Landing Gear
Landing Gear
Landing Gear
INDEX
CHAPTER 1
1.1.1 1.1.2 INTRODUCTION EVOLUTION 3 3
CHAPTER 2
2.1 DIFFERENT TYPES OF LANDING GEARS 2.1.1 TRICYCLE LANDING GEAR 2.1.2 CONVENTIONAL LANDING GEAR 2.1.3 UNCONVENTIONAL LANDING GEAR 2.2 DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAIN AND NOSE LANDING GEAR 2.3 SHOCK STRUTS 2.3.1 TYPES OF SHOCK STRUTS 1. METERING PIN TYPE 2. METERING TUBE TYPE 3. NOSE GEAR STRUTS 4. DOUBLE-ACTING SHOCK ABSORBER 2.4 OPERATION OF SHOCK STRUTS 10 11 12 12 13 6 7 7 8 9 10
CHAPTER 3
3.1 HYDRAULIC SYSTEM FOR AIRCRAFT LANDING GEAR 3.2 LANDING GEAR EXTENSION AND RETRACTION 3.2.1 LANDING GEAR EXTENSION AND RETRACTING MECHANISMS 3.3 EMERGENCY SYSTEMS 15 16 15 15
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CHAPTER 4
4.1 BRAKING SYSTEM IN LANDING GEAR 4.2 DIFFERENT TYPES OF BRAKES AND THEIR EVOLUTION 4.2.1 CARBON AND BERYLLIUM BRAKES 4.2.2 AUTO-BRAKE AND BRAKE-BY-WIRE SYSTEM 4.3 DESCRIPTION OF A HYDRAULIC BRAKING SYSTEM 4.4 ADVANCED BRAKE CONTROL SYSTEM (ABCS) 4.5 PNEUMATIC BRAKING 4.6 DIFFERENTIAL BRAKING 18 19 20 21 21 22 18
CHAPTER 5
LUBRICANTS USED IN LANDING GEAR 23
24 25
26 26 27 27 28 28 29 29 29 30 31
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FIG.12 SHOCK STRUT WITH A METERING TUBE FIG. 13 SIMPLE NOSE GEAR STRUTS FIG. 14 DOUBLE-ACTING SHOCK ABSORBER FIG. 15 OPERATION OF SHOCK STRUT FIG. 16 OLEO-PNEUMATIC SHOCK STRUT TYPES FIG. 17 BASIC HYDRAULIC SYSTEM FIG. 18 THE HYDRAULIC LANDING GEAR SYSTEM INSIDE THE WHOLE AIRPLANE FIG.19. TYPICAL BRAKE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE LANDING GEAR FIG. 20 BERYLLIUM BRAKE FIG. 21 CARBON BRAKE FIG. 22 ESTIMATED NUMBER OF STOPS VS. KINETIC ENERGY PER POUND. FIG. 23 BRAKE MATERIALS: SPECIFIC STRENGTH VS. TEMPERATURE FIG. 24AUTO-BRAKE AND BRAKE-BY-WIRE SYSTEM FIG. 25 EMERGENCY HYDRAULIC BRAKING SYSTEM FIG. 26 PAIRED WHEEL HYDRAULIC BRAKING SYSTEM FIG. 27 INDIVIDUAL WHEEL HYDRAULIC BRAKE CONTROL SYSTEM TABULAR FORM TABLE 1 PROPERTIES OF DIFFERENT HEAT SINK MATERIALS
32 33 33 34 35 35
36
37 38 39
39
40 40 41 41 42
42
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CHAPTER 1
1.1 INTRODUCTION
The landing gear is that portion of the aircraft that supports the weight of the aircraft while it is on the ground. The landing gear contains components that are necessary for taking off and landing the aircraft safely. Some of these components are landing gear struts that absorb landing and taxiing shocks; brakes that are used to stop and, in some cases, steer the aircraft; nosewheel steering for steering the aircraft; and in some cases, nose catapult components that provide the aircraft with carrier deck takeoff capabilities. The landing gear is the principle support of the airplane when parked, taxiing, taking off, or when landing. The most common type of landing gear consists of wheels, but airplane0s can also be equipped with floats for water operations, or skis for landing on snow. [Figure 1-9] The landing gear consists of three wheelstwo main wheels and a third wheel positioned either at the front or rear of the airplane. Landing gear employing a rear mounted wheel is called conventional landing gear. Airplanes with conventional landing gear are sometimes referred to as tailwheel airplanes. When the third wheel is located on the nose, it is called a nosewheel, and the design is referred to as a tricycle gear. A steerable nosewheel or tailwheel permits the airplane to be controlled throughout all operations while on the ground.
