Digital Twin Flight Simulator (AGAST)

Status: In Progress (prototype functional)
Priority: Medium
Dependencies: None (standalone hardware)
Organization: Civil Air Patrol, California Wing Group 8


Summary

The Advanced General Aviation Systems Trainer (AGAST) is a high-fidelity Cessna 172SP G1000 flight simulator built for Civil Air Patrol cadet pilot training. It provides a 53+ hour structured curriculum designed to reduce flight training costs and accelerate the path to Private Pilot certification.

The Hardware

  • Displays: 3x 55″ monitors providing 240-degree field of view
  • Controls: Force-feedback yoke, throttle quadrant, rudder pedals
  • Avionics: Full G1000 glass cockpit replication
  • Scenery: Photo-realistic terrain generation
  • ATC: PilotEdge integration for live air traffic control practice

Training Program

Phase 1: Orientation (8 hours)

Basic cockpit procedures, G1000 familiarization, taxi, takeoff, and landing patterns

Phase 2: CAT Rating Program (26 hours)

11 structured flights with written exams. Covers:
– Slow flight, stalls, steep turns
– Ground reference maneuvers
– Pattern work and landings
– Emergency procedures

Phase 3: Cross-Country Navigation (14 hours)

VOR/GPS navigation, flight planning, fuel management, diversion procedures

Phase 4: Emergency & Instruments (5 hours)

Engine failure procedures, partial panel flying, basic instrument approaches

Cost Advantage

The simulation curriculum saves an estimated 20 hours of actual flight time:
20 hours × $120/hour = $2,400 saved per student
– Cadets starting at age 15 can complete Private Pilot certification in approximately 40 total flight hours (vs. 60+ national average)

Educational Philosophy

Based on FAA “Laws of Learning”:
Primacy — first exposure in a safe, repeatable environment
Exercise — unlimited practice without aircraft availability constraints
Effect — immediate feedback without safety consequences
Intensity — realistic scenarios that engage the student
Readiness — students prepare for flight lessons in advance

Where Aviation Meets Cyber

This project bridges both sides of CyberFlight:
– The simulator runs on PC hardware managed by the same infrastructure skills used in the CyberLab
– Training data and curriculum are documented using the same tools (MkDocs, version control)
– The project demonstrates that technology amplifies learning in every domain


This project is part of Civil Air Patrol’s mission to develop the next generation of pilots.

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