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BAE Systems is developing lightweight, adaptable fly-by-wire flight control systems for several new eVTOL aircraft. [Photo: BAE Systems]
BAR Systems is advancing plans to provide
lightweight fly-by-wire (FBW) flight controls for several eVTOL aircraft
already under development. The goal is to produce a common baseline FBW package
that can be easily adapted for multiple aircraft designs and be ready for test
flights to begin by the end of 2021.
The aerospace and defense group has
extensive experience in developing FBW controls, having introduced the
technology for the F-16 and F-18 fighter aircraft in the 1970s. More
recently, it has provided systems for commercial aircraft, such as Boeing’s 777
airliner, Bell’s 525 Relentless helicopter, and Leonardo’s AW609 tiltrotor.
In 2017, BAE started discussions with a
number of undisclosed eVTOL developers that it considered had the best
prospects for getting aircraft to market to assess their various requirements.
The group’s flight controls engineering team at Endicott, New York, then
started working on an FBW package to incorporate a propulsion controller,
actuation controller, and a flight control computer.
The platform assembled so far can already
host software developed by its prospective partners, allowing them to define
the flight control laws for their aircraft and also to work on how redundancy
will be managed. As this technology is matured, the BAE team will start to
deliver engineering development units to companies that would be close to the
versions needed for type certification, and which could be used on iron bird
ground test systems.
According to Brian Hull, engineering
director for strategic development with BAE’s electronic systems division, the
company will spend the rest of 2020 assembling hardware and software for the
common flight control computer. It expects this to be ready to begin
environmental tests by late this year or in early 2021.
Hull
told AIN that BAE wants to be able to have its FBW systems
certified as early as possible to support the type certification timelines
being pursued by the eVTOL developers it is looking to support. “Particularly
with actuation and propulsion controls, we have to be able to show that a
single point of failure cannot cause a catastrophic event,” he explained. “The
certification agencies have given guidance on this and this has helped us to
focus on how we can put a system together that will detect failures and
mitigate them.”
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