Global Gears Information


Gear Applications
Gears Types
Axel Positioning Gears
Gear Material
Gear Drives
Gear Drive Classification
Gear Accessories
Gear Resources

Helicopter Gearboxes



Helicopter Gearboxes The helicopter gearbox comprises of a gearing mechanism that reduces the turbine shaft speed to the speed needed for the main rotor and tail rotor drives. It also has a bulletproof, wet, multi-disc hydraulic clutch with an automated engagement, a very high capacity auto rotation clutch, two horizontal shaft for output shaft-one for the main rotor drive and one for the tail rotor drive. Along with it also contains in it a transmission chip detector, an integrated fuel pump and a lightweight alternator.

This gearbox comprises a two-stage transmission with an overall reduction of 17.44:1. A normalized energy metric is used to classify seeded faults of the main transmission. Loaded gearbox test runs are used to evaluate the sensitivity of a non-stationary fault detection and classification. The non-stationary fault metric consists of a simple normalized energy index developed to account for a redistribution of side band energy of the dominant mesh frequency and its harmonics in the presence of actual gearbox faults. This index is used to qualitatively assess the presence, type and location of faults. With gearboxes for the main rota and tail rota and no forced air cooling, helicopters have a unique requirement for gearbox oil cooling systems.

The forces acting on a aviation gearbox during flight are simulated on the test stand by means of mechanical load systems. Quality assessment is based on measurement and documentation of all simulated operating conditions, which include speeds, torque, rotor thrust, rotor mast bending, wear, heat balance, vibrations, and oil pressures and oil flow.

A magnesium alloy is used for many navy helicopter gearbox and main transmission housings.



��