1.2 EVOLUTION
The first wheeled landing gears appeared shortly after the Wright Brothers' maiden flight in December 1903. Santos-Dumont's "No. 14 bis" had a wheeled landing gear; this airplane made the first flight in Europe in October 1906. This was followed quickly by wheeled aircraft designed. Then came World War I, by which time the configurations had more or less settled down to tail wheel types, employing fairly rugged struts attached to the fuselage and landing gears that had some degree of shock absorption through the use of bungee cords wrapped around the axles, as illustrated in figure 1. The Sopwith Camel was shown in fig. 1(a), SE5 shown in fig. 1(b) and SPAD VIL shown in fig1. (c) Were typical World War I fighter/scout aircraft. Both the Camel and SPAD had axles that pivoted from the spreader bars, the main difference being in the location of the bungee that restrained the axle from moving. The Camel's bungees were at the extreme ends of the spreaders and permitted 4 in. of wheel travel. The SPAD's shock cords permitted
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34 in. of travel (depending on the model), but were located inboard of the gear support struts. In the 21 years between World Wars I and II, landing gear design developed as fast as airframe design. The latter changed from braced wood and fabric biplanes to aluminum alloy monoplanes and the landing gears became retractable, employing a variety of shockabsorbing systems. Increased shock absorption became necessary in order to accommodate the constantly increasing aircraft weights and sink speeds. Although the shock absorber stroke is not a function of aircraft weight, it was important to increase that stroke in order to lower the landing load factors and thereby minimize the structure weight influenced by the landing loads. Larger-section tires provided some of the desired shock absorption, but size limitations and relatively low (47%) efficiency prevented a major contribution from this source. Therefore, shock-absorbing support struts were devised. These ranged from rubber blocks and compression springs to leaf springs, oleo-pneumatic struts, and liquid springs. To decrease drag in flight some undercarriages retract into the wings and/or fuselage with wheels flush against the surface or concealed behind doors; this is called retractable gear. The earliest retractable landing gear is that used on the Bristol (England) Jupiter racing aircraft of the late 1920's. In the United States, Lockheed's Model 8D Altair, which first flew in 1930, had a fully retractable landing gear. The landing gear consists of two dual wheel main gears and one dual nose gear, each main gear is equipped with Disk brakes, anti skid protection and thermal tire deflators (fusible plugs).
The landing gear is positioned hydraulically as selected by the landing gear lever in the cockpit on the center instrument panel. Door and gear sequencing is automatic. Except for the nose gear, which is mechanically opened and closed by the movement of the gear, there is a door release handle in each main gear well for ground access.
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CHAPTER 2
2.1 DIFFERENT TYPES OF LANDING GEARS
Airplanes require landing gear for taxiing, takeoff, and landing. The earliest airplane Wright Flyers used skids as their landing gears. Soon, wheels were attached to the skids. Since that time, various arrangements have been used for wheels and structures to connect them to the airplane. Landing gears are generally categorized by the number of wheels and their pattern. Figure 2 illustrates the basic types. This terminology is rapidly gaining worldwide acceptance. For instance, the USAF/USN Enroute Supplements define the strength of 11 a given field as T-50/TT-100, indicating that the airfield is cleared to accept aircraft weighing 50,000 lb with a twin-wheel gear or 100,000 lb with a twin-tandem gear. There are also hybrid arrangements such as the 12-wheel arrangement used on the Soviet TU-144 supersonic transport depicted in the figure 3 and the track gears that were tested on the Fairchild Packet, Boeing B-50, and Convair B-36 the latter is illustrated in the figure 4. The objectives of the track gear were to reduce the weight and size attributable to the tires and to improve flotation by having a larger contact area. Track gears did have higher flotation by keeping the contact pressures as low as 30 psi, but there was no weight reduction. In fact, aircraft weight was increased by about 1.8% (1.78% on the Packet and 1.87% on the B-36). Maintainability and reliability were also degraded substantially because of the complicated mechanism (multiple shock absorbers in the track bogie), low bearing life, low belt life, and high spin-up loads. The Italian Bonmartini track gear was also tested successfully, but it too was heavier than a conventional gear. It used a pneumatic belt to encompass the two wheels, as shown in the figure 5. Today, there are three common types of landing gears namely conventional landing gear shown in figure 6(a), Tricycle landing gear shown in figure 6(b), and Unconventional Landing Gears as shown in figure 6(c).
