PIA-TS-100-2015 Standardized Nomenclature for Ram-Air Inflated Gliding Parachutes.pdf

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1、! ! Page 1 of 8! !PIA Technical Standard 100 Parachute Industry Association Publications March 27, 2015 Standardized Nomenclature for Ram-Air Parachutes Introduction This Technical Standard was adopted by the Parachute Industry Association (PIA) on March 27, 2015. Input concerning revisions and addi

2、tions should be submitted to: Parachute Industry Association, Inc. Attention: Technical Committee Chair 3833 West Oakton Street Skokie, IL 60076 Telephone: 847-674-9472 Fax: 847-674-9743 Email: TechComC Definitions Airlock: On a canopy, a valve which permits air flow more easily in one direction, an

3、d restricts airflow in the opposite direction. In most case, airlocks are installed in the nose of the canopy to permit air to enter during deployment and flight, and restrict air from flowing out the nose to ensure better pressurization in turbulent air. Angle of Attack: The angle formed between th

4、e flight path and the chord line. The Greek letter alpha ( ) is used to denote the angle of attack. See Figure 3. Trim: The angle formed between the horizontal reference line and the trim line. The Greek letter theta ( ) is used to denote the angle of trim. Used instead of the somewhat analogous air

5、craft term “angle of incidence.” See Figure 1b. Area, Airfoil Section: The finished cross sectional area of a given rib (airfoil) section. When ribs are not identical, the specific rib must be identified. Used for calculations of pack volume and internal volume of canopy. Planform: The product of th

6、e average chord times the average span of the canopy. Projected: The area of an inflated canopy as viewed from above, perpendicular to the chord line at the centerline of the parachute. Due to canopy curvature and cell inflation bulging the projected area is always smaller than the planform area. As

7、pect Ratio: Span 2 /Area, which for a rectangular planform reduces to Span/Chord. ! ! Page 2 of 8! ! Attachment Point: A loop of tape, webbing, or the functional equivalent, for attaching something to the surface of the canopy. Pilot Chute. An attachment point for the pilot chute or pilot chute brid

8、le, including any reinforcement to reduce the effects of abrasion, and also including any additional rib- or canopy- reinforcing tapes intended to distribute the load from the pilot chute to the canopy. Suspension Line. An attachment point for a suspension line or control line. Some canopies use ext

9、ensions of rib-reinforcing or flare-reinforcing load tapes to form line attachment points. See also Flare, Suspension Line Attachment. Cell: The chamber formed by upper and lower surfaces and two adjacent loadbearing ribs. Channel, Drawstring: A fabric or tape channel that encloses a drawstring, mos

10、t often found on main canopy sliders. Pilot Chute Reefing: A channel that runs through the center of the canopy, from upper surface to the lower surface, to allow the pilot chute bridle to connect to the slider. Chord: The distance from the farthest forward point to the farthest aft point on an airf

11、oil section. If the canopy airfoil sections are not identical, an average chord may be specified. Airfoil dimensions are assumed to be finished dimensions unless otherwise specified. See also Span, and Line (Design), Chord. Construction, Chordwise: A construction method in which upper and lower surf

12、aces are assembled from panels which run from front to rear (chordwise) and are joined to the ribs and each other using a variety of sewn seams. The most common type of ram-air parachute construction. Spanwise: A construction method in which the upper and lower surfaces are assembled from panels tha

13、t run from side to side (spanwise) across the full width of the canopy. Personnel parachutes usually require three or four panels each for the upper and lower surfaces. Crossports: Holes cut in the rib sections to balance the air pressure between adjacent chambers. Drawstring, Slider: A length of ta

14、pe or line which may be pulled to collapse or remove a slider after deployment. Flare, Suspension Line Attachment: An extension of a load bearing rib used on some canopies to distribute suspension line loads along the lower rib seams. A suspension line attachment flare may be integral with the rib o

15、r may be sewn to it. Line (Design), Chord: A line drawn through the farthest forward point and the farthest aft point on an airfoil section. See Figure 3. Reference, Horizontal: A line drawn at a right angle to the Vertical Reference Line. Usage is equivalent to the practice of using the aircraft lo

16、ngitudinal axis as an aircraft reference line. See Figure 3. Reference, Vertical: A line drawn through the links and the quarter chord point. ! ! Page 3 of 8! ! Trim: A line drawn through the farthest forward and farthest aft line attachment points (excluding control line attachment points). See Fig

17、ure 1b. Line (Rigging), Cascade: A line attached with one end at the canopy and the other end to an intermediate point of an adjacent line. Contrast with Continuous. Continuous: A line attached with one end at the canopy and the other end at the riser of connector link. Contrast with Cascade. Contro

18、l: A line fastened to the trailing edge of the canopy, used to steer and modulate the forward speed and descent rate of the parachute. Also known as steering or brake line. Flare: A control line intended primarily for flaring the canopy for landing, but which may also for steering. Also known as Sec

19、ondary control lines, in which case the remaining control lines are known as Primary control lines. Brake-Toggle: When a control line is constructed in sections, that portion of the line between the toggle and the deployment set eye (“cat-eye”). Lower: When a control line is constructed in sections,

20、 that portion of the line between the deployment set eye and the upper portion. Upper: When a control line is constructed in sections, that portion of the line between the canopy and where it converges with other lines attached to the canopy. Identification System for: Suspension lines: lettered “A,

21、” “B,” “C,” . . . from front to rear along each load-bearing seam. Numbered from outboard to inboard (outboard lines numbered “1”; see Figure 2a ) or inboard to outboard (lines on center load-bearing seams numbered “1”; see Figure 2b). Control lines: numbered by rib seam, including non-load-bearing

