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General Electric CF6

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:30

La lignée du CF-6 de General Electric racontée sur Wikipedia de langue anglaise. Thanks ! ( en français : rien )

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The General Electric CF6 is a family of [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] produced by [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

A development of the first high-power high-bypass jet engine available, the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], the CF6 powers a wide variety of civilian airliners.

The basic engine core formed the basis for the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], LM5000, and [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] marine and power generation [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]. GE intends to replace the CF6 family with the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:32

CF-6 50

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:32

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:33

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:33

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:34

Development


After the successful development in the late 1960s of the TF39 for the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], GE offered a more powerful development for civilian use as the CF6, and quickly found interest in two designs being offered for a recent [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] contract, the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] and [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

Although the L-1011 would eventually select the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], the DC-10 stuck with the CF6, and entered service in 1971. It was also selected for versions of the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

Since then, the CF6 has powered versions of the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] and [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], and [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

The NTSB issued warnings regarding the cracking of the high pressure compressor in 2000 and failure of the low pressure turbine rotor disks in 2010.

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:35

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:37

CF-6-50

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:37

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:38

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:38

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:39

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:40

Variants

CF6-6

The CF6-6 was a development of the military TF39. It was first utilized on the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

This initial version of the CF6 comprises a single stage fan, with one core booster stage, driven by a 5-stage LP (low pressure) turbine, supercharging a 16-stage HP (high pressure) [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] driven by a 2-stage HP turbine; the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] is annular; separate exhaust nozzles are used for the fan and core airflows.

The 86.4 in (2.19 m) diameter fan generates an airflow of 1300 lb/s (590 kg/s), resulting in a relatively high bypass ratio of 5.72.

The [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] of the compression system is 24.3.

At maximum take-off power, the engine develops a static thrust of 41,500 lb (185.05 kN).

A complete disintegration of a CF6-6 fan assembly resulted in the loss of [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] of [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] over [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] in [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

The failure of a CF6-6 was the primary cause of the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] USA crash of [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] in [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] .

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:43

CF-6-6 "cutaway"

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:44

AD FAA 1993, famille CF 6

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Applicability: General Electric Company (GE) CF6-6/-45/-50/-80A/-80C2 series turbofan engines that contain high pressure turbine (HPT) thermal shields as listed in the applicable service bulletins that are referenced in this AD, installed on but not limited to Airbus A300 and A310 series, Boeing 747 and 767 series, and McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and MD-11 series aircraft.

Compliance: Required as indicated, unless accomplished previously.

To prevent an uncontained engine failure, accomplish the following:

(a) Perform either an impression and optical comparitor inspection or an ultrasonic inspection of the HPT thermal shield at the next HPT shop visit, or by December 12, 1995, whichever occurs first, as follows:

(1) For GE CF6-6 engines, in accordance with GE CF6-6 Service Bulletin (SB) No. 72-983, Revision 1, dated October 10, 1991.

(2) For CF6-45/-50 engines, in accordance with GE CF6-50 SB No. 72-1021, Revision 1, dated October 10, 1991.

(3) For CF6-80A engines, in accordance with GE CF6-80A SB No. 72-596, Revision 1, dated October 10, 1991.

(4) For CF6-80C2 engines, in accordance with GE CF6-80C2 SB No. 72-565, Revision 1, dated October 10, 1991.

(b) Remove from service prior to further flight, and replace with a serviceable part, HPT thermal shields that do not meet the service criteria contained in the applicable service bulletins as specified in paragraph (a) of this AD.

(c) For the purpose of this AD, a shop visit is defined as the removal of the HPT module from the engine for any reason.

(d) An alternative method of compliance or adjustment of the compliance time that provides an acceptable level of safety may be used if approved by the Manager, Engine Certification Office.
The request should be forwarded through an appropriate FAA Principal Maintenance Inspector, who may add comments and then send it to the Manager, Engine Certification Office.

NOTE: Information concerning the existence of approved alternative methods of compliance with this airworthiness directive, if any, may be obtained from the Engine Certification Office.

(e) Special flight permits may be issued in accordance with FAR 21.197 and 21.199 to operate the airplane to a location where the requirements of this AD can be accomplished.


