Classed as a serious safety threat, a fan blade out event occurs when a foreign object - such as a bird - is caught by an aircraft’s engine, causing one of the rotor blades to detach. The damage caused is so critical to the engine that it stops producing power, although the engine will continue to rotate due to the incoming airflow, an effect which is known as ‘windmilling’. This places high levels of stress on the aircraft’s flight systems and the ability of the systems to withstand these conditions must be validated through rigorous tests.
As such extreme conditions are usually outside the capabilities of normal test systems, Element invested in Brüel & Kjær’s LDS V8 electrodynamic test system to provide its customers with the certainty that their products would meet the most stringent testing standards.
The V8 is an air-cooled electrodynamic shaker for vibration and mechanical shock testing of large payloads up to 700kg. Its combination of large displacement and wide-duration shock pulses matches specific requirements for testing windmilling, making it ideal for Element to test this effect on components such as aircraft engines and fan blades.