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1.10 Pavement Testing FacilityThe introduction of heavier aircraft with new gear configurations makes it essential that researchers gain a more accurate characterization of paving materials so they can increase design reliability and better estimate the effects of the larger aircraft. The next generation of large civil aircraft is expected to include models that will weigh up to 1.7 million pounds and have complex, multiple-wheel, multiple-truck landing gear systems. The first of this generation of aircraft, the Boeing B-777, which entered commercial service in June 1995, has two six-wheel landing gears and a gross weight of up to 535,000 pounds. The six-wheel gear loads applied to airport pavements by the B-777 are quite different from the loads of the current generation aircraft. Although current pavement design standards have worked well, they may not accommodate the dramatic changes associated with the next generation of airplanes currently being planned.The FAA is developing new standard procedures capable of producing pavement thickness designs for all aircraft weights and landing gear configurations that might come into operation in the foreseeable future. The FAA's plan includes short-term research to meet the immediate needs arising from the introduction of new-generation aircraft, while pursuing long-term goals for improving the efficiency of airport pavement operations. The short-term research under way includes verification of design procedures based on current layered elastic analysis technology. The FAA's longer-term objective is to develop new design procedures. Essential to the development of these new design procedures is a comprehensive testing and validation program using full-scale pavement sections and dynamic simulated aircraft loading.
The creation of FAA's National Airport Pavement Test Facility was made possible through a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement between the FAA and the Boeing Company. The cost of the construction and the first year testing is $21,000,000; the FAA and Boeing are sharing this cost. Subsequent costs will be the responsibility of the FAA.
Full-scale testing will provide the information urgently needed to investigate the performance of airport pavement that is subjected to the complex gear loads of the new generation of aircraft. The resulting technical data will help validate new design standards and assure compatibility between aircraft and airports throughout the world. The data will also provide an improved scientific basis for further development and refinement of the International Civil Aviation Organization's pavement loading standards for aircraft.
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NASA Headquarters Responsible Official: Code R
Curator: SAIC Information Services http://www.aerospace.nasa.gov |
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