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Journal Article

Design and Development of a Mobile Robotic System for Aircraft Wing Fuel Tank Inspection

2022-03-08
2022-01-0042
This paper presents the design concept behind a novel remote visual inspection robotic system for fighter jet aircraft wing fuel tank inspection. This work is part of a larger research project which focuses on design, simulation, physical prototyping and experimental validation of a robotic system. Whereas this paper specifically focuses on the development concept of locomotion design choice for the robot. Therefore without an effective mobility method the robot will not be able to fulfill its purpose to access the hazardous confined spaces of the fuel tank. Aircraft wing fuel tank inspection is a challenging area of maintenance which requires a considerable amount of preparation and involvement of several tasks in order to conduct effective Visual and Non Destructive Inspection. The environment of an aircraft wing fuel tank poses several challenges due to both physical and atmospheric constraints which can be detrimental to human personal.
Technical Paper

Upstream Disturbance Effects on Self-Similarity in the Wake of a DrivAer Model

2023-04-11
2023-01-0014
This study aims to provide an understanding of self-similarity in the turbulent wake generated by a Fastback DrivAer automotive model and assess the impact of upstream disturbances on the wake. The disturbances are generated using a circular cylinder placed five cylinder diameters upstream. Multiple ‘cylinder-model’ positions were tested by offsetting the lateral positioning of the cylinder with respect to the centreline of the model. Data was obtained at cross-planes in the wake going from 25% to 100% car length. Wind tunnel data has been obtained using a total pressure probe rake and a four-hole cobra probe. Data has also been obtained using RANS based simulations with k – ε realisable turbulence model. Mean axial-component velocity profiles were analysed with momentum thickness (θ) and vorticity thickness (δω) used as the scaling parameters. It was seen that self-similarity marginally exists in the wake depending on the upstream conditions and the scaling parameter.
Technical Paper

A Simplified Motorcycle Model

2007-04-16
2007-01-0829
Motorcycle models in the literature are derived using the Lagrangian formulation approach and are generally complex in order to satisfy the requirement for accuracy of the response. The objective of this paper is to develop a simplified motorcycle model, which although reduced in complexity, captures fundamental dynamic behavior. The resulting model will have two main uses. The first use will be as an explanatory aid to introduce engineers to the dynamics of motorcycles. The second application for the motorcycle model developed in this paper is for incorporation in active bike control stability systems. This is a subtly different objective to models required for simulation only where accuracy of the response is of paramount importance. The same motorcycle model concepts will be used in the paper to develop both a transient non-linear and linearised steady state model.
Journal Article

Aircraft Wing Build Philosophy Change through System Pre-Equipping of Major Components

2016-09-27
2016-01-2120
In the civil aircraft industry there is a continuous drive to increase the aircraft production rate, particularly for single aisle aircraft where there is a large backlog of orders. One of the bottlenecks is the wing assembly process which is largely manual due to the complexity of the task and the limited accessibility. The presented work describes a general wing build approach for both structure and systems equipping operations. A modified build philosophy is then proposed, concerned with large component pre-equipping, such as skins, spars or ribs. The approach benefits from an offloading of the systems equipping phase and allowing for higher flexibility to organize the pre-equipping stations as separate entities from the overall production line. Its application is presented in the context of an industrial project focused on selecting feasible system candidates for a fixed wing design, based on assembly consideration risks for tooling, interference and access.
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