The present disclosure concerns a mounting arrangement for a gas turbine engine.
In many aircraft, gas turbine engines are mounted below the wings in pods known as “nacelles”. A coupling known as a “pylon” mounts each nacelle to the wing.
In many low wing aircraft, the wing is mounted to the fuselage such that the wing is angled relative to the ground, with the tip of the wing being higher above the ground than the wing root. Such an arrangement is known as “dihedral”, and is commonly employed to provide increased aerodynamic stability in roll.
Consequently, in such cases, the engine must be mounted to a wing that is not parallel to the ground. There are two known conventional arrangements for mounting aircraft engines to wings having dihedral.
In a first example, the pylons are mounted vertically, with the engines hanging directly beneath.
In a second example, the pylons are mounted normal to the distal wing surface, such that the top dead centre (TDC) of the engines are rolled inboard towards the fuselage to define an angle α between TDC and the vertical plane V. Such an arrangement may be referred to as a canted pylon. Such an example is shown in
Engines mounted above the wing are also known (for example as used in the Honda™ HA-420 HondaJet™). Where the wings have dihedral, similar issues may arise.
According to a first aspect there is provided a mounting arrangement for mounting an aircraft gas turbine engine to an aircraft, the mounting arrangement comprising:
an engine nacelle comprising;
a distal assembly comprising a part annular engine cowl, a gas turbine engine core housing surrounded by the engine cowl, and a distal bifurcation extending between the engine core housing and engine cowl, the distal bifurcation extending in a first direction to define a first axis;
an proximal assembly having a mount configured to mount the proximal assembly to the engine core housing, the proximal assembly further comprising a pylon configured to mount the proximal assembly to the aircraft at an engine mounting location, the pylon extending in a line between the mounting location and the engine core housing to define a second axis, wherein the second axis is normal to a surface of the aircraft at the engine mounting location and is non-parallel to the first axis.
Consequently, the pylon can be mounted to extend at a right angle to the mounting location, while the distal bifurcation of the distal assembly can be mounted to extend at a right angle to the ground. Consequently, the engine can be installed within the engine nacelle with the distal bifurcation defining the engine bottom dead centre, or any other predefined axis. Consequently, the bottom dead centre of the engine is coincident for both the port and starboard engines, while having a common distal assembly for both engines.
An angle of between 1° and 30° may be defined between the second axis and the first axis.
The proximal assembly may comprise a part annular engine housing configured to abut against a part annular engine housing of the distal assembly, such that the part annular engine housings of the proximal and distal assemblies form a full annulus when assembled.
The engine may be mounted below the wing, such that the proximal assembly is mounted above the distal assembly in use.
Alternatively, the engine may be mounted above the wing, such that the proximal assembly is mounted below the distal assembly in use.
According to a second aspect of the invention there is provided an aircraft comprising a mounting arrangement in accordance with the first aspect.
The aircraft may comprise a first engine mounting arrangement mounted to a port side of the aircraft and a second engine mounting arrangement mounted to a starboard side of the aircraft.
The distal assembly of each engine mounting arrangement may be substantially identical, while the proximal assembly of the first and second engine mounting arrangements may be reflections of one another in the first axis when assembled, or may be rotated relative to one another.
The first axis may correspond to a vertical axis.
The mounting location may comprise a wing of the aircraft, and may comprise an upper or a lower surface of the wing of the aircraft.
Alternatively, the mounting location may comprise a fuselage of the aircraft, and may comprise a tail of the aircraft.
The skilled person will appreciate that except where mutually exclusive, a feature described in relation to any one of the above aspects may be applied mutatis mutandis to any other aspect. Furthermore except where mutually exclusive any feature described herein may be applied to any aspect and/or combined with any other feature described herein.
Embodiments will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the Figures, in which:
With reference to
The wing 14a defines upper 18a and lower 20a surfaces. The lower surface 20a defines a spanwise axis 22a which runs parallel to the lower surface 20a at an engine mounting point 24a of the wing 14a.
A proximal mounting assembly 26a is provided, which is shown in further detail in
The proximal mounting assembly 26a further comprises a part annular pylon apron 36a. The apron 36 extends from either circumferential side of the pylon 28a, and defines gas washed radially inner and outer surfaces.
Referring again to
A distal mounting assembly 40a is also provided, and is shown in more detail in
The distal mounting assembly 40a further comprises a coupling member 50a, which is provided at top dead centre of the core engine housing 42a, and has fastener apertures 52a, 54a. A part annular gap 56a is defined at top dead centre of the distal mounting assembly, by a space between ends of the cowl 44a.
Referring once more to
As can be seen, when the proximal and distal mounting assemblies 26a, 40a are mounted together to form the nacelle 15a, the proximal mounting assembly apron 36a and cowl 44a form a continuous ring to define radially inner and outer continuous gas washed surfaces of the nacelle 15a. Further fasteners (not shown) may be provided to fasten the apron 36a to the cowl 44a at the join.
