koopas
Aerospace
- Aug 24, 2002
- 106
Hello to all:
I am new to the forum. I just started my job after obtaining my B.S. in aerospace engineering this past May. Working as a liaison/structural engineer for a small airline, I feel like I have lots to learn about aircraft repairs. By that, I mean that I am under the impression that I've been immersed into a structural
analysis "subculture" to which I was not exposed to in college, however vaguely familiar some of the jargon is. Lots of quick formulas with no derivations, empirical data, an enormous amount of repair processes (i.e. shim) involving lots of different types of fasteners I've never even heard of.
I am slated to take the FlightSafetyBoeing structural repairs for engineers courses (parts I and II) next month. It seems like I need it.
At work, I've been reading the Mcdonnell Douglas MD11 structural repair course guide, a course that one of my fellow colleague took in 1999. I've also been skimming over Mike Niu's Airframe Structural Design book (1st edition, 1988).
My question is the following: I believe I received adequate theoretical structures in college but all this "applied" structural repair concept is very new to me. Heck, I had to ask how a rivet worked yesterday. Or what a hi-lock was. Or what an allowable is. Reading the MD-11 structural repair course guide (not the SRM), I found that it, so far, all boils down to the following (and correct me if I am wrong) to determine whether enough fasteners are used over a doubler:
1) making sure you add more area than you took out (add more load carrying capacity).
2) determine joint allowable for particular fastener in particular metal sheet. Take lowest value if you use two materials.
3) determine load per fastener
4) ensure that load per fastener does not exceed joint allowable load.
It doesn't look like I'll use FEA. It seems I'll be lucky to see a MC/I calculation. Right now, it's a lot of P/A, material properties, and fastener jargon.
Last, I'd like to know if some of you in the same field had tips and advice on how to become a good airline structural engineer. Can you recommend any literature or training courses to take? I am planning on eventually buying both Niu books (the one I am reading and "Airframe Stress Analysis and Sizing". I understand that experience is an enormous factor.
I feel like I have the knowledge, I just need to apply it.
Thank you for any insight. It will be appreciated.
Regards,
Alex Ly
I am new to the forum. I just started my job after obtaining my B.S. in aerospace engineering this past May. Working as a liaison/structural engineer for a small airline, I feel like I have lots to learn about aircraft repairs. By that, I mean that I am under the impression that I've been immersed into a structural
analysis "subculture" to which I was not exposed to in college, however vaguely familiar some of the jargon is. Lots of quick formulas with no derivations, empirical data, an enormous amount of repair processes (i.e. shim) involving lots of different types of fasteners I've never even heard of.
I am slated to take the FlightSafetyBoeing structural repairs for engineers courses (parts I and II) next month. It seems like I need it.
At work, I've been reading the Mcdonnell Douglas MD11 structural repair course guide, a course that one of my fellow colleague took in 1999. I've also been skimming over Mike Niu's Airframe Structural Design book (1st edition, 1988).
My question is the following: I believe I received adequate theoretical structures in college but all this "applied" structural repair concept is very new to me. Heck, I had to ask how a rivet worked yesterday. Or what a hi-lock was. Or what an allowable is. Reading the MD-11 structural repair course guide (not the SRM), I found that it, so far, all boils down to the following (and correct me if I am wrong) to determine whether enough fasteners are used over a doubler:
1) making sure you add more area than you took out (add more load carrying capacity).
2) determine joint allowable for particular fastener in particular metal sheet. Take lowest value if you use two materials.
3) determine load per fastener
4) ensure that load per fastener does not exceed joint allowable load.
It doesn't look like I'll use FEA. It seems I'll be lucky to see a MC/I calculation. Right now, it's a lot of P/A, material properties, and fastener jargon.
Last, I'd like to know if some of you in the same field had tips and advice on how to become a good airline structural engineer. Can you recommend any literature or training courses to take? I am planning on eventually buying both Niu books (the one I am reading and "Airframe Stress Analysis and Sizing". I understand that experience is an enormous factor.
I feel like I have the knowledge, I just need to apply it.
Thank you for any insight. It will be appreciated.
Regards,
Alex Ly