Title: Investigating FOD Damage Part 3 Denver FOD Conference
1Investigating FOD DamagePart 3 Denver FOD
Conference
2Example 1 DC-10 2
- Vibrations in 2 engine during take-off
- Take-off aborted
- Engine pulled for fan blade damage
3Example 1 DC-10 2
Good place to sample
Circular symmetry
Apparent thread marks
4Example 1 DC-10 2
LE fan blade damage
5Example 1 DC-10 2 Analysis
- Power setting was high (takeoff)
- Impacts resulted in blade tearing and loss of
blade material - Most impacts occurred to the LE concave surface
(Indicates the impacting object entered through
the intake)
6Example 1 DC-10 2 Analysis
- There is circular damage symmetry
- There is rectangular damage symmetry
- There are apparent thread marks
- Blades are made of titanium
7Example 1 Analysis
FAST samples reveal nickel - chrome plated steel
tool material
8Example 1 DC-10 2 Conclusion
Source of thread marks
A nickel - chrome plated crescent wrench accounts
for the damage
9Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
- Engine removed for compressor blade damage.
- One HPC-1 blade suffered loss of material
- Numerous other blades suffered impact damage
- Borescope inspection revealed no damage to fan or
fan booster. - Compressor had been completely restored during
375 hours prior to this event.
10Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
- Many blades revealed TE section scratches/dents
on concave surface - Typical when an object becomes stuck on a vane
aft of blade - As blade rotates, it makes contact with the
object - FAST samples revealed that stuck object was
liberated blade material
11Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
- Several IGVs show TE impacts
- FAST samples confirmed impacts due to missing
section from broken HPC-1 blade
12Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
- HPC-2 blade shows a LE impact to the concave
surface - Not expected shape from liberated airfoil section
of broken HPC-1 blade
13Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
- Macro photo of blade shows
- LE impact to concave surface
- Fatigue zone
- Fast fracture zone
Fatigue zone
LE concave surface impact
Fast fracture
14Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
20X SEM photo showing LE impact deformation to
concave surface
15Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
1000X SEM photo showing fatigue striations in
fatigue crack growth zone aft of impact
16Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
500X SEM photo showing ductile dimples at tip
fast fracture zone
17Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
300 stainless steel found in fractured blade LE
impact.
18Example 2 Blade fracture in HPC
300 stainless steel was also found in HPC-2 LE
impact.
19Example 2 CONCLUSIONS
- Engine suffered impact from aircraft 300 series
stainless steel fastener hardware - Impact occurred many engine cycles prior to blade
breakage - Impact created a stress concentration from which
a fatigue crack began to grow - Blade broke when remaining blade material holding
blade together could no longer sustain normal
engine load
20Example 3 Blade Failure on Takeoff
21Example 3 Blade Failure On Takeoff
- Flight crew heard loud bang and noticed vibration
on 2 engine during takeoff roll - Takeoff was aborted
- While taxing off the runway and back to gate,
another aircraft reported seeing smoke and flames
coming from the 2 engine (aft fuselage mounted) - Engine was shut down
22Example 3 Investigation
There was no LE impact damage to the inlet struts
One inlet strut showed TE damage
23Example 3 Investigation
A number of blades show circular shaped impacts,
which are not the shape of the blade edges
24Example 3 Investigation
Blade fracture convex surface
Blade fracture concave surface
25Example 3 Investigation
Macro fracture features indicate instantaneous
overload
500X SEM photo confirms
26Example 3 Investigation
Fractured blade shows a LE concave surface impact
deformation
FAST sample from LE reveals aluminum as foreign
debris
27Example 3 Conclusions
- Engine ingested an aluminum object, the size and
shape suggests a flash light - Power setting was high (takeoff)
- Blades broke instantaneously
- Taxiing with engine running resulted in more
damage
28Example 4 HPC-10 Blade Failure
29Example 4 HPC-10 Blade Failure
LE impact to concave surface of HPC-1 blade
HPC-1 through HPC-9 damage included small
cylindrical and circular dents and nicks
Damage aft of HPC-10 was heavy
30Example 4 Investigation
TE fast fracture
Fatigue
LE impact
Beach marks
HPC-10 blade fracture with appropriate areas
labeled
31Example 4 Investigation
300 series stainless steel found as foreign
debris on HPC-10 LE impact
32Example 4 Investigation
300 series stainless steel found as foreign
debris on HPC-1 HPC-2 impacts
33Example 4 Investigation
300 series stainless steel safety wire accounts
for the physical damage
34Example 4 Conclusion
- Engine suffered impact by aircraft safety wire
- LE impact to HPC-10 blade created a stress
concentration from which a fatigue crack began to
grow - Blade broke when crack grew to approximately 70
across the chord width - Impact by safety wire occurred many engine cycles
prior to blade breakage