22、ribs, from outboard to inboard. See Figures 2a and 2b. Suspension: One of the lines that carries the load from the canopy surface to the risers. Control lines are usually not considered suspension lines. Pilot Chute Controlled Reefing (PCR): A parachute reefing system that uses the drag of the pilot

23、 chute to modulate the opening rate of the canopy. Planform: The overall shape of the wing as viewed from above, perpendicular to the chord line. Quarter Chord Point: a point on the chord line one quarter of the distance from the nose to the tail of an airfoil. Removable Deployment System (RDS): A s

24、lider variation that permits the slider to be removed and stowed separately after deployment. “Full RDS” is a further variation that also permits the pilot chute, bridle, and deployment bag to be removed and stowed after deployment. Rib: A section of fabric installed between the upper and lower surf

25、aces of a canopy. Used to establish the airfoil shaped of the canopy. Rib numbering systems (for example, from outboard to inboard, or from inboard to outboard) vary from manufacturer to manufacturer. ! ! Page 4 of 8! ! Rib, crossbrace: A rib or partial rib installed at an angle other than a 90 angl

26、e to the upper and lower surfaces of a canopy. Rib, loadbearing: A rib to which suspension lines are attached, installed at a 90 angle to the upper and lower surfaces of a canopy. Rib, non-loadbearing: A rib without attached suspension lines, installed at a 90 angle to the upper and lower surfaces o

27、f a canopy. Rib, stabilizer: A stabilizer-end rib assembly with line attachments along the lower edge. Rigging, Crown: A suspension line length pattern in which all “A” lines are the same length across the span of the canopy, all “B” lines are the same length across the span of the canopy, and simil

28、arly all “C” and “D” lines, etc. Flat: A suspension line length pattern in which the lines in the center of the canopy are shorter than the lines farther outboard. In flight, the center part of the airfoil is flatter and creates more vertical lift than a crown-rigged canopy, which generates lift alo

29、ng the radius of the spanwise arc. Setting, Deployment: The position of the trailing edge when the control lines are pulled down to their deployment position. Full-Flight: The position of the trailing edge when the control lines are fully extended. Slider: A parachute reefing device usually consisti

30、ng of a rectangular section of canopy cloth reinforced on the edges with lightweight webbing or tape, and with a large grommet or D-ring installed at each corner. Sliders may have fabric removed from the rectangular section or may have fabric edge extensions installed to change opening characteristi

31、cs. Slider variations include: Domed, with a planform similar to a flat rectangular slider, but with fabric pleated along the edges. Split, capable of being disassembled into halves after deployment . Spider, made of two lengths of webbing sewn in an “X,” and usually used with pilot chute controlled

32、 reefing. See Pilot Chute Controlled Reefing (PCR). Removable. See Removable Deployment System. Slider Bumper: A small device, typically made from vinyl/silicon tubing, Type-4 tape, or Type-12 webbing, installed at the lower end of the suspension lines to prevent damage to the slider grommets caused

33、 by the slider contacting the connector links. Slider Stop: A small piece of rigid material (metal, plastic, phenolic, etc.) normally covered in tape or light webbing, installed on the lower edge of a stabilizer panels to prevent a slider grommet from riding up over the stabilizer material and damag

34、ing the stabilizers or the slider. Slider Stop Chafing Pad: A tape or fabric reinforcement installed on a stabilizer at a slider stop to reduce wear from abrasion. Soft link: A connector link constructed primarily of fabric or tape. Span: The distance from one side of a canopy to the opposite side.

35、Measurements taken at various distances aft of the nose will yield different results, Measurements taken across the upper surface will typically be longer than those taken across the lower. An average span, or separate leading and trailing edge dimensions, may be specified. Airfoil dimensions are as

36、sumed to be finished dimensions unless otherwise specified. See also Chord. ! ! Page 5 of 8! ! Stabilizer: A fabric panel installed at the end of a canopy, intended primarily to reduce wingtip vortices (much as an end plate on an aircraft wing), and to provide some directional stability. Some stabil

37、izer designs are ram-air pressurized for additional rigidity. Tapes, Reinforcement: A tape installed in the canopy to provide additional strength or dimensional stability. Tapes are identified by location. Cross Tapes: A reinforcing tape that runs spanwise on the upper or lower surface to distribute

38、 loads through the canopy. With chordwise construction, a cross tape typically runs from a line attachment point to laterally adjacent line attachment point, although some may run from a suspension line attachment point diagonally to a control line attachment point. With spanwise construction, a cro

39、ss tape may be rolled into a seam joining spanwise panels. Leading Edge Tape: A tape applied to or rolled into the leading edge of a upper or lower panel. May be continuous across the span of the canopy. Line Attachment Reinforcement Tape: A tape sewn chordwise into a seam at a line attachment point

40、. Load Tape: A tape applied to a rib section and used to distribute the load from a line attachment to the canopy. When applied in a “V” may also be known as a “V-tape.” In some canopies, load tapes may extend through the lower seam to become line attachment points. Rib Leading Edge Tape: A tape app

41、lied to or rolled into the leading edge of a rib section. Trailing Edge Tape: A tape applied to or rolled into the trailing edge seam. Usually continuous across the span of the canopy. Toggle, Control: A grip attached to the end of the control line to allow the user an adequate handhold on the line.

42、 Most commonly consists of a tape/webbing loop or a hard plastic dowel. Typically supplied as part of the container assembly. Trim: The arrangement of differential line lengths to produce a desired trim angle and anhedral. See also Angle of Trim. See Figures 1a and 1b. Vent, Lower Surface: An opening in the lower surface to provide an alternate path for pressurization during deployment (“inflation vent”) or depressurization during flight (“accuracy vent”). ! ! Page 6 of 8! ! ! Page 7 of 8! ! ! Page 8 of 8! !Figure 3. Angle of attack.

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