GLOSSARY
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
ADU auxiliary drive unit
abs absolute
AC alternating current
AGB accessory gearbox
API American Petroleum Institute
atm atmosphere
BDC bottom dead center
BHP brake horsepower
BTU British thermal unit
c Celsius cal calibrated
CDU central display unit
cyl cylinder
db decibel
DC direct current
ECM electrochemical machining
ECU electrical control unit
EDM electric discharge machining
EGT exhaust gas temperature
EPR engine pressure ratio
ESHP equivalent shaft horsepower
F Fahrenheit
FAT free air temperature
FOD foreign object damage
ft-lb foot-pound
fps foot per second
GE General Electric
hd head
Hg mercury
HP horsepower
HMU hydromechanical unit
hr hour
HUD heads up display
Hz Hertz
in inch
lb pound
LDS load-demand spindle
LH left-hand
man manifold
MGT measured gas temperature
microsec microsecond
min minute
MPH miles per hour
N north
NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
OAT outside air temperature
OD outside diameter
ODV overspeed and drain valve
OEI one engine inoperative
PAS power-available spindle
PDU pilot display unit
PRT power recovery turbine
PRV pressure regulating valve
psi pounds per square inch
psig pounds per square inch gage
PT power turbine
PTO power takeoff
RAT ram air temperature
res resistance
RH right-hand
RPM revolutions per minute
s south
SAT static air temperature
SDC signal data converter
SHP shaft horsepower
TAT total air temperature
TC top center
TCP tricresyl phosphate
TDC top dead center
TEL tetraethyl lead
temp temperature
TGT turbine gas temperature
TRQ torque
VG variable geometry
VIDS vertical instrument display system
vs versus
wt weight
DEFINITIONS
- Acceleration lag --
- in the turbine engine, delay between the time instant
power is requested and when power is available. The time
it takes the engine to accelerate and give the required
power increase.
-
- Aerodynamic drag --
- force which thrust must overcome to move an aircraft
forward. Design can lesson aerodynamic drag through
streamlining. Drag increases with increased speed.
-
- Airbleed actuator --
- device that operates the interstage bleed system, to
improve compressor acceleration characteristics by
unloading small amounts of compressed air.
-
- Air density--
- total mass of air per given volume, the weight of a given
volume of air. Air is denser at lower altitude, at lower
temperature, and lower humidity.
-
- Airfoil profile --
- outline of an airfoil section.
-
- Airfoil section --
- cross section of an airfoil parallel to a specific
reference plane.
-
- Air-fuel ratio --
- Ideal mixture of 15 parts of air to 1 part of fuel by
weight; the mixture to be burned in the combustion
chamber.
-
- Air inlet --
- large, smooth aluminum or magnesium duct at mouth of
engine which conducts air into the compressor with
minimum turbulence and restriction.
-
- Aluminum alloy --
- any of a variety of alloys formed by combining
commercially pure aluminum with other metals or materials
such as copper, silicon, manganese, magnesium, and zinc.
These alloying agents maybe added singly or in
combination to produce a metal with desired
characteristics or strength, heat resistance, corrosion
resistance, and the like. Both wrought-and cast-aluminum
alloys are widely used in the manufacture of rotor blades
and aircraft propellers.
-
- Ambient --
- condition of atmosphere existing around the engine, such
as ambient pressure or temperature.
-
- Annular combustion chamber --
- two-part combustion chamber made up of an annular liner
and a housing assembly. The compressed air goes into a
ring-shaped space formed by the annular liner around the
turbine shaft rather than into individual combustion
chambers. The space between the outer liner wall and the
housing assembly allows the flow of cooling air. Used
with axial-flow and dual compressors.
-
- Annular reverse-flow engine --
- type of gas turbine engine most commonly used in Army
aircraft. Airflow direction is reversed in the combustion
area.
-
- Anti-icing system --
- device that supplies hot air under pressure to prevent
icing of the inlet housing areas and inlet guide vanes.
Hot scavenged oil is also circulated through internal
passages in the walls and struts.
-
- Army Spectrometric Oil Analysis Program (ASOAP) --
- periodic oil analysis for microscopic metal particles.
This takes place at an oil analysis laboratory.
-
- Atmospheric pressure --
- barometric pressure exerted by the atmosphere as a result
of gravitational attraction above the point in question.
-
- Atomizer --
- nozzle that creates minute particles and accurately
shaped spray of fuel suitable for rapid mixing and
combustion.
-
- Axial-flow compressor --
- one in which the air is compressed parallel to the axis
of the engine. It is made up of a series of alternating
rotor and stator vane stages.
-
- Bending --
- combination of tension and compression. The inside curve
is under compression; the outside is under tension.
-
- Bleed system --
- device that unloads small amounts of air to relieve
pressure.
-
- Boss --
- raised rim around a hole; e.g., axle hole in a wheel.
Circular projection on a casting, usually serving as the
seat for a bolt head or nut.
