SAE AIR 5691-2013 Guidance for the Design and Installation of Fuel Quantity Indicating Systems《燃料质量指示系统安装和设计导则》.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 entirely voluntary, and its applicability and suitability for any particular use, including any patent infringement arising there
2、from, is the sole responsibility of the user.“ SAE reviews each technical report at least every five years at which time it may be revised, reaffirmed, stabilized, or cancelled. SAE invites your written comments and suggestions. Copyright 2013 SAE International All rights reserved. No part of this p
3、ublication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of SAE. TO PLACE A DOCUMENT ORDER: Tel: 877-606-7323 (inside USA and Canada) Tel: +1 724-776-497
4、0 (outside USA) Fax: 724-776-0790 Email: CustomerServicesae.org SAE WEB ADDRESS: http:/www.sae.org SAE values your input. To provide feedback on this Technical Report, please visit http:/www.sae.org/technical/standards/AIR5691 AEROSPACE INFORMATION REPORT AIR5691 Issued 2013-01 Guidance for the Desi
5、gn and Installation of Fuel Quantity Indicating Systems RATIONALE This guidance document has been produced in an effort to record best practice in fuel gauging system design and indicate those things which should be considered in the design of a new fuel gauging system in order to achieve an accurat
6、e and reliable fuel quantity indicating system (FQIS). It is also intended to capture changes in design practice since ARINC 611-1 was issued in 1999. FOREWORD Airlines and aircraft operators continue to experience an assortment of in-service problems caused by fuel gauging systems. The complex natu
7、re of the system and its importance to the operation of the aircraft tends to produce faults that need to be repaired prior to further flight. This is especially true on older systems where the probes in a tank were treated as a single input. These faults typically are inconvenient to repair and oft
8、en require an extensive amount of time to isolate and correct. With more advanced systems where each probe is connected individually to the processing electronics this can be less of an issue, and flights can continue with a single probe failure or even multiple probe failures in some cases, allowin
9、g failures to be addressed as a scheduled maintenance issue. Older systems often exhibited a large number of in-flight faults that can be difficult or impossible to reproduce on the ground. This, combined with the limited BITE (Built-In Test Equipment) facilities on older systems has led to many abo
10、rtive attempts at trouble-shooting and thousands of man-hours of unproductive effort spent in trying to determine the root cause of the fault. The primary problem with older FQIS systems has been associated with the electrical connections and connectors and the need to approach troubleshooting from
11、a fundamental physics approach (i.e., what could impact shifts in capacitance value). The fuel tank wiring harnesses with associated connectors are often the cause of the problem due to the size (gauge of wire), shielding, system complexity, routing of wire and moisture ingress. Problems in this are
12、a are brought about by the systems susceptibility to grounding anomalies on shielded cables (particularly applicable to older systems based on 400 Hz AC capacitance measuring technology). The problem most often observed is due to the wire harness shields no longer being properly grounded, and thus t
13、he noise rejection of the system is degraded and the harness capacitance can cause large errors in FQI reading. The replacement of a wiring harness requires typically up to 1 day of actual replacement time, once the replacement wire harness(es) are received, which generally equates to 3 days of airc
14、raft downtime. Often there is the necessity to replace the entire wiring harness, when frequently the fault is caused by just one faulty wire, as it is not always obvious where the intermittent failure is. Copyright SAE International Provided by IHS under license with SAENot for ResaleNo reproductio
15、n or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-SAE AIR5691 Page 2 of 63 Other shortcomings of capacitance systems, based on widespread experience with capacitance technology, are problems associated with the presence of water in the fuel. Water can be present in solution when the fuel is loa
16、ded (uplifted). The water solubility in fuel increases with temperature, conversely, as the fuel temperature decreases the water precipitates out of the fuel, leading to more free water in the tank, which ultimately changes to ice. The water settles at the bottom of the tank and can build up to such
17、 a level that it starts to rise between the concentric tubes of capacitance probes and may cause erroneous measurements. Liquid water has a very high dielectric constant when compared to aviation fuels (nominal 40 to 1 ratio) that introduces significant changes in measured capacitance for fuel senso
18、rs that are immersed in water, even if that immersion affects only the lower few millimeters of the probe. It must be noted that frozen water is not conductive and has a dielectric constant not far from fuel (1.4 to 1 ratio) and so does not have the same effect as free water. Traditional fuel system
19、s address water condensation by frequent sumping/water drain activities from the fuel tanks and placement of the fuel sensors sufficiently above the bottom of the tank to mitigate water accumulation effects. Fuel probes are designed to readily shed water from collecting on the inner surfaces of the
20、capacitive sensor. These measures do not solve the problem entirely, but reduce it to a practical level. Ultrasonic fuel quantity systems also have issues with water as there is a boundary layer between fuel and water, and reflection of the ultrasonic signal from this boundary can be read as fuel le
21、vel. Ultrasonic systems can have other issues such as temperature cycling extremes experienced by the fuel tanks putting thermal stress on the ultrasonic transducer, so the sensor quality is paramount. In addition, air bubbles in fuel will cause the sensor not to be able to read the fuel height, as
22、the lower surface of the bubble will reflect the ultrasonic signal, leading to a lower height reading for sensors affected by bubbles, This is particular problem during climb, where the fuel will out-gas rapidly producing many bubbles. A bigger problem area is the perceived poor accuracy of fuel qua
23、ntity systems (no matter what the base technology) from the viewpoint of operating crews. Discrepancies between the FQIS and the bowser meter on dispensing trucks during refueling can lead to delays where the loaded quantity must be checked. Crews may uplift more fuel than required as a contingency
24、factor to compensate for perceived inaccuracies. Declared system accuracy can have an effect on the required fuel load, with less accurate systems requiring extra fuel to be loaded. A more accurate system results in less fuel needed as a contingency factor. However, several surveys have shown that i
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