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AERO ENGINE MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR AE1009

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Title: AERO ENGINE MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR AE1009


1
AERO ENGINE MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR (AE1009)
  • By
  • Yogesh Kumar Sinha
  • Rajalakshmi Engineering College

2
General Requirement of Aircraft Engine
  • An aircraft engine must be
  • reliable, as losing power in an airplane is a
    substantially greater problem than an automobile
    engine seizing. Aircraft engines operate at
    temperature, pressure, and speed extremes, and
    therefore need to operate reliably and safely
    under all these conditions.
  • Durable It is the amount of engine life obtained
    while maintaining the desired reliability
  • lightweight, as a heavy engine increases the
    empty weight of the aircraft reduces its
    payload.
  • powerful, to overcome the weight and drag of the
    aircraft.
  • small and easily streamlined large engines with
    substantial surface area, when installed, create
    too much drag, wasting fuel and reducing power
    output.
  • repairable, to keep the cost of replacement down.
    Minor repairs should be relatively inexpensive.
  • fuel efficient to give the aircraft the range the
    design requires.
  • capable of operating at sufficient altitude for
    the aircraft

3
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5
Powerplant Selection
6
Types of reciprocating Engine
Inverted inline engine
  • Inline Engine
  • This type of engine has cylinders lined up in one
    row. It typically has an even number of
    cylinders.
  • The biggest advantage of an inline engine is that
    it allows the aircraft to be designed with a
    narrow frontal area for low drag.
  • The disadvantages of an inline engine include a
    poor power-to-weight ratio, because the crankcase
    and crankshaft are long and thus heavy.
  • An in-line engine may be either air cooled or
    liquid cooled, but liquid-cooling is more common
    because it is difficult to get enough air-flow to
    cool the rear cylinders directly
  • Example Wright Flyer

7
Opposed or O-type Engine
  • An opposed-type engine has two banks of cylinders
    on opposite sides of a centrally located
    crankcase. The engine is either air cooled or
    liquid cooled
  • Due to the cylinder layout, reciprocating forces
    tend to cancel, resulting in a smooth running
    engine free from vibration.
  • Low weight to power ratio

8
V-Type engine
  • Cylinders in this engine are arranged in two
    in-line banks, tilted 30-60 degrees apart from
    each other
  • The vast majority of V engines are water-cooled.
  • The V design provides a higher power-to-weight
    ratio than an inline engine, while still
    providing a small frontal area.

9
Rotary Engine
  • Rotary engines have all the cylinders in a circle
    around the crankcase like a radial engine (see
    below), but the difference is that the crankshaft
    is bolted to the airframe, and the propeller is
    bolted to the engine case.
  • The entire engine rotates with the propeller,
    providing plenty of airflow for cooling
    regardless of the aircraft's forward speed.
  • Unfortunately, the severe gyroscopic effects from
    the heavy rotating engine made the aircraft very
    difficult to fly.

Le Rhone 9C rotary aircraft engine
10
Radial Engine
  • This type of engine has one or more rows of
    cylinders arranged in a circle around a
    centrally-located crankcase. Each row must have
    an odd number of cylinders in order to produce
    smooth operation
  • A radial engine has only one crank throw per row
    and a relatively small crankcase, resulting in a
    favorable power to weight ratio.
  • The lower cylinders, which are under the
    crankcase, may collect oil when the engine has
    been stopped for an extended period causing
    serious damage due to hydrostatic lock
  • In military aircraft designs, the large frontal
    area of the engine acted as an extra layer of
    armor for the pilot. However, the large frontal
    area also resulted in an aircraft with a blunt
    and aerodynamically inefficient profile.
  • The power output varies from 100 to 3800 hp

11
Principles of Operation
12
Reciprocating Engine Power and Efficiencies
  • Piston displacement The volume displace by the
    piston is known as piston displacement
  • Compression Ratio In a piston engine it is the
    ratio between the volume of the cylinder and
    combustion chamber when the piston is at the
    bottom of its stroke, and the volume of the
    combustion chamber when the piston is at the top
    of its stroke.
  • The compression ratio is defined as (Swept
    Volume Clearance Volume) / Clearance Volume

13
  • Indicator Horse Power
  • Indicated mean effective pressure is an average
    pressure value that theoretically must be present
    in a cylinder of an engine during the power
    stroke to generate the maximum horsepower
    possible, given the pressures recorded within the
    cylinder during a dynamometer test.
  • IHP PLANK/33,000
  • P - indicated mean effective pressure
  • L - length of stroke
  • A - area of piston head in square inches
  • N - number of power strokes per minute
  • K - number of cylinders

14
  • Brake Horsepower
  • The power developed to the propeller for useful
    work is called brake horsepower

Prony brake dynamometer
15
  • Friction Horsepower
  • FRICTION HORSEPOWER is the difference between
    indicated horsepower and brake horse- power
  • Thrust Horsepower
  • Propeller efficiency refers to the percentage of
    Brake Horsepower (BHP) which gets converted into
    useful Thrust Horsepower (THP) by the propeller.
    The propeller is never 100 efficient. Therefore
    the propeller efficiency is always a number less
    than one.
  • Neta is propeller efficiency.

16
  • Propeller Efficiency

where J is Advance ratio, n is rpm and D is
propeller diameter, V is TAS
The most efficient J depends upon the propeller
blade angle. Course propellers (large blade
angles) will be more efficient at larger advance
ratios. Fine pitch propellers will be more
efficient at small advance ratios.
When choosing a fixed pitch propeller an
aeronautical engineer usually chooses one, which
is optimum for cruise.
17
  • Efficiencies
  • Thermal Efficiencies
  • The ratio of useful work done by an engine to
    the energy of the fuel it uses is called thermal
    efficiencies
  • 25 to 30 useful power
  • 15 to 20 lost in cooling
  • 5 to 10 lost in overcoming friction
  • 40 to 45 lost through exhaust
  • Useful power can be increased by increasing the
    compression ratio
  • Indicated thermal efficiencies
  • i.h.p 33000
  • wt of fuel burned/min heat value 778

18
  • Mechanical Efficiencies
  • In an engine it is the ratio of brake horsepower
    to indicated horsepower.
  • The factor greatest effect mechanical effect is
    the friction within the engine. Mechanical
    efficiency is high when the engine is running at
    the rpm at which max b.h.p is developed.
  • Note Friction remain practically constant for an
    engine

19
  • Volumetric Efficiency
  • It is a comparison of the volume of fuel/air
    charge conducted into the cylinders to the total
    piston displacement of the engine
  • Factors decrease volumetric efficiency
  • Part throttle operation
  • Long intake pipes of small diameter
  • Sharpe bend in intake pipe
  • Carburetor air temperature to high
  • Cylinder head temperature to high
  • Incomplete scavenging
  • Improper valve timing

20
  • Propulsive efficiency
  • It is the ratio of thrust horsepower to brake
    horsepower. Ranges to 80-85
  • Loss is due to friction and slippage
  • Controlling the blade angle is the best method to
    maximize propulsive efficiency
  • During take off less blade angle
  • During high speed or diving more blade angle

21
END
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