Dernière édition par Maury le Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:46, édité 1 fois

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General Electric CF6 Empty Re: General Electric CF6

Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:56

Heu... Si, bien-sûr, les AD CF-6 sont tellement nombreux que cela fait un sujet tout seul, que j'incluais dans l'histoire, assez brève sur Wikipedia, du GE CF-6

En fait, mon angle personnel d'approche concernait les expertises métallurgiques de CF-6 45/ 50 :

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 16:56

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has identified a critical safety issue with General Electric Company (GE) CF6-45/-50 series turbofan engine low pressure turbine (LPT) stage 3 (S3) disks that requires immediate action.

The investigations of several recent uncontained LPT S3 disk failures have determined that the CF6-45/-50 engine LPT S3 disk, a critical, life-limited rotating engine part, can fail unexpectedly when excited by high pressure (HP) rotor unbalance vibration resulting from localized high pressure turbine (HPT) blade material loss.

A turbine disk failure can release high-energy engine debris capable of damaging an airplane and endangering its passengers.

This failure mode was identified in the 1970s, but an uncontained failure did not occur until 2008.GE established inspection procedures to mitigate this failure mode on August 28, 2009, via GE Service Bulletin (SB) 1307.

However, an uncontained LPT S3 disk failure occurred following an inspection using the new procedures, which has raised concerns that the procedures are insufficient to prevent additional LPT S3 disk failures.

Although the investigations of these events are ongoing, the NTSB believes that immediate action is required to address
this safety issue.

On July 4, 2008, a Saudi Arabian Airlines (Saudia) Boeing 747-300 experienced an uncontained failure of its GE CF6-50 No. 1 engine, during initial climb after takeoff from King Abdulaziz International Airport, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

No injuries were reported.

The nonrevenue repositioning flight was going to Jakarta, Indonesia, for maintenance.

The flight crewmembers reported that, following takeoff, they reduced the No. 1 engine thrust after noticing
fluctuations in its exhaust gas temperature and fan speed (N1).According to the captain, the fluctuations continued during the initial climb, and, about 1 minute later, at about 1,100 feet above ground level (agl), the engine’s low oil pressure warning illuminated, and the oil quantity indicator read zero.


The flight crew shut down the engine, dumped fuel, returned to the airport, and accomplished an uneventful
landing.

Postflight inspection of the airplane found that the aft end of the No. 1 engine was missing and that airplane damage, including penetration of the airplane’s left wing and flaps, was consistent with impact from parts exiting the engine.

Examination of the No. 1 engine found that the engine’s LPT S3 disk had separated at the forward spacer arm and that all components aft of the separation were missing.

Most of the missing engine components were recovered about 2 1/2 miles from the departure end of the runway.

The forward and aft portions of the LPT S3 disk were examined.

The disk had separated at the fillet radius between the forward spacer arm and the rim forward face.

Metallurgical examination of undamaged areas of the disk fracture surfaces found fatigue cracks initiating around the inner diameter of the spacer arm from sites spaced about 0.1 inch to 0.2 inch apart.

The cracks had propagated rapidly through the spacer arm thickness and exhibited high-stress, high-cycle fatigue, termed high-amplitude fatigue (HAF), consistent with a high-amplitude per-revolution stimulus.

The cracks joined to form a single circumferential crack, which led to the 360° fracture and disk separation.

A postincident video borescope inspection (BSI)5 of the engine’s HPT revealed that three HPT stage one (S1) blades
over a nine-blade sector were missing airfoil material equivalent to about 1.8 blades.

This amount of localized blade material loss can result in a significant increase in the eccentricity of the rotor mass center relative to its axis of rotation (rotor unbalance).

On March 26, 2009, an Arrow Cargo McDonnell Douglas DC-10F experienced an uncontained failure of its No. 2 GE CF6-50 engine.

There were no injuries.

The airplane was operating under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 121 as a regularly scheduled cargo flight from Eduardo Gomes International Airport, Manaus, Brazil, to El Dorado International Airport, Bogota, Colombia.According to flight crew reports and flight data recorder information, about 30 minutes after takeoff, about 8,000 feet agl, the airplane’s No. 2 engine began to lose oil pressure and N1 decreased.

The pilots shut down the engine and diverted to José María Córdova International Airport, Medellín, Colombia, where an uneventful landing was accomplished.

Postflight inspection found that the aft end of the No. 2 engine was missing and that there was impact and tearing damage to the airplane’s horizontal stabilizers, tail strut, elevator, and rudder.