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general aviation airplanes. The two main wheels are fastened to the fuselage by struts. Without a wheel at the nose of the plane, it easily pitches over if brakes are applied too soon. Because the tailwheel is castered free to move in any direction. The plane is very difficult to control when landing or taking off. The tailwheel configuration offers several advantages over the tricycle landing gear arrangement. Due its smaller size the tailwheel has less parasite drag than a nosewheel, allowing the conventional geared aircraft to cruise at a higher speed on the same power. Tail wheels are less expensive to buy and maintain than a nosewheel. Taildraggers are considered harder to land and take off (because the arrangement is unstable, that is, a small deviation from straight-line travel is naturally amplified by the greater drag of the mainwheel which has moved farther away from the plane's center of gravity due to the deviation), and usually require special pilot training. . The taildragger arrangement was common during the early propeller era, as it allows more room for propeller clearance. Landing a conventional geared aircraft can be accomplished in two ways. Normal landings are done by touching all three wheels down at the same time in a three-point landing. This method does allow the shortest landing distance but can be difficult to carry out in crosswinds. The alternative is the wheel landing. This requires the pilot to land the aircraft on the main wheels while maintaining the tail wheel in the air with elevator to keep the angle of attack low. Once the aircraft has slowed to a speed that can ensure control will not be lost, but above the speed at which rudder effectiveness is lost, then the tail wheel is lowered to the ground.
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Air cushion systems are another type of unconventional gear, which have been pioneered by Bell-Textron in the United States. The LA-4 was their first venture; it was a small aircraft shown in the below figure, that operated successfully on plowed ground, over tree stumps up to 6 in. high, over 3 ft wide ditches, on soft muddy ground, and over both sand and water. Further details of this and other systems, including the ACLS Buffalo, are also provided in later chapters. Most modern aircraft have tricycle undercarriages. Taildraggers are considered harder to land and take off (because the arrangement is unstable, that is, a small deviation from straight-line travel is naturally amplified by the greater drag of the mainwheel which has moved farther away from the plane's center of gravity due to the deviation), and usually require special pilot training. Sometimes a small tail wheel or skid is added to aircraft with tricycle undercarriage, in case of tail strikes during take-off. The Boeing727also had a retractable tail bumper. Some aircraft with retractable conventional landing gear have a fixed tailwheel, which generate minimal drag (since most of the airflow past the tailwheel has been blanketed by the fuselage) and even improve yaw stability in some cases.
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Most aircraft are equipped with steerable nose-wheels and do not require a separate self-contained shimmy damper. In such cases, the steering mechanism is hydraulically controlled and incorporates two spring-loaded hydraulic steering cylinders that, in addition to serving as a steering mechanism, automatically subdue shimmy and center the nosewheel. For more information concerning landing gear components (shock struts, shimmy dampers, power steering units, and brakes), you should refer to chapter 12 of this TRAMAN.
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The fluid passes through this orifice into the upper chamber during compression, and returns during extension of the strut. Most shock struts employ a metering pin similar to that shown in figure 11 to control the rate of fluid flow from the lower chamber into the upper chamber. During the compression stroke, the rate of fluid flow is not constant, but is controlled automatically by the variable shape of the metering pin as it passes through the orifice.
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The following are the specifications of the double-acting shock absorber shown in fig. 14 1. Landing gear attachment to airframe for cantilever strut arrangement centerline 2. Drag strut retraction actuator centerline 3. Axle centerline for twin-wheel tires and brakes
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4. Oil charge and bleed plug 5. Oil charging valve 6. Oil drain plug 7. Oil/air separator pistons 8. First-stage damping 9. Second-stage damping 10. Charge valve, first-stage nitrogen 11. Charge valve, second-stage nitrogen 12. Pressure gage 13. Brake hydraulic manifold 14. Weight-on wheel switch subassembly
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Oleo-pneumatic shock struts shown in the below figure, absorb energy by "pushing" a chamber of oil against a chamber of dry air or nitrogen and then compressing the gas and oil. Energy is dissipated by the oil being forced through one or more orifices and, after the initial impact; the rebound is controlled by the air pressure forcing the oil to flow back into its chamber through one or more recoil orifices. If oil flows back too quickly, the aircraft will bounce upward; if it flows back too slowly, the short wavelength bumps (found during taxiing) will not be adequately damped because the strut has not restored itself quickly enough to the static position. Different types of oleo-pneumatic shock struts are shown in the figure 16.
