Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

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TheGreenGoblin
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Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#1 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Fri Aug 28, 2020 4:03 am

I was prompted to post this thread on the basis of some of the excellent points raised in C16's recent fascinating thread on the Sikorsky S-76 helicopter.
Helicopters don't fly, they vibrate so badly the ground rejects them. - Tom Clancy
The requirement for low vibrations has achieved the status of a critical design consideration in modern helicopters. There is now a recognized need to account for vibrations during both the analytical and experimental phases of design. Research activities in this area were both broad and varied and notable advances were made in recent years in the critical elements of the technology base needed to achieve the goal of a jet smooth ride. The purpose is to present an overview of accomplishments and current activities of govern and government-sponsored research in the area of rotorcraft vibrations and structural dynamics, focusing on NASA and Army contributions over the last decade or so. Specific topics addressed include: airframe finite-element modeling for static and dynamic analyses, analysis of coupled rotor-airframe vibrations, optimization of airframes subject to vibration constraints, active and passive control of vibrations in both the rotating and fixed systems, and integration of testing and analysis in such guises as modal analysis, system identification, structural modification, and vibratory loads measurement.
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19880007245 (download if you want to read the whole document)

It is a long read but is well worth it.
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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#2 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Fri Aug 28, 2020 4:12 am

The report above touches only briefly on ground resonance...

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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#3 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Fri Aug 28, 2020 5:20 am

Ground resonance

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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#4 Post by ian16th » Fri Aug 28, 2020 11:54 am

......and I have trouble balancing the celling fan in my kitchen!
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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#5 Post by bob2s » Sat Aug 29, 2020 12:52 am

ian16, More likely out of track rathe than out of balance.

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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#6 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Sat Aug 29, 2020 5:36 am

A good basis for looking what bifilar vibration absorbers are all about. The Sikorsky paper is well worth a read but is not free.
The requirements of higher aircraft availability, lower maintenance costs, and a more comfortable passenger/crew environment demand low vibration in helicopters. To meet this objective, Sikorsky Aircraft has developed and reduced to practice the main rotor head bifilar absorber. The bifilar absorber reduces vibration directly at the source-the main rotor. It cancels the rotor system exciting forces before they are transmitted into the airframe, and thus effectively controls vibration throughout the helicopter. Reduced vibration levels translate directly into improved reliability and maintainability.

The principle of the bifilar absorber and the vibration reductions achieved in production installations are described. The quantitative improvement in reliability and reduction in maintenance resulting from the reduction in vibration are presented. The field data were collected from 15 aircraft without the bifilar absorber and from 15 aircraft with the bifilar absorber. The data show a 40% reduction in maintenance resulting from a 55% average vibration reduction.
https://www.sae.org/publications/techni ... nt/730894/

Some basic principles described here.

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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#7 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Sat Aug 29, 2020 5:46 am

Sikorsky moving on from the vanilla bifilar vibration absorber.
The same technology that vibrates cell phones and is used to counter vibrations locally in helicopter cabins could soon be used to better attenuate the shaking motion at the rotor hub, saving weight and decreasing drag in the process.

Sikorsky plans to flight-test a low-profile hub-mounted active vibration suppressor (HMVS) that could replace the passive, tuned pendulum system now used on the S-92.

Both systems are capable of cancelling out about 90% of rotor in-plane vibrations caused by air loads acting on the blades, disturbances that result in 4X per revolution vibrations in the helicopter structure for four-bladed helicopters such as the S-92 and S-76.

However, by using two eccentric spinning masses housed together and actively controlled both in speed and phase, HMVS builder Lord has produced a system that is 54.4kg (120lb) lighter than the bifilar system and has a lower drag profile than the passive device, which is mounted just above the blade attach points on the S-92. The system mounts to the same attach points as the current attenuator. In combination with the weight savings, the reduced cross-section of the HMVS will yield "significant increases in the maximum range and payload capability of modern helicopters," says North Carolina-based Lord.

Ground testing at Sikorsky's bifilar test facility proved that active design achieved the same attenuation performance as the passive bifilar design in handling steady and varying loads and speeds. Failure modes were also tested on the HMVS, including the simulated seizing of one of the two motors that drive the eccentric masses.

In that scenario, the HMVS would revert to single motor control, which would result in 50% vibration reduction in cruise, but would actually increase vibration in hover, requiring shutdown of the system for hover and landing.
https://www.flightglobal.com/sikorksy-t ... 14.article
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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#8 Post by TheGreenGoblin » Sat Aug 29, 2020 5:49 am

A version of this article appears Aviation Week & Space Technology.

http://www.aviationtoday.com/regions/us ... 5pH3yjLOew
Vibration has been an enemy of rotorcraft designers since before Igor Sikorsky began building helicopters. Not only is it debilitating to passengers and crews, vibration is also detrimental to avionics and components, reducing reliability and life.

The unsteady aerodynamics of rotor blades in forward flight produce vibratory loads that enter the hub, travel down the mast to the gearbox and from there into the airframe. Traditionally, vibration has been reduced using absorbers placed in key locations—initially passive and tuned to a single rotor rpm, but more recently active and able to adjust to variable speeds.

