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Flight demonstration of a self repairing flight control system in a NASA F-15 fighter aircraftBattle damage causing loss of control capability can compromise mission objectives and even result in aircraft loss. The Self Repairing Flight Control System (SRFCS) flight development program directly addresses this issue with a flight control system design that measures the damage and immediately refines the control system commands to preserve mission potential. The system diagnostics process detects in flight the type of faults that are difficult to isolate post flight, and thus cause excessive ground maintenance time and cost. The control systems of fighter aircraft have the control power and surface displacement to maneuver the aircraft in a very large flight envelope with a wide variation in airspeed and g maneuvering conditions, with surplus force capacity available from each control surface. Digital flight control processors are designed to include built-in status of the control system components, as well as sensor information on aircraft control maneuver commands and response. In the event of failure or loss of a control surface, the SRFCS utilizes this capability to reconfigure control commands to the remaining control surfaces, thus preserving maneuvering response. Correct post-flight repair is the key to low maintainability support costs and high aircraft mission readiness. The SRFCS utilizes the large data base available with digital flight control systems to diagnose faults. Built-in-test data and sensor data are used as inputs to an Onboard Expert System process to accurately identify failed components for post-flight maintenance action. This diagnostic technique has the advantage of functioning during flight, and so is especially useful in identifying intermittent faults that are present only during maneuver g loads or high hydraulic flow requirements. A flight system was developed to test the reconfiguration and onboard maintenance diagnostics concepts on a NASA F-15 fighter aircraft.
Document ID
19910003389
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Urnes, James M.
(McDonnell-Douglas Astronautics Co. Saint Louis, MO., United States)
Stewart, James
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA., United States)
Eslinger, Robert
(Wright Research Development Center Wright-Patterson AFB, OH., United States)
Date Acquired
August 14, 2013
Publication Date
April 1, 1990
Publication Information
Publication: AGARD, Fault Tolerant Design Concepts for Highly Integrated Flight Critical Guidance and Control Systems
Subject Category
Aircraft Stability And Control
Accession Number
91N12702
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
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