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CHAPTER 3
3.1 HYDRAULIC SYSTEM FOR AIRCRAFT LANDING GEAR
A hydraulic system for raising and lowering aircraft landing gear includes an actuator which is extendible and retractable to operate the landing gear, the actuator including a movable member in a casing, the movable member being moved relative to the casing in a first direction to extend the actuator when fluid under pressure is supplied to a first side of the movable member while fluid is exhausted from a second side of the movable member, and the movable member being moved in a second direction to retract the actuator when fluid under pressure is supplied to the second side of the movable member while fluid is exhausted from the first side of the movable member, and there being selector valve selectively to supply pressurized fluid to the first or second side of the movable member, and a check valve to permit exhausted fluid from at least one of the first and second sides of the movable member to augment the supplied fluid from the selector valve and thus be directed with the supplied fluid, to the second or first side respectively of the movable member as shown in figure 17. There are multiple applications for hydraulic use in airplanes, depending on the complexity of the airplane. For example, hydraulics is often used on small airplanes to operate wheel brakes, retractable landing gear, and some constant-speed propellers. On large airplanes, hydraulics is used for flight control surfaces, wing flaps, spoilers, and other systems. A basic hydraulic system consists of a reservoir, pump (either hand, electric, or engine driven), a filter to keep the fluid clean, selector valve to control the direction of flow, relief valve to relieve excess pressure, and an actuator. The hydraulic fluid is pumped through the system to an actuator or servo. Servos can be either single-acting or double-acting servos based on the needs of the system. This means that the fluid can be applied to one or both sides of the servo, depending on the servo type, and therefore provides power in one direction with a single-acting servo. A servo is a cylinder with a piston inside that turns fluid power into work and creates the power needed to move an aircraft system or flight control. The selector valve allows the fluid direction to be controlled. This is necessary for operations like the extension and retraction of landing gear where the fluid must work in two different directions. The relief valve provides an outlet for the system in the event of excessive fluid pressure in the system. Each system incorporates different components to meet the individual needs of different aircraft. A mineral-based fluid is the most widely used type for small
NIMRA INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, A.E
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airplanes. This type of hydraulic fluid, which is a kerosene-like petroleum product, has good lubricating properties, as well as additives to inhibit foaming and prevent the formation of corrosion. It is quite stable chemically, has very little viscosity change with temperature, and is dyed for identification. Since several types of hydraulic fluids are commonly used
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extension may be operated by the free-fall method and the nose gear by the auxiliary/hydraulic system method. The nitrogen storage bottle system is a one-shot system powered by nitrogen pressure stored in four compressed nitrogen bottles. Pushing in, rotating clockwise and pulling out the landing gear control handle actuates the emergency gear linkage connected to the manually operated release valve on the nitrogen bottle. The release valve connects pressure from the bottle to each release valve of the remaining three bottles. The compressed nitrogen from the manually operated bottle repositions the shuttle valve in each of the other three nitrogen bottles and permits nitrogen pressure to flow to the extend side of the cylinders. When the up lock hooks are released, the main gear drops by gravity, and the nose gear extends by a combination of gravity and nitrogen pressure. Each gear extends until the down lock secures it in the down position. At this time, the cockpit position indicator shows the down wheel, and the transition light on the control panel goes out. When the landing gear control handle is actuated in the emergency landing gear position, a cable between the control and the manually operated nitrogen bottle opens the emergency gear down release valve on the bottle. Nitrogen from this bottle actuates the release valves on the other three bottle so that they will discharge. This action causes the shuttles within the shuttle valve on the aft door cylinders, and on the nose gear cylinder, to close off the normal port and operate tie cylinders. The nose gear cylinder extends and unlocks the up lock and extends the nose gear. The nitrogen flowing into the aft door cylinders opens the aft doors. Fluid on the closed side of the door cylinders and the up side of the nose gear cylinder is vented to return through the actuated dump valves. Nitrogen from another bottle actuates the shuttle valves on the up lock cylinders. Nitrogen flows into the up lock cylinders and causes them to disengage the up locks. As soon as the up locks are disengaged, the main gear extends by the force of gravity. Fluid on the up side of the main gear cylinders is vented to return through the actuated dump valves, preventing a fluid lock. When the gear fully extends, the down lock cylinders spring extends its piston and engages the down lock.
