New methodology for flight control system sizing and hinge moment estimation

Author(s):  
Carlos Cabaleiro de la Hoz ◽  
Marco Fioriti

Flight control surfaces guarantee a safe and precise control of the aircraft. As a result, hinge moments are generated. These moments need to be estimated in order to properly size the aircraft actuators. Control surfaces include the ailerons, rudder, elevator, flaps, slats, and spoilers, and they are moved by electric or hydraulic actuators. Actuator sizing is the key when comparing different flight control system architectures. This fact becomes even more important when developing more-electric aircraft. Hinge moments need to be estimated so that the actuators can be properly sized and their effects on the overall aircraft design are measured. Hinge moments are difficult to estimate on the early stages of the design process due to the large number of required input. Detailed information about the airfoil, wing surfaces, control surfaces, and actuators is needed but yet not known on early design phases. The objective of this paper is to propose a new methodology for flight control system sizing, including mass and power estimation. A surrogate model for the hinge moment estimation is also proposed and used. The main advantage of this new methodology is that all the components and actuators can be properly sized instead of just having overall system results. The whole system can now be sized more in detail during the preliminary design process, which allows to have a more reliable estimation and to perform systems installation analysis. Results show a reliable system mass estimation similar to the results obtained with other known methods and also providing the weight for each component individually.

Author(s):  
J E Perrin

Manned flight simulation plays a key role in the design and development of modern aircraft systems where pilot interaction is an important consideration. Examples of the systems simulated during an aircraft project include the flight control system, the head-up display, the weapons system and the warnings system. Flight simulation allows the pilot to assess the system operation at an early stage in the design process, and modifications can be quickly implemented so that optimum system operation can be finalized. At British Aerospace (Military Aircraft Division), Warton, three differently configured simulators are currently utilized in the evaluation of aircraft systems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mária Jabrocká ◽  
◽  
Martin Bugaj

Automation, robotic, unconventional arrangement hydrogen are the hallmarks of new trends in aircraft design. The implementation of hydrogen fuel in aircraft appears to be one of the biggest advances in the near future. Automation in aircraft control is based on the reduction of runway requirements. Among the main conclusions of the paper we include the finding that the aircraft does not have to have a classic conventional arrangement of vertical tail surfaces in order to achieve static/dynamic stability of the aircraft. The complexity of the elements of the aircraft stability and flight control system is directly depended on the weight of the aircraft. Upcoming trends in aircraft design should only based on existing concepts.


1975 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-299
Author(s):  
G. H. Hunt

This paper was presented at a joint meeting of the Institute with the Institution of Electronic and Radio Engineers in London on 15 January 1975. The theme of the meeting at which six papers were discussed (a selection of which will be published in the Journal) was Advances in Airborne Equipment for Navigation and Freight Control.Modern data processors because of their increasing power and flexibility are increasingly used for a variety of functions in modern aircraft, both civil and military. It might seem that a flight control system could be designed of the form shown in Fig. 1, with a powerful central processor taking in signals from all the relevant sensors, gyros, pressure sensors, radar, &c., and operating the control surfaces so as to drive the aircraft along any desired course. But such a system would be quite inadequate in two vitally important aspects: there is no facility for inputs from the aircrew and no account has been taken of failure cases. These and other factors drive the control system designer inexorably towards a total system structure very similar to the type currently used in operational aircraft. There are of course a wide variety of such systems, but most of them are characterized by a number of common features.


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