onsdag 10. februar 2016

F/A-18E/F med problemer a la F-22 - Flight Global

US Navy looking for answers to F/A-18 pilot ailments
·          
 04 FEBRUARY, 2016 - BY: JAMES DREW - WASHINGTON DC
The US Navy’s director of air warfare says efforts to overcome high rates of hypoxia and decompression sickness in pilots flying Boeing F/A-18 variants is “like chasing a ghost,” but he remains confident in the aircraft and its oxygen backup systems nevertheless.
Since 2010, F/A-18 pilots have been asked to report every possible physiological event like dizziness or confusion because of suspected problems with the aircraft’s onboard oxygen generation systems (OBOGS) and environmental control system (ECS).
Those rates have been consistently high over the past six reporting period, with an average of 19.7 cases per 100,000 flight hours for the early model F/A-18s and 20.4 for the newer F/A-18E/F Super Hornet.
The average is 8.9 per 100,000 flight hours for EA-18G Growler pilots, except for a “statistical anomaly” in 2015 with 43.5 cases reported.
Rear Adm Michael Manazir says during a congressional hearing on naval strike fighters today that efforts to come up with a material solution to the problem is like chasing a ghost because it’s difficult to recreate the scenario without knowing exactly what is causing the problem, and there are no onboard sensors to record carbon monoxide or contaminant levels.
“We’re trying to get the rate down,” Manazir says. “If we had a confidence problem in the airplane, we would ground the fleet but we don’t have that problem.”
Director of navy tactical aircraft Rear Adm Michael Moran says 18 or 19 changes have been made to the environmental control system to include new pressure and control valves and sensors to deal with possible causes of the decompression sickness.

New filtration systems have already been installed in the oxygen generation systems of 219 aircraft to better remove carbon monoxide and other contaminants from the pilot’s oxygen. Those filters will eventually be rolled out across the F/A-18 fleet, and testing of a new oxygen monitoring system should wrap up later this year for installation in 2017 if it checks out.

Ingen kommentarer:

Legg inn en kommentar

Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.