A teardown examination of the Arrow Cargo engine found that the LPT S3 disk had fractured 360° at the fillet radius between the forward spacer arm and the rim forward face and that all components aft of the LPT S3 nozzles were missing.

The liberated engine parts impacted a densely populated area, and 22 homes were reported damaged.

Metallurgical examination of the LPT S3 disk fracture surfaces revealed HAF cracks over approximately 90 percent of the fracture, consistent with a high-amplitude per-revolution stimulus.

The remaining 10 percent of the fracture showed overstress features.

Cracks propagated from initiation sites spaced about 0.1 inch to 0.2 inch around the inner circumference of the spacer arm and joined to form a single circumferential crack, leading to disk separation.

Inspection of the HPT rotor found that one HPT S1 blade was missing about 85 percent of its airfoil.

On December 17, 2009, a Jett8 Cargo Boeing 747-200F airplane, registration 9V-JEB, experienced an uncontained failure of its No. 4 CF6-50 engine in Singapore. No injuries were reported.

According to information provided by the Singapore Air Accident Investigation Bureau, which is investigating this incident, the flight crewmembers reported that, while passing through 7,000 feet agl, they heard a muffled explosion and immediately applied left rudder.

Noting rapidly decreasing No. 4 engine oil pressure and N1, the crew performed the engine failure checklist and returned to land the airplane at Singapore Changi International Airport, Changi, Singapore.

Post-event inspection found that the aft end of the No. 4 engine was missing and that the lower right wing/pylon, the aft right cargo door, and the vertical stabilizer exhibited damage consistent with impact from high-energy parts.

An inspection of the No. 4 engine found that the engine’s LPT S3 disk had separated at the forward spacer arm and that all components aft of the separation were missing.

In addition, localized HPT blade deterioration was observed in a video of a BSI provided by the Air Accident Investigation Bureau of Singapore.

The NTSB is participating in this investigation.

On April 10, 2010, an ACT Cargo Airbus A300B4 experienced an uncontained failure of its No. 2 CF6-50 engine while accelerating for takeoff at Bahrain International Airport, Manama, Bahrain.

The crew declared an emergency, rejected the takeoff, activated the fire suppression system, and evacuated the airplane.

No injuries were reported.

Photographs of parts recovered from the runway indicate that the LPT S3 disk separated at the forward spacer arm.

The NTSB is participating in this investigation.

The NTSB is coordinating teardowns and inspections of the Jett8 Cargo and the ACT Cargo engines in order to gain more insight into the failures.

HPT rotor blades are expected to deteriorate (lose blade airfoil material) between overhaul intervals due to the operating stresses they experience.

The blade material loss is usually symmetrical and does not significantly affect rotor balance.

However, when the blade material loss is localized, detrimental rotor unbalance will occur, resulting in synchronous, per-revolution vibration.

According to GE, when sufficient HP rotor unbalance occurs in the CF6-45/-50 engine, the resulting synchronous vibration forces can interact with the low pressure (LP) rotor system through a common bearing support and excite a bladed-disk mode response8 in the LPT S3 disk.

The resonant frequency experienced by the LPT S3 disk in this mode will result in forward spacer arm bending loads that exceed the fatigue limit of the material, which then causes HAF cracks to initiate.

The individual cracks can link together, forming a circumferential crack that results in separation of the aft section of the LP rotor.

The separated rotor section will penetrate the engine case, releasing high-energy debris.

The structural failure of the engine case will result in the liberation of all case-supported components aft of the
fracture.


The CF6 LPT S3 disk resonance response to HP rotor unbalance was first identified in the GE CF6-6 engine, which shares the CF6-45/-50 type certificate.

The CF6-6 experienced four uncontained LPT S3 disk forward spacer arm separations between 1975 and 1978 due to HP rotor unbalance.

As a result, GE redesigned the CF6-6 LPT S3 disk so that an HP rotor unbalance condition would not excite the LPT S3 disk and result in disk failure.

The CF6-50 engine has experienced 12 instances of LPT S3 disk forward spacer arm cracking since 1973.

Eight of the cracked CF6-50 disk forward spacer arms were discovered during shop-level inspections when LPTs were disassembled for unrelated reasons, such as engine model conversion or the replacement of life-limited parts.

In the remaining cases, all of which are cited above, disk cracks progressed to failure, leading to in-service uncontained engine failures.

