CRADLE FOR A TURBOPROPELLER ENGINE WITH INTEGRATED AIR INLET DUCT
20190270524 ยท 2019-09-05
Inventors
- Frederic Paul Eichstadt (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Nora El Ghannam (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Romain Jean-Claude Ferrier (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
- Antoine Elie Hellegouarch (Moissy-Cramayel, FR)
Cpc classification
B64D27/402
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64D2033/0246
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a cradle (10) for an aircraft turbopropeller engine (12) of a substantially axial orientation, comprising a front arch (16) and a rear arch (18) extending transversely relative to said axial direction (A), said arches (16, 18) being open at their lower ends and connected to each other by at least one axial longeron (34) extending between said arches (16, 18), characterised in that the longeron (34) is arranged in an upper portion of the cradle (10) and is formed in a single piece with the front arch (16).
Claims
1. Cradle for the turbopropeller engine of an aircraft oriented in a substantially radial direction, comprising a front arch and a rear arch extending transversally with respect to said axial direction (A), said arches being open at their lower ends and connected to one another by at least one axial longeron that extends between said arches, wherein the longeron is arranged in the upper portion of the cradle and in that it is formed of one single part with the front arch, and with at least one tubular section configured to define an air inlet duct of said turbopropeller engine.
2. (canceled)
3. Cradle according to claim 1, wherein the longeron is further formed of one single part with at least part of the pipe forming the particulate trap.
4. Cradle according to claim 1, wherein the tube section comprises an air inlet that substantially opens onto a transversal plane (P) of said front arch.
5. Cradle according to claim 1, wherein the tube section comprises an air outlet that opens into said cradle along a plane (P) substantially perpendicular to the plane (P) of the air inlet.
6. Cradle according to one claim 1, wherein it comprises two lateral rods secured on either side of the upper portions of said arches, exclusive of any other rod.
7. Cradle according to claim 3, wherein said pipe forming the particulate trap comprises a front end that opens into the tube section and at least one tubular and right-angled rear end, oriented outwards from the cradle and oriented along a substantially horizontal axis (C).
8. Cradle according to claim 1, wherein it further comprises two longitudinal lateral walls, formed of one single part with the longeron, these walls extending towards the rear from the front arch and running along the entire length of the longeron.
9. Cradle (10) according to claim 8, wherein the free longitudinal edges of the longitudinal lateral walls are configured to receive hinges for the lateral protection hoods of the turbopropeller engine.
10. Aircraft turboporpeller engine unit, wherein it comprises a turbopropeller engine secured to a cradle according to claim 9, and wherein the turbopropeller engine comprises: a reduction gear that extends to the front of the front arch of said cradle and under the air inlet of the tube section, an air supply secured to said air inlet, at least one item of equipment of the turbopropeller engine, secured under said turbopropeller engine, two beetle-wing hoods, each hinged on an edge of the longitudinal side walls of the cradle, which are joined in a closed position along a longitudinal line (D) arranged under the cradle).
11. Power unit according to claim 10, wherein the beetle-wing hoods are structural hoods that contribute to rigidifying said power unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0034] The invention will be better understood, and other details, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become clearer upon reading the following description, provided as an example and not limited thereto, and with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
[0035]
[0036]
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[0039]
[0040]
DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
[0041] As shown in
[0042] As is already known from the state of the art, the front 16 and rear 18 arches are connected by at least one axial longeron 34 extending between said arches 16, 18.
[0043] According to the invention, the longeron 34 is advantageously arranged in the upper portion of the cradle and is formed of one single part with the front arch 16. This type of longeron significantly contributes to the rigidity of the cradle.
[0044] In addition, the longeron 34 is advantageously formed of one single part with at least one tubular section 36 configured to define an air inlet duct 28 of said turbopropeller engine.
[0045] This configuration is more specifically shown in
[0046] In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the tube section 36 does not define the entire air inlet duct 26, but only part thereof, as will be seen below in the present description.
[0047] Thus, the cradle 10 comprises one single and same part forming, as a minimum, the front arch 16, the longeron 34 and the tube section 36. This part can be produced by the moulding of a metallic material, or by means of mechanically welded construction. The rear arch 18 is provided on this unit, and more particularly at the rear of the longeron 34, as shown in
[0048] Advantageously, the longeron 34 is further formed of one single part with at least one part of the pipe 40 forming the particulate trap.
[0049] As shown in
[0050] As shown in
[0051] It will be noted that the invention is not limited to this configuration, and that the air inlet 44 could also not be form-fitted with the concave recess of the front arch 16, or open onto a front face of a transversal arm of the front arch 16.
[0052] As has been seen, the tube section 36 does not form the entire air inlet duct 26. As shown in
[0053] Moreover, the tube section 36 comprises an air outlet 48 that opens inside said cradle 10 in a plane P substantially perpendicular to the plane P of the air inlet 44, i.e. in a substantially horizontal plane P. As shown in
[0054] The pipe 40 forming the particulate trap is, as has been seen, connected to the tube section 36, since the purpose thereof is to trap particles contained in the air suctioned by the air inlet duct to prevent them from being suctioned by the compressor of the turbopropeller engine 12.
[0055] To this end, the pipe 40 is connected to the inner wall 42 of the tube section 36. In particular, the pipe 40 comprises, as seen in
[0056] This arrangement in the upper portion of the cradle 10 of the tube section 36 delimiting the air inlet duct 28 and the pipe 40 forming the particulate trap is particularly advantageous, as it allows, with respect to a conventional cradle 10, to move these elements to the upper portion of the cradle 10, where they are less likely to absorb foreign bodies and/or stagnating water present on the surface of the ground. Consequently, the filtering of the air supplying the turbopropeller engine 12 is significantly improved. Furthermore, this configuration frees up the lower portion of the cradle 10 from these elements, which facilitates access to the turbopropeller engine 12 for maintenance or disassembly operations.
[0057] Moreover, as shown in
[0058] Moreover, as is shown in
[0059] These walls 54 are connected to the unit formed by the longeron 34 of the front arch 16 and the tube section 36. Preferably, when this unit is moulded, the walls 54 are also made during the moulding operation. Advantageously, as seen in
[0060] Such beetle-wing hoods 60, i.e. articulated along two close or similar parallel axes formed by the hinges 58, like the forewings of a beetle, are well-known from the state of the art.
[0061] However, the lateral protection hoods 60 are, in this case, structural hoods that contribute to the rigidity of the unit formed by the cradle 10 and the hoods 60.
[0062] With respect to a cradle known from the state of the art, the cradle 10 equipped with structural hoods 60 proposed herein has increased rigidity. Therefore, it can comprise a truss 20 of rods comprising a limited number of rods, and in particular no longer comprising rods in the lower portion. Thus, as shown in
[0063] The cradle 10 according to the invention is therefore particularly well adapted to an aircraft power unit comprising a turbopropeller engine attached to the cradle 10 and provided with a reduction gear 31 extending at the front of the front arch 16 of said cradle 10 and under the air inlet 44 of the tube section 36, as shown in