Why Your Backup System Isn’t as Reliable as You Think

In modern business aircraft, redundancy is built into nearly every system. Multiple displays, layered avionics, and backup pathways keep things running when something fails. But there is one component that quietly breaks this pattern: the standby indicator.

Unlike primary flight displays, which rely on multiple layers of redundancy, most aircraft have just one standby instrument. If that instrument fails, the aircraft typically cannot dispatch. It’s a small component with an outsized impact on reliability. For many operators today, this is becoming increasingly common.

Aircraft equipped with early-generation electronic flight instrument systems (EFIS) depend on independent standby indicators for critical flight data during a system failure. Historically, these have been electromechanical instruments. While these instruments were simple, reliable, and long-lasting, they were quite limited in capability. 

In many cases, OEM support has diminished or disappeared. Operators now hunt for used units or face high costs to replace outdated technology. At the same time, standby instruments must meet recurring certification requirements, often every two years. Older systems fail these inspections more and more frequently. At this point, replacement isn’t optional.

New options have emerged in recent years. Companies like Garmin and Mid-Continent Instruments now offer modern, self-contained standby solutions. These systems cost less and accomplish more than the units they replace.

Their differences largely come down to philosophy and form factor. The GI 275 uses a round display that fits a standard instrument hole with the flexibility to show everything from attitude to moving maps. The SAM takes a more traditional approach. It uses a rectangular layout with dedicated attitude and altitude displays, replacing multiple legacy instruments at once. Both approaches solve the same core problem: replacing unsupported systems with modern, maintainable technology.

Some operators go even further. Instead of replacing a single unit, they install dual standby displays. This restores compliance and adds redundancy. That was not practical or cost-effective when these aircraft were originally built. It’s a specific upgrade that both solves a problem and improves capability.

Incorporating a replacement into a scheduled maintenance event can help avoid unplanned downtime, reduce installation costs, and eliminate the scramble to source obsolete parts. As more aircraft reach the point of obsolescence with each passing day, it’s becoming clear: this ‘backup’ system truly deserves a more proactive approach. 

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