MOZA Expands Flight Simulation Line with New Displays, Avionics Panels and Cockpit Hardware


MOZA is making a major push into the home cockpit market with a new collection of flight simulation displays, avionics panels and modular cockpit controls aimed at airline, general aviation and military pilots.




The expanded lineup moves MOZA beyond its force-feedback yokes, flight sticks, throttles and pedals. It now includes Airbus- and Boeing-inspired flight management computers, an Airbus-style autopilot panel, a G1000-style avionics display and a modular tactical cockpit system.




MOZA officially announced the expanded product family on July 8, following demonstrations of the equipment during FlightSimExpo 2026 in Saint Paul, Minnesota.




Building a Complete Flight Deck



The new lineup includes five primary product families:





  • MA3F Electronic Flight Control Modules




  • MA3F Flight Computer Display




  • MB7F Flight Computer Display




  • MGX1000 Instrument Panel




  • FMP18 Panel Bundle





Together, the devices are intended to provide physical controls for tasks that are normally completed by clicking instruments and buttons on a computer screen.




For flight simmers building dedicated cockpits, the collection offers hardware for several different types of flying rather than concentrating exclusively on one aircraft or simulator niche.




MA3F Brings Airbus-Style Autopilot Controls to the Desktop



The MA3F Electronic Flight Control Module is modeled after the flight-control and EFIS panels found in modern Airbus cockpits.




The system includes dedicated controls for managing heading, altitude, speed and other autopilot functions. MOZA has also developed a dual-rail push-pull mechanism intended to reproduce the feel of Airbus-style knobs, where pilots push or pull a selector to engage managed or selected modes.




The center flight-control unit is priced at $149, while the separate left and right EFIS modules are priced at $99 each. Pilots can purchase only the center unit or gradually expand to a complete three-panel setup.




Dedicated Flight Computers for Airbus and Boeing Pilots



MOZA is also offering two dedicated flight-management computer displays.




The MA3F Flight Computer Display is designed around an Airbus-style MCDU workflow, while the MB7F Flight Computer Display provides a Boeing-style CDU layout.




Both units feature high-resolution IPS displays, metal front panels, illuminated controls and physical keypads. They are designed to synchronize with supported aircraft inside the simulator, allowing pilots to enter flight plans, configure aircraft performance and manage navigation without relying on an on-screen pop-out window.




Both flight computer displays are priced at $199.




MGX1000 Targets General Aviation Pilots



General aviation pilots are not being left at the gate.




The new MGX1000 Instrument Panel recreates the layout and operation of a modern G1000-style glass cockpit. It features a full-size 10.4-inch IPS display, rotary controls and dedicated avionics buttons.




One of its most notable features is DisplayLink connectivity. Instead of requiring another HDMI or DisplayPort connection from the computer's graphics card, the panel can receive video through USB.




That could make it easier to install multiple avionics displays without turning the back of the computer into a spaghetti convention.




MOZA says multiple MGX1000 units can be combined to create primary and multifunction display arrangements. The panel is priced at $449.




FMP18 Takes Aim at Military Simulation



For military flight simulation enthusiasts, MOZA has introduced the FMP18 Panel Bundle.




Inspired by the front cockpit of the F/A-18 Hornet, the system combines multiple displays, fighter-style controls and modular panel sections. Magnetic, swappable bezels use Pogo Pin connections, allowing users to change portions of the layout without complicated rewiring.




The complete FMP18 bundle is priced at $849, making it the most expensive product in the newly expanded lineup.




Simplifying the Home Cockpit



A major theme of MOZA's expansion is reducing the complexity traditionally involved in building a home simulator.




Cockpit displays often require multiple video cables, USB connections, power supplies and software utilities. MOZA is using DisplayLink technology across parts of its new ecosystem so additional displays can connect through USB without consuming another graphics-card output.




The devices are also managed through MOZA Cockpit and MOZA Pit House software, providing centralized control for device settings, lighting, profiles and simulator telemetry.




Competition Continues to Grow



The flight simulation hardware market has expanded significantly in recent years, with manufacturers offering increasingly specialized equipment for Airbus, Boeing, general aviation and military aircraft.




MOZA's latest products place the company in direct competition with established cockpit-hardware manufacturers while offering customers the ability to combine force-feedback flight controls, avionics displays and aircraft panels within one software ecosystem.




For home cockpit builders, that growing competition could mean more choices, easier installation and potentially more competitive pricing.




It may also mean explaining to family members why the computer room now contains most of an Airbus cockpit.




Sky Blue Radio will continue following MOZA's flight simulation lineup as additional compatibility information, software updates and shipping details become available.



via: https://news.skyblueradio.com/2026/07/15/moza-expands-flight-simulation-line-with-new-displays-avionics-panels-and-cockpit-hardware/


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