SAE AIR 1335A-2000 Ramp De-Icing《停机坪除冰》.pdf
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1、SAE Technical Standards Board Rules provide that: “This report is published by SAE to advance the state of technical and engineering sciences. The use of this report is entirelyvoluntary, and its applicability and suitability for any particular use, including any patent infringement arising therefro
2、m, is the sole responsibility of the user.”SAE reviews each technical report at least every five years at which time it may be reaffirmed, revised, or cancelled. SAE invites your written comments and suggestions.Copyright 2000 Society of Automotive Engineers, Inc.All rights reserved.Printed in U.S.A
3、.TO PLACE A DOCUMENT ORDER: (724) 776-4970 FAX: (724) 776-0790SAE WEB ADDRESS: http:/www.sae.org400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA 15096-0001AEROSPACE INFORMATION REPORTAIR1335REV.AIssued 1975-01Revised 2000-03Ramp De-IcingFOREWORDChanges in this revision are format/editorial only.TABLE OF CONTE
4、NTSINTRODUCTION 21. SCOPE .42. REFERENCES .43. DE-ICING WEATHER.43.1 Season and Temperature 43.2 Heat .44. SURFACE DE-ICING FLUID55. RAMP DE-ICING 56. THE FUTURE OF DE-ICING67. WHY DE-ICING? 87.1 De-Icing .87.2 Why De-Ice? 87.3 Ice-Accretion87.4 Icing Conditions for Jets 108. IMPROPER DE-ICING .108.
5、1 “Aileron and Rudder Nibble vs Vibration Enroute“ - An Actual Occurence108.2 Reaction. 11APPENDIX A .12SAE values your input. To provide feedback on this Technical Report, please visit http:/www.sae.org/technical/standards/AIR1335A SAE AIR1335 Revision A- 2 -INTRODUCTIONA. REPORT ON DE-ICINGThis br
6、ief report attempts to summarize many different factors and it should be noted that the figures are not exact and should only be taken as “rule of thumb“ figures; there are many, many exceptions to them. De-icing is a long way from an exact science and is actually a very rough science, with very lit
7、tle having been written about it. Much of the following information has been received from Air Canada and we wish to give credit and thanks to Air Canada for their help. De-icing probably affects Air Canada more than any other airline in the western world, consequently, they are probably more concer
8、ned with the problem than other airlines. In recent years, however there has been an increasing awareness by all airlines flying in the northern hemisphere and, consequently, the management of all of these airlines are much more concerned with the possibility of delays, particularly with the increas
9、ed travel and increased size of the aircraft.B. BRIEF HISTORY OF RAMP DE-ICINGAs recently as 1957, the only type of de-icing or snow removal equipment available to many airlines was manual or if a hangar was available, then the aircraft could be moved into the hangar, and the snow or ice washed off
10、with water from the fire hydrant. A manual method of removing snow was either by the use of brooms, which were very dangerous both to personnel and to aircraft, or by tying knots in a rope with rags in the knots. The rope would then be thrown over the wing and one man on either end would pull the ro
11、pe back-and-forth, in this way loosening up the snow and ice and partially cleaning the wings. It was fairly common in the 1950s to have a plane towed to a hangar and have the snow washed off with a fire hydrant hose and then someone on a stepladder with a bucket of glycol would spray on a protectiv
12、e coating. This procedure was improved by having a small, air-cooled engine driving a pump and a tank of glycol, all supported by a forklift and the operator could be maneuvered around the aircraft. There were many other such methods, even a simple platform, for the operator to stand on, mounted on
13、a truck. During the 1950s, Canadas role in North American defense was one of having fighter aircraft at various bases across the northern part of North America. These fighters were to become airborne in the event of an attack by a foreign power. The threat was ever present of catching the fighter ai
14、rcraft with snow on the wings and snow on the runway, preventing the aircraft from interrupting the possible attack. This situation caused activity to obtain equipment to not only wash the snow and ice off of the wings of the aircraft quickly but also to clean the runways quickly. Possibly the fore-
15、runner of sophisticated de-icers was developed for the Canadian Air Force in the mid-1950s in the form of a small, three-wheeled vehicle with a single boom which would not only elevate but also traverse between the wheels and having a tank which was heated electrically and a pump to dispense the hea
16、ted fluid. At the same time, the U. S. Air Force had a requirement for a decontaminating vehicle which could spray hot, decontaminating fluid on a bomber in the event of its returning from a nuclear bombing raid and having been subjected to nuclear fallout. A large number of these vehicles were buil
17、t, however, the device turned out to have all of the basic ingredients of a sophisticated de-icer, insofar as it had tanks, pumps, closed flame heaters and the aerial apparatus. These machines were too costly for the commercial airlines and it was only Air Canada that bought any, the cost justified
18、by using them for flight maintenance as well as de-icing. Equipment needs changed and, with the size of aircraft increased, this small, three-wheel machine was too small, too slow and provided insufficient heat for a busy station.SAE AIR1335 Revision A- 3 -Because of the inadequacies of the small de
19、-icer, the next generation device was a truck-mounted unit which, of course, had much higher ground speeds, larger tanks, larger pumps and closed flame heaters similar to those used by the U. S. Air Force. In all of the de-icers mentioned to this point, 10 gallons per minute from a nozzle was consid
20、ered a fairly large flow. In the early 1960s, a three wheel vehicle type de-icer was developed in the United States which had much larger tanks, larger pumps and an open flame gas fired heater. This unit was produced in quantity and was quite satisfactory except for its ground speed. In the mid-1960
21、s, the quantity of glycol sprayed from the nozzle increased dramatically and it was proven that the larger gallonages from the single nozzle transmitted more BTUs to the wings, more efficient in heat transfer and in time to de-ice an aircraft. The increased use of glycol was accepted. In the meantim
22、e, Air Canada was experiencing higher costs than any other airline because of many more days of de-icing weather and because of the increase in the size of planes and in the frequency of flights. A third generation of aircraft de-icers was ordered, which, of course, had larger tanks, larger pumps, h
23、igher pumping pressures, higher aerial devices and closed flame heaters.In early 1968 the Air Transport Associations committee on de-icing and aircraft servicing drew up specifications for a fourth generation of de-icers which came into being with the introduction of the 747. The fourth generation w
24、as very much larger and truck mounted, with a minimum 1500 gallon tank size and the ability of “instant heat“. This would give them the ability to take the fluid from a partly heated tank and discharge it at the maximum temperature directly on to the aircraft. Any type of de-icer with a hot tank and
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- SAEAIR1335A2000RAMPDEICING 停机坪 除冰 PDF
