ESA 272 Introduction
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Transcript of ESA 272 Introduction

Introduction
Dr. Nurul Musfirah Mazlan
Room Number: 2.06
Ext Number: 5913
ESA 272: Aircraft Sub-systems
Elements

Before we start
• http://padlet.com/n_musfirah/esa272
• E-learn @ USM
• https://todaysmeet.com/ESA272

A Quote for today

Course Information
Course Code : ESA 272
Course Name : Aircraft Sub-systems Elements
Credit Unit : 2
Contact Hours : Lecture 2hrs/week
Tutorial 1hr/week

About the course
• This course is an introduction to the aircraft systems
• Learning outcomes:
1. Able to identify components in aircraft systems and their functions [PO1: Engineering knowledge]
2. Able to understand the principal operation of aircraft system [PO10: Individual and team work]
3. Able to determine requirement of each system in aircraft [PO3: Design and development of solutions]
4. Able to relate the aircraft systems with the environmental concerns [PO7: Environment and Sustainability, PO9: Communication]

Course Schedule
Activities involve in this course • Lectures • 2 Tests • Quizzes • 2 Assignments • 1 Group project • Industrial talk/visit

Course Assessment
100% coursework
2 Tests 30% (15% each) Test 1 – covers lecture 1 – 7
Test 2 – covers lecture 8 - 12
Group project 40% Review project presentation 10%
Final project presentation 10%
Project Report 20%
2 Assignments 20% (10% each)
Quizzes 10%

Course Assessment
Important dates
Review project presentation Week 7 (19th and 21th Oct)
Final project presentation Week 14 (7th and 9th Dec)
Project Report submission Week 15 (14th – 16th Dec)
Test 1 Week 6 (On 12nd Oct)
Test 2 Week 11 (On 30th Dec)
Assignment 1 Week 8 (28th Oct)
Assignment 2 Week 12 (25th Nov)
Industrial visit/talk Week 12 (25th Nov) - TBD

Guideline
• For project
– Figures and facts are referred by trustworthy recourses (i.e preferably
from journals, books and/or government agency websites).
– Present your studies/report in a table or figure comparison whenever
possible.
– Reports should not exceed 20 000 words or 50 pages.
– All reports layout should at least contain a title cover, an executive
summary (<300 words), brief introduction, layout drawings, description
of subsystems and its drawings/layouts, discussion on the modifications
or simplifications deem required, and the justifications on the suggestion
(must have at least 3 element proposed), conclusion together with some
recommendation for future work, and reference materials.
– Every team members are required to present your findings in the class
presentation

Project Title
• Project Title 1: Passenger Aircraft
• Project Title 2: Trainer Aircraft
• Project Title 3: Fighter Aircraft
• Project Title 4: Helicopter
• Project Title 5: Unmanned Fixed Wing Aircraft
• Project Title 6: Unmanned Helicopter
• Project Title 7: Transport Aircraft
• Project Title 8: Home-Built Propeller Aircraft
• Project Title 9: Business Jets
• Project Title 10: Amphibious Aircraft
** Students are required to choose and discuss 5 subsystems from the
selected aircraft.

Group Distribution
What you have to do:
• 5 members/each group
• Must have mixture of gender and races (if possible)
• Select any type of aircraft (from project titles) and choose 5 sub-systems of the selected aircraft.
• Each member in the group discuss one sub-systems

Rubric Assessment
Items Mark Distribution
Introduction 10
Content 60
Summary/conclusion 10
Spelling, Grammar and Structure 5
Appearance and Formatting 5
Data, Figures and References 10
Total 100
Report

Rubric Assessment
Presentation Items Mark
Content & Organization (50%)
Introduction 10
Main Ideas 10
Contents 10
Conclusion 10
Length Requirements 10
Delivery (30%) Vocal Expression 10
Physical Characteristics 10
Language 10
Visual aids (10%): Power Point, Multimedia Presentation or and tools used for presentation
10
Overall impact (10%): Energy, Enthusiasm, Sincerity, Originality, Creativity
10
Total 100

Further Reading
• Ian Moir & Allan Seabridge., Aircraft System, Longman Scientific & Technical, 1992.

Further reading
• Ian Moir & Allan Seabridge., Aircraft System: Mechanical, Electrical And Avionics Subsystems Integration, 3rd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2008.

Further reading
• Federal Aviation Administration., Aviation Maintenance Technician Handbook–Airframe, Volume 2, U.S. Department of Transportation, Flight Standards Service, 2012.

Want to play a game?
• Kahoot.it

Types of Aircraft
AIRCRAFT
Powered &
Unpowered
Manned &
Unmanned
Fixed & Rotary
Wing
Manual,
Autonomous,
Remote Control

Aircraft Components

Aircraft Sub-systems
Flight control systems
Engine control systems
Fuel systems
Hydraulic systems
Electrical systems
Pneumatic systems
Environmental control systems
Emergency systems
Rotary wing systems
Environmental condition

Flight control system
• Yaw (controlled by rudder)
• Roll (controlled by ailerons)
• Pitch (controlled by elevators)
stepbystepppl.wordpress.com

Hydraulic System
• Landing gear
• Extension, retraction, locking, steering, braking
• Primary flight controls
• Rudder, elevator, aileron, active (multi-function) spoiler
• Secondary flight controls
• high lift (flap / slat), horizontal stabilizer, spoiler, thrust reverser
• Utility systems
• Cargo handling, doors, ramps, emergency electrical power generation
HYDR. MOTOR
TORQUE TUBE
GEARBOX
Flap Drive Spoiler Actuator
Landing Gear
Nosewheel Steering

Pneumatic System
Wing and engine anti-ice

Fuel system
• Fuel tank and fuel line

Engine System
• Main components
Intake case
Compressor
Combustion chamber
Turbine
Nozzle

Engine System
Cockpit Indications
Fuel on Board
Crew Alerting
Indication
Maintenance
Indication
Fuel Flow
Shaft Speed
Engine Pressure
Ratio indicates the
engine thrust
Exhaust Gas
Temperature
Engine Display (Upper ECAM) on the A330

Environmental Control System

Environmental Control system

Environmental Condition
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-
10/volcanic-ash-cloud-halts-indonesian-
flights/6609870

Emergency System