Referring now to
As can be seen from a comparison of
Referring to
The engine access doors located on the core housing 42a and cowl 44a would be latched together at 6 o'clock below top dead centre. By having hinge and latch points symmetrical about the vertical centre line 48a the cowl doors will naturally hinge closed, improving the cowl latching procedure.
However, the proximal mounting assembly 26b for the starboard engine 16b differs from that of the port engine 16a. As can be seen, the proximal mounting assembly 26b is essentially a reflection of the proximal mounting assembly 26a about the vertical axis 46b. Consequently, the generally rotationally symmetric apron 36b and coupling member 50b are relatively unchanged, but the pylon 28b is provided at an angle θ which has the same magnitude but opposite sign as the angle α of the proximal mounting assembly 26a.
Several advantages of the described arrangement can realised. Firstly, the engines 16a, 16b are provided at the same orientation regardless of their position on the port or starboard wings. Consequently, a common distal mounting assembly can be provided, with each distal mounting assembly having components that need to be located at bottom dead centre (such as drain holes, sumps) and other equipment that has to be provided at a certain angle or height on the equipment, such as fluid sight glasses, located in a common position. Consequently, design and manufacturing costs are reduced. This in turn results in the engines of both wings having a line between their top dead centre and bottom dead centre coincident with a vertical axis when on the ground. This results in optimum installed cross-wind performance and inlet incidence performance. Furthermore, since the engine top dead centre is located at the 12 o'clock position relative to the ground, panels can be hinged to meet at a common latching point, thereby simplifying ground handling procedures. Normally need to accommodate flight envelope plus rolls allowance—deletes the roll allowance. Nacelle drainage.
Each apron can be tailored to local aerodynamic conditions for each wing, without requiring adjustments to the remainder of the engine or the nacelle, thereby resulting in further potential aerodynamic improvements.
The aircraft includes an engine 116b housed within a nacelle 115b. As can be seen, the engine is mounted at a mounting location 124 provided at an upper surface 118b of the wing 114b. A proximal mounting assembly 126b is provided. The proximal mounting assembly 126b is similar to the mounting assembly 26b, but is provided upside-down relative to the arrangement 26b. In other words, the mounting assembly 126b is mounted proximate to the wing 114b upper surface 118b and includes a pylon 128b, with a proximal end of the pylon 128b being mounted to the wing 114b at a mounting location. A distal/radially inner end of the pylon 128b is coupled to a part annular coupling member 130b, which is similar to that of the first embodiment.
As can be seen, the engines 216a, 216b are mounted to respective pylons 228a, 228b. Each pylon projects from a side surface of the fuselage, but is oriented away from the horizontal plane 260 (which defines a first axis in this example) by a cant angle of approximately 10°. Each engine 216a, 216b includes a proximal mounting assembly 226a, 226b located adjacent the aircraft fuselage 212. The proximal mounting assembly 226b is similar to the mounting assembly 26b, but is oriented 90° relative to the arrangement 26b. In other words, the mounting assembly 226b is mounted proximate to the fuselage side surface, and includes a pylon 228a, 228b, with a proximal end of the pylon 228a, 228b being mounted to the fuselage 212 at a mounting location 224, which is located adjacent an aft part of the aircraft, at the tail 270. A distal end of the pylon 228a, 228b defines a bifurcation 246a, 246b, which is coupled to a part annular coupling member 230b, which is similar to that of the first embodiment. Again, the bifurcation 246a, 246b extends vertically to define a second axis, though it will be understood that the bifurcation could extend horizontally to define the second axis. The proximal end of each pylon 228a, 228b extends at an angle to the horizontal plane, while the bifurcation 246a, 246b end extends in the vertical plane 261.
Further optimisations can be realised in view of the above arrangement. In prior designs, the nacelle aerodynamic design is a compromise between the port and starboard engines, since interactions between the nacelle and the ground and between the nacelle and the wing take place on different positions on the port and starboard nacelle. For example, an ideal inlet lip design would take into account the different airflows around the lip circumference, especially at the bottom dead centre and sideline (90 degrees from TDC), and the wing at the top of the engine. In view of the port and starboard engines having the same orientation relative to the ground, and different proximal mounting assemblies, the nacelle aerodynamics can be optimised. Furthermore, the gearbox sump can be optimised to accommodate lower fluid levels, since maximum variation in orientation of the sump is reduced. Consequently, fluid quantities can be reduced, thereby further reducing weights.
It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments above-described and various modifications and improvements can be made without departing from the concepts described herein. Except where mutually exclusive, any of the features may be employed separately or in combination with any other features and the disclosure extends to and includes all combinations and sub-combinations of one or more features described herein.
For example, the wing could have anhedral (i.e. be angled toward the ground from the root to the wingtip). The engine could be of any suitable bypass type, such as direct drive or geared.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1811728.3 | Jul 2018 | GB | national |
1816074.7 | Oct 2018 | GB | national |