Definition
The traditional cockpit instrument arrangement in which flight information is displayed on individual mechanical gauges, each driven by its own sensor or system, with moving needles, pointers, and rotating dials indicating values such as airspeed, altitude, attitude, heading, vertical speed, and turn coordination.
Plain English
The older style of cockpit, where each piece of flight information has its own round dial with a needle, instead of being shown on a computer screen.
Context Anchor
Seen when comparing traditional round-gauge instrument flying with instrument flying using an electronic flight display.
Derivation
Analog' comes from the Greek 'analogos,' meaning 'proportional.' These instruments are called analog because the position of the needle is directly proportional to the value being measured — a physical, continuous representation rather than a digital number on a screen.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots transitioning from older aircraft to modern glass cockpits must understand both systems to maintain situational awareness during instrument flight.
Analogy
Like a wristwatch with hands and a dial, compared to a digital watch that shows numbers on a screen. Both tell the time, but you read them differently.
Intuition Check
Conventional does not mean “better” or “official” here; it means the traditional setup. Analog does not mean vague or approximate here; it means the information is shown by a moving pointer, dial, or similar display instead of primarily as a screen presentation.
Example Sentence 1
The Cessna 172 he trained in had conventional analog instrumentation, with six round gauges arranged in the standard T-pattern.
Example Sentence 2
Training on conventional analog instrumentation remains essential because many aircraft still rely on these mechanical instruments.