircraft.

Flight testing and production of the RDR-7000 are currently underway, and initial deliveries to customers are expected to begin in the third quarter of this year.