Airplane maintenance manuals (AMMs) require inspection of CF6-45/-50 HP rotor blades every 450 flight cycles as part of the engine hot section BSI.

However, the Saudia LPT S3 disk failure occurred about 216 flight cycles after the engine’s last hot section BSI, and the Arrow Cargo LPT S3 disk failure occurred about 350 flight cycles after the engine’s last hot section BSI, 10 indicating that a 450 cycle hot section BSI interval was not adequate to detect HPT blade deterioration that can result in
catastrophic LPT S3 disk failure.

On August 28, 2009, GE issued CF6-45/-50 SB 1307, which recommended that operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes conduct an HPT rotor blade BSI every 200 or fewer flight cycles to detect HPT rotor blade material loss earlier,
thus potentially preventing unbalance conditions from occurring.

The Jett8 Cargo LPT S3 disk failure in December 2009 occurred about 185 flight cycles after the engine’s last hot section BSI.

On March 17, 2010, the FAA issued immediate Airworthiness Directive (AD) 2010-06-15, effective April 1, 2010, which requires that CF6-45/-50 HPT rotor blades be subjected to a BSI for excessive HPT rotor blade material loss or damage within 50 flight cycles, repetitive BSIs every 175 flight cycles, and, if excessive HPT blade material loss is found, a fluorescent penetrant inspection (FPI)11 of the LPT S3 disk before further flight.

However, the most recent event, which occurred on April 10, 2010, suggests that the current interim measures are not adequate to prevent uncontained CF6-45/-50 LPT S3 disk separations.

A review of airplane records indicated that the ACT Cargo engine had been maintained in accordance with GE SB 1307 since November 2009.

In addition, the records indicated that an HPT BSI was performed fewer than 50 flight cycles before the LPT S3 disk failure and that no HPT blade material loss was noted.

On May 10, 2010, GE issued revision 1 of SB 1307, which recommends an HPT BSI every 75 flight cycles or, if the operator adopts and maintains additional repetitive maintenance and inspection criteria, every 350 flight cycles.

The NTSB concludes that the current CF6-45/-50 engine HPT rotor blade BSI interval is not adequate and must be further reduced to detect HPT blade material loss before an HPT unbalance condition can result in an uncontained LPT S3 disk failure.

The NTSB believes that BSIs must be performed at an interval such that if undetectable blade loss begins and continues to progress, there is still time to potentially identify the HPT blade loss at the next BSI before an uncontained event is a possibility.

Therefore, because of the potential for catastrophic damage to the airplane and passengers from an uncontained engine failure, the NTSB recommends that the FAA immediately require operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes to perform
HPT rotor blade BSIs every 15 flight cycles until the LPT S3 disk is replaced with a redesigned disk that can withstand the unbalance vibration forces from the HP rotor.

The CF6-45/-50 engine manual requires an FPI of the LPT S3 disk whenever the disk is exposed during rotor
disassembly.

However, the LPT rotor is not disassembled during every engine shop visit.

Since December 2008, the CF6-45/-50 engine manual has required an LPT S3 disk FPI to detect HAF cracks at the forward spacer arm that may have resulted from vibration forces, if the reason for engine removal includes a report of excessive HP rotor vibration.

However, HP rotor vibration was not reported in the 12 instances where LPT S3 disk HAF cracks were identified either in shop-level inspections or in the uncontained LPT S3 disk failures.

Thus, it is unlikely that vibration would be reported in other cases of HPT unbalance that would lead to an LPT S3 disk failure.

In addition, GE recently revised the CF6-45/-50 engine manual LPT S3 disk rejection criteria and disk cleaning requirements to improve the detectability of HAF cracks on the forward spacer arm.

As a result, some in-service LPT S3 disks have not been inspected in accordance with this improved inspection criteria.

The NTSB concludes that there may be LPT S3 disks in service that were exposed to HP rotor unbalance conditions but not inspected to the latest engine manual standards and that, as a result, these disks may have accumulated forward spacer arm HAF damage, making them more susceptible to HPT rotor unbalance.

Therefore, the NTSB recommends that the FAA require operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes to perform FPI inspections of CF6-45/-50 LPT S3 disks at every engine shop visit until the LPT S3 disk is replaced with a redesigned
disk that can withstand the unbalance vibration forces from the HP rotor.