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4.2 DIFFERENT TYPES OF BRAKES AND THEIR EVOLUTION 4.2.1 CARBON AND BERYLLIUM BRAKES
Until about 1963, most brake heat sinks were made from steel. Beryllium was selected for the Lockheed C-5A to save about 1600 lb on the aircraft's 24 brakes. It is also used on other aircraft such as the Lockheed S-3A and the Grumman F-14. More recently, carbon has been introduced (e.g., C-5B, Boeing 757, and Concorde). The below graph compares the weight and volume of different heat sink materials. It was reported in 1986 that the substitution of carbon for beryllium brakes on the C- 5B saved 400 lb per aircraft and that they gave equal or better performance. In addition, overhaul time for the carbon brakes was 37% less than the beryllium brakes. Figure 20 shows the beryllium brake. The carbon brake is shown in figure 21. Characteristics of current heat sink materials are provided in table 1. As shown, carbon has properties that make it highly desirable as a heat absorber. Its high specific heat reduces brake weight. High thermal conductivity ensures that heat transfer, throughout the disk stack, is more uniform and occurs at a faster rate. It is obvious, therefore, that there are several factors other than weight to consider; in the case of beryllium, one of its problems is
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the toxicity of beryllium oxide. This requires special precautions when handling the material. In particular, the rubbing of beryllium against any other material must be avoided to prevent formation of a toxic dust. Another aspect in the carbon vs. beryllium comparison is their relative strengths at high temperatures. Figure 21 compares the specific strengths of candidate brake materials as a function of temperature, where specific strength equals ultimate tensile strength (psi) divided by density (lb/in.3). It shows how carbon retains its strength at high temperature. Relative to a steel heat sink, the beryllium and carbon heat sinks require a larger volume of brake, which sometimes causes design problems. To illustrate some of the economics, it was estimated in 1971 that on the Concorde carbon would probably allow 3000 landings vs. 500600 landings for steel before brake refurbishment and would save 1200 lb weight, equivalent to 5% of the estimated transatlantic payload. 4.2.2 AUTO-BRAKE AND BRAKE-BY-WIRE SYSTEM Some details of a typical auto brake system were provided in this section. Automatic brakes are applied typically by the wheel spin-up signal and the subsequent deceleration is controlled by a pilot operated switch such as that described above. The primary objective, when used in the landing mode, is to reduce ground run. In some cases, this reduction amounted to 200 ft. Side benefits is increased passenger comfort due to controlled deceleration and smooth braking, as well as reduced pilot workload. Figure 24 illustrates a system that incorporates an auto brake. This provides a comprehensive review of hydraulic brake systems applicable to modern commercial and military aircraft. In addition to describing the overall systems, it describes and diagrams the various components such as antiskid valves and auto brake valves. are taken from that report to show systems of gradually increasing complexity. The system described above is that used on the Boeing 757 and 767 aircraft. In addition to providing skid control, it also includes an auto brake
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Transducers are mounted in each of the eight main wheel axles and are driven by wheel hubcap rotation. Transducer output signals are routed through shielded wiring to the control unit, where the wheel speed data are converted from analog to digital form. The information is processed and analyzed so that correction signals can be produced. These brake pressure corrections are converted back to analog form and smoothly varying correction currents are sent from the control unit to each control valve, where brake pressure is varied to maintain optimum braking efficiency. Figure 25 shows the emergency hydraulic braking system. Figure 26 shows the schematic diagram of the paired wheel hydraulic braking system. Figure 27 shows the schematic figure of individual wheel control system.
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CONCLUSION
1. The study of evolution of landing gear. 2. Classification details of landing gear. 3. Internal construction of the landing gear is done.
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REFERENCES
1. FAA Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge 2. Aircraft design: A conceptual approach Daniel P. Raymer 3. Aviation Maintenance Administration 4. Aviation Structural Mechanics 5. Dictionary of Aeronautical Terms 6. Landing gear Hilmerby 7. Landing gear design - Norman S. Currey
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FIGURES
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Fig. 18 The hydraulic landing gear system inside the whole airplane
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TABULAR FORM
Property
Density Specific heat at 5000 F Thermal conductivity at 5000 F
Thermal expansion
Carbon
0.061 0.310 100
Beryllium
0.066 0.560 75
Steel
0.283 0.130 24
Desired
High High
High
at
1.500
6.400
8.400
low
5000 F
Thermal shock resistance index Temperature limit, F
141 4000
2.700 1700
5.500 2100
low
low
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