WING TIP DEVICE ATTACHMENT APPARATUS AND METHOD
20190225325 ยท 2019-07-25
Inventors
- Julien Chaussee (Bristol, GB)
- Camille Paumes (Bristol, GB)
- Norman Wijker (Bristol, GB)
- Stuart Alexander (Bristol, GB)
Cpc classification
Y02T50/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B64C23/072
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C3/56
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method of assembling a wing tip device to a wing of a powered aircraft including: providing a wing tip, providing a wing tip device, pivotably attaching the wing tip device to the wing at a first position, pivoting the wing tip device about the first position, and attaching the wing tip device to the wing at a second position spaced from the first position.
Claims
1. A method of assembling a wing tip device to a wing of a powered aircraft comprising the steps of: providing a wing tip, providing a wing tip device, pivotably attaching the wing tip device to the wing at a first position, pivoting the wing tip device about the first position, and attaching the wing tip device to the wing at a second position spaced from the first position.
2. The method of claim 1, in which the first position is closer to the wing tip device than the second position.
3. The method of claim 1, in which the wing tip device comprises a first mounting member extending therefrom, which mounting member is attached to the wing at the first and second positions, and in which the mounting member defines an outer surface which forms part of the outer surface of the wing tip in use.
4. The method of claim 1, in which the wing tip device comprises: a first mounting member extending from the wing tip device, the first mounting member defining a first attachment formation comprising a first pivotable joint means; a second mounting member extending from the wing tip device being spaced in a chordwise direction from the first mounting member and defining a second attachment formation comprising a second pivotable joint means; wherein the step of pivotably attaching the wing tip device to the wing at a first position comprises pivotably attaching the wing tip device to the wing at the first and second pivotable joint means, and wherein the step of pivoting the wing tip device about the first position comprises pivoting the wing tip device about the first and second pivotable joint means.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the wing tip device is pivoted above the axis of rotation of the wing tip device.
6. The method of claim 4 wherein the first mounting member defines a second attachment formation distal to the wing tip device and wherein the step of attaching the wing tip device to the wing at the second position comprises attaching the wing tip device to the wing tip using the second attachment formation.
Description
SUMMARY OF DRAWINGS
[0028] A wing tip device attachment apparatus and method in accordance with the invention will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying figures in which:
[0029]
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[0041]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
[0042] Referring to
[0043] The wing tip device 104 is attached to the wing tip 102 at the outboard end 106. As such a torque, Twl, is generated which is a product of the winglet force Fwl and the perpendicular distance Lwl to the centre of the outboard end 106 of the wing tip 102 (also known as the winglet moment arm).
[0044] In order to keep the wing tip device 104 stably attached to the outboard end 106 of the wing tip 102, the torque Twl created by the winglet force Fwl must be reacted at the outboard end 106. Because the moment arm available at the outboard end 106 can only be as high as the wingbox thickness Tw, the reaction forces Fw1, Fw2 are extremely high. As such the material in the area of the outboard end 106 of the wing tip 102 has to be reinforced adding weight and complexity to the aircraft.
[0045] As mentioned above, known attachment methods include splice plates which span the upper and lower skin of the wing tip device 104 and the wing tip 102. Alternatively abutting perpendicular plates at the outboard end 106 which are used and held in position by tension bolts. In both cases a moment arm defined vertically between the two wing covers is used to react the forces.
[0046] Turning to
[0047] The winglet 114 comprises a winglet root 128 and a free end 130 distanced from and vertically spaced from the winglet root 128.
[0048] A main beam 132 extends from a position partway between the free end 130 and the winglet root 128 and extends towards the winglet root 128 and beyond into the wing tip 112 as will be described below. The main beam 132 is spaced towards the rear of the winglet 114. A canted spar 134 runs from the position midway along the winglet 114 towards the winglet root 128 but diverges from the main beam 132 towards the forward part of the winglet 114. The canted spar 134 extends into the wing tip 112 as will be described below.
[0049] The main beam 132 and the canted spar 134 are supported by a number of winglet ribs 136 which extend chordwise within the winglet 114. A winglet skin 138 covers the winglet in order to present an aerodynamic surface to the airflow.
[0050] Referring to
[0051] The canted spar 134 also extends into the wing tip 112, but in this example is only arranged to abut the wing tip rib 122 and is attached thereto at point C.
[0052] A, B and C are therefore first, second and third mounting formations, and will be described in greater detail below.
[0053] Turning to
[0054]
[0055]
[0056]
[0057] In the examples shown in
[0058] Referring to
[0059] Referring to
[0060] Referring to
[0061] Referring to
[0062] Referring to
[0063] Referring to
[0064] Finally, referring to
[0065] The release of certain degrees of freedom (e.g. the inability of the spigot at B to react the side force FX) allows the system some relative movement to avoid thermally induced stresses whilst making the loads more predictable (moving towards a statically determinate system). For example, because the joint at point B does not need to react the side force, it can be made smaller as a result (i.e. can be optimised for a more predictable load case).
[0066] It will be noted that because the present invention only uses three attachment points, it is possible to constrain the winglet 114 in a manner which makes the system statically determinate. Therefore, each attachment point can be designed around a known load case. This offers an advantage over the prior art in which generally a high number of fixings are used for load-bearing purposes and consequently a statically indeterminate system is formed in which the exact load case on each attachment point is unknown. Therefore each attachment point has to be over-engineered to cope with the worst possible case.
[0067] Referring to
[0068] This method of assembly demands an interruption in the skin on the top of the wing tip 202. This can be achieved by making the winglet mean beam part of the aerodynamic surface of the wing (see below) or providing a replaceable panel in the wing skin. The method permits replacement of the winglet in-field without the need for an overhead crane and/or hanger space.
[0069] Referring now to
[0070] The wing tip 302 comprises a front spar 306 and a rear spar 308. A front spar 306 comprises two flanges extending in a chordwise direction; an upper flange 310 and a lower flange (not visible). The flanges extend towards the rear spar 308. Similarly, the rear spar 308 comprises an upper flange 312 and a lower flange 314 both of which extend towards the front spar 306. A rib 316 extends between the spars 306, 308 in a chordwise direction at the widest parts of the flanges 310, 312, 314.
[0071] The winglet 304 comprises a flat main beam 318 which extends substantially parallel to the skin of the winglet 304. The main beam 318 tapers from a point midway along the winglet 304 to its thickest cross-section at a mid-point 320 at the position where the winglet and the wing tip meet and tapers inwardly again at attachment point 322 within the wing tip 302.
[0072] The beam 318 is attached to the wing tip 302 via a spigot at point B, a lap shear joint at point A and a further lap shear joint at point C. The axes of rotation of the lap joints at A and C are aligned such that the winglet 304 can be assembled to the wing tip 302 in a similar manner as described in
[0073] It will be noted that the beam 318 tapers from the point of maximum bending moment at area 320 to areas of lower bending moment at its opposite ends within both the winglet 304 and the wing tip 312. Referring to
[0074] It will also be noted that by making the beam 318 part of the wing skin, the assembly process as shown in
[0075] Variations fall within the scope of the present invention.