Posted on 02/16/2006 2:01:08 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham
Airbus A380 test wing breaks just below ultimate load target
The wing of the Airbus A380 static test specimen suffered a structural failure below the ultimate load target during trials in Toulouse earlier this week, but Airbus is confident that it will not need to modify production aircraft.
The airframer has been running load trials on a full scale A380 static test specimen in Toulouse since late 2004 (pictured below). After completing limit load tests (ie the maximum loads likely to experienced by the aircraft during normal service), progressively greater loads have been applied to the specimen towards the required 1.5 times the limit load. Engineers develop finite element models (FEM) to calculate the load requirements.
The failure occurred last Tuesday between 1.45 and 1.5 times the limit load at a point between the inboard and outboard engines, says Airbus executive vice president engineering Alain Garcia. This is within 3% of the 1.5 target, which shows the accuracy of the FEM. He adds that the ultimate load trial is an extremely severe test during which a wing deflection of 7.4m (24.3ft) was recorded.
The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) says that the maximum loading conditions are defined in the A380 certification basis. The aircraft structure is analysed and tested to demonstrate that the structure can withstand the maximum loads, including a factor of safety of 1.5. This process is ongoing and will be completed before type certification.
However Garcia says that the failure of the wing below the 1.5 target will require essentially no modifications to production aircraft: This static test airframe has the first set of wings built, and we have refined the structural design for subsequent aircraft due to increased weights etc. We will use this calibration of the FEM to prove the adequacy of the structure on production aircraft.
EASA says that it is aware of the structural failure but "cannot make a statement about the specific failure as it has not been officially briefed by Airbus on what the cause was, and the certification process is ongoing".
Garcia says that the FEM calculations had already established that the A380s wing had no margin at ultimate load. We had a weight saving programme and played the game to achieve ultimate load. However in earlier briefings, Airbus structural engineers had stated that it planned to carry out a residual strength and margin research test in 2006 after completing ultimate load trials.
The results gleaned from the static testing will be extrapolated for the future aircraft developments over the next 40 to 50 years says Garcia. It is normal to refine and strengthen the structure of new heavier or longer range variants, he says.
MAX KINGSLEY-JONES / LONDON
If it ain't Boeing, I'm not 'goin!
You know what they say: "If it ain't Boeing, I ain't going."
Nineteen seconds.
I hate you.
I'll bet he pulled 'em off of flies as a kid.
< ]B^)
Great minds think alike. :)
I always thought they did this kind of stuff before they built the friggin thing and flew one.
Maybe they're just going to have really athletic passengers.
Thank you for that clarification. Now I won't be flying them under *any* circumstances. I guess they are screwed. That's too bad.
As I said, it's not like they were going to sell any/much of those anyway, but this, pretty much puts the nail in that (flying) coffin.
Where we get a copy of the video?
I'd hate to eat a MILSPEC chicken.
Especially while sitting in a cockpit.
Thanks. I knew there were regs that applied here.
"Aren't these the people who's tail fin broke off in NYC in 2001 killing like 280 people???"
Yeah, on account of the pilot used the rudder.
If computers were designed with these sorts of margins, well, let's just say that there would be a whole lot less cussin' goin' on!
Are you aware of the story that when British Aerospace heard that Boeing was testing engine/bird crashes with a specially designed air-cannon shooting chickens into a running jet engine, they requested copies of the design. Boeing dutifully sent them plans.
British Aerospace evidently called Boeing up about six months later and said they were having horrendus problems with their test program. Boeing flew over an engineer to help. After hearing that the cannon was evidently too powerful because the tests were destroying the impeller and fan blades in the engines, the Boeing guy asked to witness a test.
Word has it that he saw the problem right away; he commented "aah...we thaw the chickens first", and caught a Boeing flight back to Seattle.
I heard that story years ago - do you know if it is true. True or not - its a great story!!! LOL
21st Century Jet: The Building of the 777
Both links are to the same video, just different sources. This show was originally a PBS series about building the 777.
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