Refine Your Search

Topic

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 14 of 14
Standard

Braking System Dynamics

2016-11-16
CURRENT
AIR1064D
The aircraft landing gear is a complex multi-degree of freedom dynamic system, and may encounter vibration or dynamic response problems induced by braking action. The vibratory modes can be induced by brake and tire-ground frictional characteristics, antiskid operation, brake design features, landing gear design features, and tire characteristics. The impact of this vibration can range from catastrophic failure of critical system components or entire landing gears, to fatigue of small components, to passenger annoyance. It is therefore important that the vibration is assessed during the design concept phase, and verified during the development and testing phases of the system hardware. This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) has been prepared by a panel of the A-5A Subcommittee to present an overview of the landing gear problems associated with aircraft braking system dynamics, and the approaches to the identification, diagnosis, and solution of these problems.
Standard

INFORMATION ON ANTISKID SYSTEMS

1988-01-01
HISTORICAL
AIR1739
This Aerospace Information Report (AIR) has been prepared by a panel of the SAE A-5 Committee and is presented to document the design approaches and service experience from various applications of antiskid systems. This experience includes commercial and military applications.
Standard

Information on Antiskid Systems

2010-01-20
HISTORICAL
AIR1739A
This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) has been prepared by a panel of the SAE A-5A Committee and is presented to document the design approaches and service experience from various applications of antiskid systems. This experience includes commercial and military applications.
Standard

Information on Antiskid Systems

2016-11-15
CURRENT
AIR1739B
This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) has been prepared by a panel of the SAE A-5A Committee and is presented to document the design approaches and service experience from various applications of antiskid systems. This experience includes commercial and military applications.
Standard

Information on Electric Brakes

2019-02-15
CURRENT
AIR5937
This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) describes the design, operation, and attributes of electrical braking systems for both military and commercial aircraft. At this time, the document focuses only on brakes utilizing electromechanical actuators (EMAs), as that is the present state of the art. As such, the discussions herein assume that EMAs can simply replace the hydraulic actuation portion of typical brake system leaving things such as the wheel and heat sink unchanged. Furthermore, the document provides detail information from the perspective of brake system design and operation. The document also addresses failure modes, certification issues, and past development efforts. Details on the design and control of electric motors, gear train design, ball or roller screw selection are available in the reference documents and elsewhere, but are outside the scope of this document.
Standard

MAINTAINABILITY RECOMMENDATIONS FOR AIRCRAFT WHEELS AND BRAKES

1993-04-01
HISTORICAL
ARP813A
This ARP suggests the maintainability features which should be considered in the design of aircraft wheels and brakes. The effect on such factors as cost, weight, reliability, and compatibility with other systems should be considered before incorporation of any of these features in the design.
Standard

REPLACEMENT AND MODIFIED BRAKES AND WHEELS

1993-04-01
HISTORICAL
ARP1619
This Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) identifies "type" and "degree" of change to brake, wheel, or component thereof, and recommends substantiation procedures to confirm that performance capability of an existing aircraft using the replacement or modified brake and wheel equipment is not less than that when originally certified for commercial or military aircraft applications.
Standard

Recommended Wheel Tie Bolt Preload Procedure

2007-08-09
HISTORICAL
ARP5481
This SAE Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) provides the recommended procedure for obtaining desired preloads in aircraft wheel tie bolts when mounting tires and assembling the wheel. It is generally referred to as the snug-angle bolted joint assembly procedure. It is also known as the “torque-turn” procedure in the heavy equipment ground vehicle industry.
Standard

Recommended Wheel Tie Bolt Preload Procedure

2020-09-17
CURRENT
ARP5481A
This SAE Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) provides the recommended procedure for obtaining desired preloads in aircraft wheel tie bolts when mounting tires and assembling the wheel. It is generally referred to as the snug-angle bolted joint assembly procedure. It is also known as the “torque-turn” procedure in the heavy equipment ground vehicle industry.
Standard

Replacement and Modified Brakes and Wheels

2012-05-16
HISTORICAL
ARP1619A
This SAE Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) defines recommended substantiation procedures and associated reviewing and approval processes to confirm that proposed changes do not compromise the demonstrated safety, performance, and airplane compatibility of the originally certified commercial and military aircraft. Successful demonstration also includes confirmation that no adverse failure modes are introduced. These procedures apply to modifications made by the original component or assembly supplier as well as certification of an alternate supplier.
Standard

Unique Wheel and Brake Designs

2022-09-08
CURRENT
AIR5388
This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) has been prepared by a panel of the SAE A-5A Committee and is presented to document unique design approaches used for aircraft wheels and brakes.
Standard

Valve, Inflation, Aircraft Wheel

2019-11-14
CURRENT
AS6817
This SAE Aerospace Standard (AS) defines the configuration of aircraft wheel inflation valve assemblies, including required tolerances, materials, and appropriate finishes.
X