Uncontained turbine engine disk failures present a direct hazard to the airplane and its passengers because high-energy disk fragments can penetrate the cabin or fuel tanks, damage flight control surfaces, or sever flammable fluid or hydraulic lines.

Engine cases are not designed to contain failed turbine disks.

Instead, the risk of uncontained disk failure is mitigated by designating disks as safety-critical parts.

The design process for a safety-critical turbine disk includes consideration of the disk’s critical frequencies and mode
shape information so that the part is designed with an adequate margin of safety.


In the case of the LPT S3 disk, an adequate margin of safety should have existed between the disk’s natural response frequencies and the engine’s operating frequencies, including the frequencies that result from common fault conditions, such as HP rotor unbalance.Further, an engine vibration monitoring (EVM) system13 can be used to alert flight crews of impending part failure to increase the margin of safety.

However, when the CF6-45/-50 engine was being certified, the EVM systems installed on the airplanes that the CF6-45/-50 engines were designed to power were considered marginal in their ability to detect HP rotor unbalance.

As a result, the FAA placed a special condition (No. 33-36-EA-9, dated November 8, 1971) on the CF6-45/-50 type certificate that required GE to show that

the engine would operate without inducing detrimental stresses in any engine part while operating with an increased vibration level, such as that which might result from one or more broken or missing rotor blades, if the increased vibration level cannot be detected in flight.”

The FAA considered this special condition satisfied with its acceptance of a GE certification report that concluded that CF6-45/-50 engine unbalance levels high enough to have detrimental effects would be easily detectable by perceived noise and vibrations in the cabin area and in the controls, enabling the flight crew to take corrective action.

However, the flight crews of the airplanes that experienced the uncontained CF6-50 LPT S3 disk failures cited above did not report any unusual engine vibration preceding the events.

In addition, there were no reports of vibration associated with the removal-from-service of the eight CF6-50 engines in which the cracked LPT S3 disks were discovered during normal teardowns.

Thus, the NTSB concludes that GE’s FAA-approved special condition has failed to provide an adequate margin of safety to prevent catastrophic CF6-45/-50 LPT S3 disk failure.

Therefore, the NTSB recommends that the FAA immediately require GE to redesign the CF6-45/-50 LPT S3 disk so that it
will not fail when exposed to HP rotor unbalance forces.

The NTSB also recommends that, once GE has redesigned the CF6-45/-50 LPT S3 disk in accordance with Safety Recommendation A-10-100, the FAA require all operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes to install the newly designed
LPT S3 disk at the next maintenance opportunity.

Therefore, the National Transportation Safety Board recommends that the Federal Aviation Administration: Immediately require operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes to perform high pressure turbine rotor blade borescope inspections every 15 flight cycles until the low pressure turbine stage 3 disk is replaced with a redesigned disk that can withstand the unbalance vibration forces from the high pressure rotor.

(A-10-98) (Urgent) Require operators of CF6-45/-50-powered airplanes to perform fluorescent penetrant inspections of CF6-45/-50 low pressure turbine stage 3 disks at every engine shop visit until the low pressure turbine
stage 3 disk is replaced with a redesigned disk that can withstand the unbalance vibration forces from the high pressure rotor.


(A-10-99) Immediately require General Electric Company to redesign the CF6-45/-50 low pressure turbine stage 3 disk so that it will not fail when exposed to high pressure rotor unbalance forces.

(A-10-100) (Urgent) Once General Electric Company has redesigned the CF6-45/-50 low pressure turbine (LPT) stage 3 (S3) disk in accordance with Safety Recommendation A-10-100, require all operators of CF6-45/-50-powered
airplanes to install the newly designed LPT S3 at the next maintenance opportunity.

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General Electric CF6 Empty Re: General Electric CF6

Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 17:31

La nuance "non revenue flight" n'a pas d'intérêt, ici. Un moteur en l'air doit être un moteur qui tourne.

Les dates sont assez récentes par rapport au "first run" de 1971

Mais ce n'est pas sur Wikipedia;en

Alors la suite dans la section "Propulsion" ?

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Message par DayAfter Lun 05 Déc 2011, 17:51

Bonsoir à tous,

Merci à Maury d’avoir ouvert le sujet.
Merci Sevrien pour la remarque.

Concernant le CF6 l’histoire rejoint l’actualité.

