dgapilot
New member
- Oct 12, 2006
- 143
I'm frequently asked to evaluate the impact of a significant change to the flight spectrum that an aircraft was designed to. An example I'm currently working on is a large corporate jet type aircraft that normally has a GAG cycle of TO, climb to between FL300 to FL450, cruise for several hours, descend and land. This aircraft is being repurposed and will now take off, fly at some intermediate altitude for positioning, then descend to 1500' and fly there for several hours, then climb for the return flight, descend and land. In this case, the pressure cycles most likely won't be the issue, but fatigue to other aircraft structures (wings, empennage . . . ) will be impacted due to increased gust loads at low altitude.
The other issue is bird impact issues with driving around for significant times down low and the increased risk of bird impact to the windshield and liberating glass into the cockpit.
I've got a copy of "Fatigue evaluation of wing and associated structures on small airplanes" dated 1973 from FAA where they talk about usage spectrum and it's impact on the structure, and the "standard" spectrum used for different types of aircraft during certification. I was wondering if there might be a similar document that identifies the different spectra to be used for transport aircraft.
The other issue is bird impact issues with driving around for significant times down low and the increased risk of bird impact to the windshield and liberating glass into the cockpit.
I've got a copy of "Fatigue evaluation of wing and associated structures on small airplanes" dated 1973 from FAA where they talk about usage spectrum and it's impact on the structure, and the "standard" spectrum used for different types of aircraft during certification. I was wondering if there might be a similar document that identifies the different spectra to be used for transport aircraft.