METAL REPAIR PROCEDURES FOR CIVIL AIRCRAFT ENGINEERS.

By archit On April 18, 2009 Under Uncategorized

  civil side banner 151x300 METAL REPAIR PROCEDURES FOR CIVIL AIRCRAFT ENGINEERS.  

                Aircraft mechanics will tell you the airframe of a fixed wing aircraft is generally considered to consist of five principal units; the fuselage, wings, stabilizers, flight control surfaces, and landing gear.

Aircraft principal structural elements (PSE) and joints are designed to carry loads by distributing them as stresses. The elements and joints as originally fabricated are strong enough to resist these stresses, and must remain so after any repairs. Long, thin elements are called members. Some examples of members are the metal tubes that form engine mount and fuselage trusses and frames, beams used as wing spars, and longerons and stringers of metal-skinned fuselages and wings. Longerons and stringers are designed to carry principally axial loads, but are sometimes required to carry side loads and bending moments, as when they frame cutouts in metal-skinned structures. Truss members are designed to carry axial (tension and compression) loads applied to their ends only. Frame members are designed to carry side loads and bending moments in addition to axial loads. Beam members are designed to carry side loads and bending moments that are usually large compared to their axial loads. Beams that must resist large axial loads, particularly compression loads, in combination with side loads and bending moments are called beam-columns. Other structural elements such as metal skins, plates, shells, wing ribs, bulkheads, ring frames, intercostal members, gussets, and other reinforcements, and fittings are designed to resist complex stresses, sometimes in three dimensions.

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