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In retrospect, I think I was too hard on you, Fliegler. Sorry about that, I think I misunderstood your point. Yes, by all means, parts crack. Every single structural part has a predicted mean time to failure. We more or less "know" when it's going to happen. What we decidedly do not do, however, is allow any given part's service life to extend beyond even any initial cracking, and continue to fly it while proclaiming "yeah, we knew it would do that". We endeavor to replace or repair cracked parts as soon as possible, especially those that have cracked unexpectedly. It becomes very difficult, if not impossible, to predict the rate of crack propagation when we have well and truly missed on its mean time to failure anyway. In these cases, inspection intervals are severely compressed, and we monitor the situation very closely. Inspections on parts approaching a certain percentage of their mean time to failure become more vigorous as well. Parts are replaced at some percentage of their predicted lifespan (depending on application and relation to safety of flight). These parts get pretty thoroughly analyzed in an effort to validate our predictions. So, yes, you are technically quite correct - airplanes do have a designed-in, finite lifespan. Just not at an "entire airplane" level, which is kind of how I read your post. (I don't think that's what you meant.) It's really the individual parts that make them up that do. There are, however, very few we cannot replace, even in the field. So, technically, airframes really do not have a "designed lifetime", but parts of them do. |
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By the way, "Are you an Engineer?" was an authentic question. I knew you were with Boeing, but did not know if you were a skilled worker in assembly or an Engineer or both... |
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/Looks at the BUFF I am not a engineer. Just a computer tech. |
Jeff pointed out my error. I was referring to each part of an airframe having a service life. I did not mean to imply that the whole aircraft was treated as a single piece with one lifetime.
The B-52s are not the same as they were when they rolled off the line. Lots of upgrades. Airplanes are like some Porsches. All that is left that is original is the vin plate. :) |
I don't think this is a big issue at all - isn't most of the Aeroflot fleet held together by cracks?
AM |
Again, sorry for the misunderstanding. We're on the same page.
To satisfy your curiosity as to whether I'm "a skilled worker in assembly or and Engineer or both...", I would have to answer "all of the above". At least at one time or another. A quick "history of me in aerospace": Graduated high school in '78, and went on in pursuit of a degree in mechanical engineering. After a year and a half, dad dies, leaving me as the oldest male at home. I drop out of school and go to work at Boeing in an effort to help support my mom and two younger siblings. I started there at the ripe old age of 19 as an apprentice tool maker. By the time I'm 26, I've been promoted to a lead position over about 70 other tool makers (way, way out of sequence, union seniority wise, thereby pissing off all the old union do-nothings). By then, my mom was working and two younger siblings were out of the house. So, fulfilling my "obligations" at home, I up and got married and started a family. Just in time to weather a couple of union strikes... Having had enough of that (and the union in general), I restarted my education after 16 years and two kids, and fulfilled my dream of becoming an engineer. And I've had a ball ever since. I initially made the "easy" transition at work, from the tooling world I had grown familiar with as a tool maker, into the design end of the tools I had built for so long. Growing bored with that about ten years ago, I made the jump into the world of "AOG" - "Aircraft on Ground", wherein we repair damaged aircraft. Often under "austere" conditions, often in third world shyt holes, often ill-equipped and therefore engineering "on the fly", I've never had more fun. I'm in the best of both worlds - I get to design the tools and equipment for a unique in-field repair, and then often get to roll my sleeves up and get down and dirty with the mechanics, working side by side to use my equipment and affect the repair. All union boundaries are forgotten, and we go to work. I'm one of the few "hands on" engineers in a big union company, working with a hand-picked team that transcends all of that union b.s. and just gets it done. Whatever it takes, wherever we need to go. It's great. |
You have my respect.
I saw a TV program, I think it was on National Geographic or something about their emergency repair team. If a plane runs off the end of a runway in a far away land they would go with the part and get it ready to fly. The TV program was them repairing/replacing the aft bulkhead for the pressure cabin. I think it was a tail strike due to over-rotation or something. |
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First, no...I am not an engineer. But aircraft do fly with known cracks (at least in the military realm). I worked as both a machinist/welder and managed a NDI (Non-Destructive Inspection) Lab and know for a fact that some structural elements on aircraft are allowed to crack. It's quite common to find cracks, schedule hourly inspections and track crack progression. Once the crack gets to the known fatigue limit...parts are replaced or repairs are made.
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Again, "if it aint Boeing, I aint going!" |
Compared to a DC3 this is funny!
The DC has been around maybe 50 yrs and nothing falling off..LOL |
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But the big thing is when is the last time you flew in an all original DC-3? I bet most all of the mission critical parts have been replaced or restored on the DC-3s. |
I saw a 737 in a Jig in Evertt Wa
Robots were bending the wings every 30 sec. or so about 6' past center ! I thought it would just blow apart. It did give me confidence in the structure. True the old DC 3 was a recip....still, it is a old flying dog and they still beat the Hell out of them way up North (Alaska) |
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Pressurization does stress the fuselage but how about wings? The wings and tail feathers on most -3's flying today are prolly still original, but inspected as needed. |
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Legend has it has it that the wing load testing for the 747 used up all the travel on the jig which was 150% of load requirements +. They were supposed to load it to failure....uh, now what? It took 13 saw cuts in the wing to get it to break.....legend has it.
IIRC, the 380's wing failed before the 150% requirement........the excuses flowed hot & heavy. AB said at one point that the structure actually failed at the wing/body joint & all was well.....or some such nonsense. Boeing had a similar problem with the 787. They DON"T make em' like they used to. Planned obsolescence is now the mantra. |
Rumor also has it "They" did not know much about Aluminum in the begaining and over built the design requirements.
Now it has swung the other way.............. |
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With the latest upgrades they predict the B52 will have been in service 100 years. The last one was made in 1962. |
I remember this day well. I'm in that crowd surrounding the airplane. I had just started at the company when we did this to the 767, and was on hand for that. I also witnesses the 787 test.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Ai2HmvAXcU0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Less spectacular, but every bit as important, is the cyclic fatigue test. A similar fixture pulls up and down on the wings to simulate one "cycle", or take off and landing. Pretty boring stuff compared to the spectacular ultimate strength test. And yes, the 747 damn near touched its wing tips above the fuselage. They couldn't break them. There are plenty of photos of it decorating our offices. |
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