All of the "autoland" systems I've dealt with in the military were for normal day/average conditions/normal systems functions. When Crosswinds were out of limits - the human pilot had to fly it. When the engine failed, the human pilot had to fly it, when certain other systems didn't work like GPS jamming, certain flight control malfunctions, etc were present - it would kick off and say good luck.
Jets can auto-land on a carrier air night and in weather, but it isn’t optimizing choices, it is single focus. Not AI either, just a number crunching coupled system with the “target” already designated. What I’ve heard second (third?) hand is the original automated carrier landing system was too precise and they had to introduce deliberate error such that hooks wouldn’t wear out a hole in the deck… would love to know the veracity of that. Think of it similar to cat II/III ILS capable of zero/zero but needing that pilot interaction to engage and confirm. Unlike what we would ask an AI to do. Using the system was extremely rare, it took a ballsy pilot to actually engage it.
I watched the carrier suitability team once, they did lots of these coupled passes. On the ship from which I was observing, there was an issue that the “glide slope” curved low then flattened out. They would audible what they were seeing on the radio open mic, “one ball high, on, on, half low, one low, two low, red ball, red ball, two low, one low” translating to “a little high, on, on, a little low, low, Low, LOW, LOW, low flattening, low ‘climbing’” they said it all calm and collected, no thank you. You can have that. Calm and collected letting it ride while staring the dragon in the eye. The catapult was even worse, kept shooting off progressively lowering the umpf relative to aircraft launch weight, went from jets springing up to them flying out flat a bit before climbing to sinking a moment before climbing. On the go end, they’d read the altitude at which they bottomed out. They cried uncle well after what I would accept. Letting it settle down to thirty feet. No thank you, you can have that. Granted, the go is strictly aircraft trim, power, and catapult force so not the same as the auto-land.
Outside of the carrier suitability test team, only time I’ve witnessed the autoland were clear calm full moon nights. Why night? Because those are straight-ins. I’ve done it twice to the field to prove I knew the system, never did it to the boat myself. You can question my courage now. I’m ok with it.
They did manage to reduce the curve on that particular boat, but it was never straight. You’d definitely see an opening between ICLS and ACLS that would close back up as you got closer. Fresnel agreed with the ICLS. Yet ACLS used manually not coupled is the preferred system. Probably because ACLS is the preferred on all the other boats. ACLS is the system to which you’d couple for that auto-land. With that boat, I used the ICLS. ICLS is just like civilian ILS but different frequencies. ACLS is actually like a PAR but with the controller cut out. Boat sends a radar out, gets the return, computer processes it, sends a radio signal out telling the jet where it is. From a pilot perspective, however, it is also an ILS. Coupled it is optimizing, performing tighter than any human could, but it isn’t making larger decisions.