Southwest Airways has added a brand new cockpit security instrument to most of its fleet that would stop the sorts of shut runway calls which have raised issues in recent times.

The Honeywell-built “SmartLanding” and “SmartRunway” software program will give verbal warnings and textual content alerts to pilots when they’re about to make use of the incorrect runways for taxiing, take-off or touchdown. It additionally indicators when planes are shifting too quick or on the incorrect altitude, in keeping with a information launch from the North Carolina-based firm.

The system operates along with current security measures utilized by business plane.

“It is a really powerful tool, we believe, to add more barriers to potentially bad outcomes,” Southwest chief working officer Andrew Watterson informed The Wall Road Journal.

Watterson informed the Journal that the airline determined so as to add the Honeywell alerts as half of a bigger effort to deal with rising security dangers.

“Safety is at the heart of everything we do at Southwest,” he mentioned in a information launch from Honeywell.

A Southwest flight practically took off from a taxiway as a substitute of a runway in Orlando, Fla., in March earlier than an air visitors controller intervened.

Months earlier, a airplane operated by an American Airways regional service landed on the incorrect runway in Chicago, however nobody was harmed.