Thousands of holes are drilled in military and commercial aircraft to facilitate fastener installation. Fastener installation tolerances in military and commercial aircraft are very tight.
Out of tolerance holes can occur during manufacture of an aircraft. For instance, tolerances might be exceeded due to angularity of holes extending through a part (more prevalent in thicker parts) and mis-shaped holes.
During service of an aircraft, holes can become damaged and out of tolerance. For instance, hole shapes can change during service. These damaged and out of tolerance holes must be repaired to precise requirements in order for the aircraft to remain in service.
Damaged and out of tolerance holes may be repaired using a cutter (e.g., a drill bit, a reamer) and drill block. The drill block is positioned on a part, and aligns and guides the cutter to drill out the hole. If the hole is still out of tolerance after drilling (that is, the cutter doesn't clean-up all of the damaged area), the process is repeated with a larger cutter. The drilling is repeated until the hole is within tolerance, or until the hole is bushed, or until the part is scrapped.
This repair process is very tedious, especially for hard-to-drill materials. As many as two to three hours can be taken to repair a single hole, and hundreds or thousands of holes might have to be repaired on a single aircraft.
It is highly desirable to process a repair hole only once, and not have to drill more than once. Much time would be saved. Moreover, re-drilling would be avoided. If a part has to be re-drilled, that part might have a reduced life expectancy or it might have to be scrapped.
According to an embodiment herein, a method comprises aligning a drill block and selecting a cutter diameter to repair a through-hole in a part. The hole has a nominal diameter. A pin having a less-than-nominal diameter is inserted into the hole, with a bushing on the pin placed over the hole at a first side of the part, the bushing having an outer diameter that is greater than the nominal diameter. Light is shone on the hole. A drill block engaging the pin is positioned to move the pin and the bushing until no light shines past the bushing.
According to another embodiment herein, a method comprises placing a head of an alignment device in a guide hole of a drill block; placing a bushing over a pin of the alignment device; positioning the drill block on a first side of an aircraft part such that the pin extends into a through-hole in the part and the bushing abuts against the part, over the through-hole; shining a light into the through-hole at the second side of the part; and positioning the drill block on the part until no light shines past the bushing. The method further comprises removing the alignment device and the bushing; re-inserting the alignment device with the bushing on the pin, covering the through-hole at the second side of the part; shining a light into the hole at the second side of the part; and determining whether light shines past the bushing to the first side. If the light is blocked, the through-hole is repaired with a cutter having a diameter equal to an outer diameter of the bushing.
According to another embodiment herein, an apparatus comprises an aircraft part having a through-hole of a nominal diameter; a drill block having a guide hole over the through-hole, the guide hole having a larger diameter than the through-hole; an alignment device including a pin extending through the through-hole and a head within the guide hole, the pin having smaller than the nominal diameter; and a bushing on the pin, covering the through-hole at one side of the part.
a and 1b are illustrations of a through-hole in a part.
a and 5b are illustrations of a bushing.
a and 6b are illustrations of a method of repairing a through-hole in a part.
a-7c are illustrations of the drill block, bushing and alignment device as they are used to align the drill block and determine a final diameter of a cutter for repairing a through-hole in a part.
Reference is made to
Reference is made to
An example of a drill block 220 is illustrated in
An example of an alignment device 230 is illustrated in
An example of a bushing 250 is illustrated in
Reference is now made to
At block 620, a bushing is selected from the set, and slip fitted onto the pin. The pin is inserted into the through-hole until the drill block rests on the part (see
At block 630, light is shone into the through-hole. The light may be provided by a flashlight or other light source, which is positioned at a second (opposite) side of the part.
At block 640, a visual observation is made by looking down through the guide hole of the drill block to see whether any light is shining past the bushing (see
The head of the alignment device is configured to allow the light blockage to be observed. The head may have three radially-extending prongs (see, for example,
If the bushing cannot be moved to a position that totally blocks the light (block 645), then the bushing is replaced with a larger-diameter bushing (block 650). The inserting (block 620), the shining (block 630), and the positioning (block 640) are repeated with the larger diameter bushing.
Once a bushing is found that can totally block the light, then at block 660, the position of the drill block is set (e.g., the drill block is clamped to the part), and the bushing is moved to the second side of the part (see
At block 670, the light source is positioned at the second side of the part, and light is shone onto the bushing. At block 680, an observation is made as to whether light shines past the bushing to the first side. If the light is not totally blocked (block 685), the bushing is replaced with a larger-diameter bushing (block 650), and the inserting (block 620) and subsequent steps are repeated with the larger diameter bushing.
If the light is totally blocked (block 685), then a repair cutter size and drill block position have been found. In this manner, optimum cutter diameter and optimum position of the drill block are determined prior to repair cutting.
At block 690, the optimum cutter diameter and drill block position are used to repair cut the through-hole. This method enables a through-hole to be repaired by the smallest available cutter.
A method herein is not limited to the exact sequence of functions illustrated in
The drill block is not limited to the block illustrated in
The alignment device is not limited to the device illustrated in
Reference is now made to
This invention was made with Government support under contract number FA820207D0004 awarded by the United States Air Force. The government has certain rights in this invention.
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