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#1
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Long ago it occurred to me that a twin-engine jet running with one engine out
might be putting tremendous eccentric stress on the plyon and mounting of the running engine (meaning stress not aligned with the normal thrust vector of the engine). Today it occurred to me that this might not be true if the pilots adjust the attitude of the aircraft so that it is flying straight forward. The adjustments would create opposing forces that not only keep the aircraft in level flight but also realign the stress on the running engine, as if there were still two engines and symmetric forces on the pylons. Does this make sense? If so, are there limits to how far an aircraft can fly out of trim in such a way as to put unusual stress on engine pylons (even with all engines running). For example, does yawing sharply in a large jet put unacceptable stress on the pylons? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#2
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Mxsmanic wrote
For example, does yawing sharply in a large jet put unacceptable stress on the pylons? You should see what those pylons do in heavy turbulence! The only stress is on the pilot who looks at them. :-) Bob Moore |
#3
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote... You should see what those pylons do in heavy turbulence! The only stress is on the pilot who looks at them. :-) My wife and I were on a flight a few years back in an A300 IIRC and we were in seats that gave us a clear view of the engine on the left wing. I was casually looking out at it when I noticed that it was oscillating back and forth quite noticeably and considerably, and we were only in light chop at the time. My first impression was HOLY #$%&! quickly followed by the realization that since it hadn't come off yet it must be normal. Judging by how much it was moving around you would have thought it was held on with bungee cords. BDS |
#4
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BDS wrote
Judging by how much it was moving around you would have thought it was held on with bungee cords. Nope! Back in my B-707 days, the engine was attached to the pylon with just three bolts about the size of your forefinger, and each of these bolts was designed to break-away and release the engine before it could do damage to the wing. Bob Moore |
#5
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Bob Moore writes:
Nope! Back in my B-707 days, the engine was attached to the pylon with just three bolts about the size of your forefinger, and each of these bolts was designed to break-away and release the engine before it could do damage to the wing. Well, that's certainly reassuring. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#6
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On 23 May, 17:04, Mxsmanic wrote:
Bob Moore writes: Nope! Back in my B-707 days, the engine was attached to the pylon with just three bolts about the size of your forefinger, and each of these bolts was designed to break-away and release the engine before it could do damage to the wing. Well, that's certainly reassuring. Why, what's it matter to you, you don't fly anyway. Bertie |
#7
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On May 23, 12:04 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
Bob Moore writes: Nope! Back in my B-707 days, the engine was attached to the pylon with just three bolts about the size of your forefinger, and each of these bolts was designed to break-away and release the engine before it could do damage to the wing. Well, that's certainly reassuring. Not necessarily. Although it was admittedly caused by maintenance crew abuse, don't forget the Chicago DC-10 accident, where the engine came off and caused the deadliest accidental crash in US history. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America...nes_Flight_191 |
#8
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BDS wrote:
"Bob Moore" wrote... You should see what those pylons do in heavy turbulence! The only stress is on the pilot who looks at them. :-) My wife and I were on a flight a few years back in an A300 IIRC and we were in seats that gave us a clear view of the engine on the left wing. I was casually looking out at it when I noticed that it was oscillating back and forth quite noticeably and considerably, and we were only in light chop at the time. My first impression was HOLY #$%&! quickly followed by the realization that since it hadn't come off yet it must be normal. Judging by how much it was moving around you would have thought it was held on with bungee cords. BDS I love the window seat, but dammit, I cannot look at the wing ever. "Ok, if it didn't flex like that, it would be brittle and snap. It's supposed to bounce, it's not supposed to break" But nothing reassures me. |
#9
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Erik wrote:
I love the window seat, but dammit, I cannot look at the wing ever. "Ok, if it didn't flex like that, it would be brittle and snap. It's supposed to bounce, it's not supposed to break" But nothing reassures me. I find it helps in cases like these to watch a few videos of wing loading tests, so you can see really just *how* far those wings can go before breaking. ![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Uo0C01Fwb8 TheSmokingGnu |
#10
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TheSmokingGnu wrote:
Erik wrote: I love the window seat, but dammit, I cannot look at the wing ever. "Ok, if it didn't flex like that, it would be brittle and snap. It's supposed to bounce, it's not supposed to break" But nothing reassures me. I find it helps in cases like these to watch a few videos of wing loading tests, so you can see really just *how* far those wings can go before breaking. ![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Uo0C01Fwb8 TheSmokingGnu Holy crap. I thought the two to three foot deflection I've seen was a lot. I had no idea that you could turn an airplane into a U. |
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