Credit: Sikorsky Aircraft
Now Sikorsky plans to demonstrate that vibration can virtually be eliminated in a helicopter by using a combination of rotor and gearbox suppressors to create a “choke point” that blocks unsteady loads from entering the airframe.

The “zero-vibe” demonstration late this year will follow flight tests of a hub-mounted vibration suppressor (HMVS), completed in March, that achieved a substantial reduction in main-rotor vibration. Anti-vibration actuators will be added to the main gearbox to create the choke point and achieve a global reduction in airframe vibration, says Bill Welsh, Sikorsky dynamics technical fellow.

Current helicopter active vibration control systems can reduce forces in specific areas of the fuselage, such as the cockpit, but can increase the problem in other parts of the airframe. Sikorsky’s goal is to “eliminate all vibration from the main rotor, through the main gearbox to the airframe,” he says. “We want to stop the gearbox moving so we create a choke point that stops vibration entering the airframe.”

Developed by Lord and Sikorsky, under the Army Aviation Applied Technology Directorate’s (AATD) Active Rotor Component Demonstration program, the HMVS was flight-tested on a UH-60A Black Hawk. The HMVS comprises four brushless electric ring motors, each with an eccentric tungsten mass, in a housing atop the main rotor hub. One pair turns in the same direction as the rotor and the other pair in the opposite direction, but at four times the speed of the rotor.

In the hover, no vibration suppression is required, so each pair of eccentric masses is 180 deg. apart. As the helicopter moves into forward flight, and the blades start to produce vibratory loads in the plane of the rotor, the masses are moved closer together to produce an unbalanced load.

“We arrange the phase of the unbalanced load to counter what the rotor is producing,” says Welsh. “If the rotor is producing a 1,000-lb. load at 140 kt., then the device produces 1,000 lb. to counter. We need masses spinning in both directions to get complete suppression of rotor in-plane loads.”

Flight test results were “as expected . . . we put the device on a UH-60A and got significantly lower vibration than the current bifilar [vibration absorber],” Welsh explains. Mounted atop the hub, the bifilar (left in photo) comprises dynamic masses on the ends of four arms that are tuned to absorb rotor vibrations. The HMVS (right) is 50 lb. lighter than the Black Hawk bifilar, and electrical power is supplied via the slip ring already used to power the rotor anti-icing system.

Through the 1980s, higher harmonic control (HHC) of blade pitch was pursued as a way to reduce rotor vibration, but it was limited to certain frequencies. More recently, there has been research into individual blade control, with actuators on the rotor; but both involve placing increased demand on the flight-critical rotor control system. “HHC never promised to nullify every load. This does, and we are not wearing out the main rotor servos,” notes Welsh.

The zero-vibe flight tests will be performed under an AATD program known as the Combat Tempered Platform Demonstration, which aims to increase the durability and survivability of Army helicopters. In addition to the HMVS, Sikorsky will install four Lord active vibration-control (AVC) spinning-mass actuators at the four corners of the main gearbox. “This will give us a total of six knobs to turn to stop the motion of the gearbox. The key is positioning them very near the choke point, which first-generation AVC didn’t do,” Welsh explains.

To reduce risk, the first generation of AVC systems “put the active suppressors where the old absorbers used to be . . . and allowed vibration to leak through.” Forces entering the fuselage are sensed by 14 accelerometers distributed around the airframe. “They feed information into a control computer that tells the system how much force to put out in what places to minimize vibration,” Welsh says.

While the goal of zero-vibe is to achieve “very low” global 4/rev vibration levels, “there is a little bit of higher harmonic vibration—8/rev, 12/rev—but low enough that the crew will not notice,” he adds. “It is close enough to zero to be good enough.”
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Re: Helicopter Anti-Vibration technologies and strategies...

#9 Post by CharlieOneSix » Sat Aug 29, 2020 11:07 pm

I'm not sure if it is unique but it is unusual - and that is the nodal beam anti-vibration system on the Bell 214ST - the helicopter type in my avatar. The rotor system including the main transmission is mounted on a nodal suspension beam from which the fuselage is suspended. The science behind it is based on the fact that a beam subjected to vertical vibrations will flex in wave form, with nodal points of no relative motion equidistant from the centre of the induced wave form. The helicopter fuselage was suspended from the nodal points of such a beam, resulting in a reduction of more than 70% in rotor-induced vibration.

In theory it was fine and it worked well as long as it was set up correctly. It was not unusual to get nodal beam bounce which was quite uncomfortable to experience. Also if the bushes at the fuselage mounting points became worn it was possible during hard manoeuvring to bottom out the nodal beam and a marked sharp vibration would be felt through the airframe.
nodal beam .png
If you sat in the rear passenger seats on the starboard side adjacent to the transmission tunnel and removed the sound insulation there was a small circular window where you could view the transmission bouncing up and down at least one and a half inches on the nodal beam. Quite disturbing if you didn't know what was going on!

Another unusual vibration reduction feature was the ability of the pilots to track one main rotor blade whilst in the cruise by altering the pitch by means of a small electric motor. The amount of movement was very limited but it was useful sometimes if you went from a sector at MAUW to the next sector with crew only. It did help a bit but there was no visual indication that the electric motor was travelling and all too often the motor had failed and in that case you spent a fair bit of time between the two of you convincing yourselves that you had achieved a smoother ride!
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