Boeing 777X set to become world’s first flying iPad

US plane maker chooses Rockwell Collins to provide the first commercial aircraft touch-screen technology for pilots of its 777X when it debuts in 2020.

Boeing's 777-9X, the largest of the aerospace company's new family of 777X jetliners.  Boeing has chosen Rockwell Collins to develop the world's first touch-screen technology for commercial pilots on its new 777X. Courtesy / Boeing
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Pilots on Boeing’s 777X jetliner will soon be able to use a swipe of the finger to plot a course around a threatening storm or check an engine’s maintenance history.

The Chicago-based plane maker has chosen Rockwell Collins to provide the first touchscreen monitors to be installed in a commercial aircraft. When Boeing’s largest twin-engine plane debuts in 2020, pilots will hone in on flight data on the jet’s five displays with a pinch-to-zoom motion – much like Apple’s iPad has brought a world of information to consumers.

Rockwell Collins is counting on the screens and the data flowing through them to boost sales and improve pilots’ situational awareness as modern planes turn into flying file servers. The touchscreens are also designed to make flight displays more intuitive while shaving weight from airframes.

“Airplanes were one of the last places that were disconnected, but no longer,” said the Rockwell Collins chief executive Kelly Ortberg. “It’s happening to all of us in the mobile world. You could see it was going to sweep our world as well.”

Rockwell Collins stock has dropped 11 per cent this year through Tuesday as tepid business-jet sales and a slow rebound in US government spending held back earnings.

The aerospace manufacturer is counting on a late-decade pay-off from contract wins to install large flight displays and other electronic systems on Boeing’s next-generation aircraft, from the 787 Dreamliner to the 737 Max. Honeywell International, Thales and Garmin are also competing for supremacy to bring new innovations to pilots’ fingertips.

They face a common rival in the iPad itself and ecosystems of developers catering to recreational pilots. ForeFlight, for example, has developed maps and “synthetic vision” to help to steer around hazardous terrain with a tap of an Apple or Android tablet hooked into a plane’s GPS and ADS-B tracking systems.

The new Rockwell Collins products are the culmination of a strategy plotted by then-chief executive Clay Jones and Mr Ortberg early last decade, when smartphones and tablets were in their infancy. Following a painful defence contract loss, the manufacturer adopted a flexible “open” architecture for its systems to win over customers such as Boeing. Its US$1.39 billion acquisition of Arinc in 2013, just 11 days after Mr Ortberg took the helm, was the company’s largest and provided new ways to pipe data into aeroplanes.

While Rockwell Collins is scouting smaller deals, Mr Ortberg is open to another bold move as he charts a course toward a world of smart planes and connected pilots.

“If another Arinc came along, I’d love to be in a position to do that,” he said. “We’re keeping our credit rating at investment grade so we have the financial capability to do that.”