Abstract
The variability in ground manoeuvre occurrences for aircraft landing gear is intrinsically linked to the airport geometries served by aircraft in-service and consequently, the cyclic loads that landing gear carry are driven by the route network and characteristics of aircraft operators. Currently, assumptions must be made when deriving fatigue load spectra for aircraft landing gear, which may fail to capture the operator characteristics, potentially leading to design conservatism. This paper presents the enhanced characterisation of ground turning manoeuvres within the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) trajectories for six narrow-body aircraft across a full-service carrier (FSC) and a low-cost carrier (LCC) fleet. The methodology presented within this paper employs ADS-B latitude and longitude information to overcome limitations of previous approaches, increasing the rate of correct manoeuvre identification within ADS-B trajectories to 77% of flights from the 50% rate achieved previously. When characterising the ground manoeuvres across 3,000 flights, significant differences in manoeuvre occurrences were observed between individual aircraft within the LCC fleet and between the FSC and LCC fleets. The occurrence of tight and pivot turns were shown to vary across the six aircraft with six and eight fatigue-critical turns being performed by the FSC and LCC fleet for every 10 flights performed. In addition, it was observed that the direction of fatigue critical turns is biased in specific directions, suggesting that individual main landing gear assemblies will accumulate fatigue damage at an increased rate, leading to greater justification for operator-specific spectra and structural health monitoring of aircraft landing gear.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 30 |
Journal | The Aeronautical Journal |
Early online date | 15 Oct 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 15 Oct 2024 |
Event | 8th Aircraft Structural Design Conference - London, United Kingdom Duration: 3 Oct 2023 → 4 Oct 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Aeronautical Society.
Keywords
- Aircraft Trajectories
- Landing Gear
- ADS-B
- Fatigue
- Data Analytics