On voit sur le 1er AD proposé par Maury en lecture que des problèmes ont migré du CF6-50 au CF6-80C.

A mon avis, l’histoire reste l’histoire, qu'il s'agisse d'avions ou de moteurs, même si le rapport du NTSB cité est encore jeune.

Je propose de laisser Maury poursuivre ici même et je crois qu’il ne nous en voudra pas, au contraire, si nous piochons quelques parties des posts du sujet qu’il a ouvert pour alimenter l’actualité, hélas répétitive autant que variée des déboires du GE CF-6.

Pour faire court, mal fichu au départ (design flaw) mal fichu à l’arrivée : mais l’arrivée, c’est quand ? :|

Seulement mon opinion.
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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 17:55

Autre lecture :

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 18:10

Wikipedia.en Suite

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CF6-50

The CF6-50 series are high-bypass turbofan engines rated between 51,000 and 54,000 lb (227.41 to 240.79 kN) of thrust.

The CF6-50 was developed into the LM5000 industrial [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] engines. It was launched in [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] to power the long range McDonnell Douglas [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], and was derived from the earlier CF6-6.

Because a significant increase in thrust and therefore core power was required not long after the -6 had entered service, General Electric could not increase (HP) turbine rotor inlet temperature significantly, so they took the very expensive decision to reconfigure the CF6 core to increase its basic size.

They achieved this by removing two stages from the rear of the HP compressor (even leaving an empty air passage, where the blades and vanes had once been located).

Two extra booster stages were added to the LP (low pressure) compressor, which increased the overall pressure ratio to 29.3.

Although the 86.4 in (2.19 m) diameter fan was retained, the airflow was raised to 1450 lb/s (660 kg/s), yielding a static thrust of 51,000 lbf (227 kN).

The increase in core size and overall pressure ratio significantly raised the core flow, resulting in a decrease in bypass ratio to 4.26.

In late 1969, the CF6-50 was selected to power the then new [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] became the launch customer for the A300 by ordering six aircraft in [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien].

In [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien], [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] was the first airline to order the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] powered by the CF6-50.

This led further developments to the CF6 family such as the CF6-80.

The CF6-50 also powered the [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] USAF AMST transport prototype.

The basic CF6-50 engine was also offered with a 10% thrust derate for
the 747SR, a short-range high-cycle version used by All Nippon Airways
for domestic Japanese operations. This engine is termed the CF6-45.

Four [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] of CF6-45/50 engines in the preceding two years prompted the U.S. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien] to issue an "urgent" recommendation to increase inspections of the engines on U.S. aircraft in May 2010.[Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]
None of the four incidents of rotor disk imbalance and subsequent failure resulted in an accident, but parts of the engine did penetrate the engine housing in each case.

Maury
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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 18:13

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Maury
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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 18:15

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Message par Maury Lun 05 Déc 2011, 18:29

AD FAA 22 février 2011

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We are superseding an existing airworthiness directive (AD) for General Electric Company (GE) CF6-45 and CF6-50 series turbofan engines with certain low-pressure turbine (LPT) rotor stage 3 disks installed.

That AD currently requires initial and repetitive borescope inspections of the high-pressure turbine (HPT) rotor stage 1 and stage 2 blades for wear and damage, including excessive airfoil material loss.

That AD also requires fluorescent-penetrant inspection (FPI) of the LPT rotor stage 3 disk under certain conditions and removal of the disk from service before further flight if found cracked.

That AD also requires repetitive exhaust gas temperature (EGT) system checks (inspections).

This AD requires HPT rotor stage 1 and stage 2 blade inspections and EGT system inspections.

This AD also requires FPI of the LPT rotor stage 3 disk under certain conditions, removal of the disk from service before
further flight if found cracked, and an ultrasonic inspection (UI) of the LPT rotor stage 3 disk forward spacer arm.

This AD also requires initial and repetitive engine core vibration surveys and reporting to the FAA any crack findings, disks that fail the UI, and engines that fail the engine core vibration survey.Show citation box

This AD was prompted by reports received of additional causes of HPT rotor imbalance not addressed in AD 2010-12-10, and two additional LPT rotor stage 3 disk events.

We are issuing this AD to prevent critical life-limited rotating engine part failure, which could result in an uncontained
engine failure and damage to the airplane.

Maury
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