-
- Brayton cycle --
- constant pressure cycle, with four basic operations which
it accomplishes simultaneously and continuously for an
uninterrupted flow of power. The turbine engine operates
on this cycle.
-
- Camber --
- the curvature of an airfoil's surfaces from the chord
line. It maybe positive, negative, or zero.
-
- Can-annular combustion chamber --
- one with characteristics of both the annular types. It
has an outer shell and a number of individual cylindrical
liners.
-
- Can combustion chamber --
- one made up of individual combustion chambers in which
the air from the compressor enters each individual
chamber through the adapter.
-
- Center of pressure --
- aerodynamic center of an airfoil; the point where all
forces act.
-
- Centrifugal axial-flow compressor --
- combination of the centrifugal-flow and the axial-flow
compressor. It usually consists of a five-or seven-stage
axial-flow compressor and one centrifugal-flow
compressor. Also called the dual compressor.
-
- Centrifugal-flow compressor --
- one with an impeller (rotor), stator, and compressor
manifold. The rotor revolves at high speed drawing air
into the blades. Centrifugal force accelerates the air,
and it moves through the stator and through the manifold.
-
- Centrifugal twisting movement --
- force that tends to streamline rotating blades with the
plane of rotation.
-
- Choked nozzle --
- a nozzle whose flow rate has reached the speed of sound.
-
- Chord line --
- imaginary line drawn between the leading and trailing
edges of an airfoil.
-
- Combustion --
- process of burning the fuel-air mixture in a gas turbine
engine.
-
- Combustion chamber --
- part of a turbine engine in which the propulsive power is
developed by combustion of the injected fuel and the
expansive force of the resulting gases.
-
- Combustion chamber liner --
- engine part usually constructed of welded high-nickel
steel, subjected to flame of extremely high temperature.
It is behind the compressor and receives the compressed
air which is mixed with fuel and ignited. The combustor
is where the combustion takes place.
-
- Compressibility effects --
- the phenomenon encountered at extremely high speeds (near
the speed of sound) when air ceases to flow smoothly over
the wings (or blade) and piles up against the leading
edge, causing extreme buffeting and other effects.
-
- Compressor --
- that section of an engine that produces an increase in
air pressure. It is made up of rotating and stationary
vane assemblies. It is the gas producer, or it may be
thought of as an air pump.
-
- Compressor rotor --
- impeller, may be thought of as an air pump. It
accelerates the air rearward into the first stage vane
assemblies.
-
- Compressor stall --
- separation of the airflow from the suction surface of the
freed or rotating blades of a compressor. Any degree of
stall reduces airflow.
-
- Concave --
- pressure side of an airfoil.
-
- Conduction --
- transfer of heat through material by communication of
kinetic energy from particle to particle rather than by a
flow of heated material.
-
- Convergent area --
- place where the cross-sectional area of a duct becomes
smaller.
-
- Convergent exhaust duct --
- duct used on fixed-wing aircraft; formed by tapering
toward the rear of the duct.
-
- Convex --
- suction side of an airfoil.
-
- Crossover tube --
- duct carrying flame to the individual cylindrical liners
of the can-annular combustion chamber.
-
- Diffuser --
- aft structural member of an engine. It receives high
velocity air from the centrifugal impeller and decreases
velocity and increases air pressure. In the combustor, a
diffuser forms a divergent flow path for the exhaust
gases.
-
- Diffusion --
- process by which gases intermingle as the result of their
spontaneous movement caused by thermal agitation.
-
- Directional references --
- specific definitions of terms referring to gas turbine
engines to identify front and rear, right and left,
bottom and top.
-
- Divergent area --
- place where air flows from a smaller into a larger area.
-
- Divergent exhaust duct --
- used on helicopter. Device to diffuse the exhaust gases
rearward and to eliminate thrust.
-
- Drag parasite --
- drag caused by any member or structure which does not
contribute to lift, such as engine cowlings.
-
- Drag profile --
- friction resistance produced by a member moving through
the air; in simple terms, the "stickness" of
air against the surface of an airfoil.
-
- Dry-cleaning solvent --
- cleaning compound that maybe used for all metal parts.
-
- Dry-sump engine --
- one in which the oil is stored separate from the engine.
-
- Dual compressor --
- see centrifugal-flow, axial-flow compressor.
-
- Duplex nozzle --
- dual-orifice channel through which highly atomized and
accurately shaped sprays of fuel go into the combustion
chamber.
-
- Dynamic load --
- load on an aircraft due to a dynamic force.
-
- Effective angle of attack --
- that part of a given angle of attack that lies between
the chord of an airfoil and a line representing the
resultant velocity of the disturber airflow.
-
- End play --
- longitudinal back-and-forth play of a shaft.
-
- Engine airflow path --
- route of the airflow through the engine.
-
- Engine oil pressure indicating system --
- device that gives continuous readings of engine oil pump
pressure in psi.
-
- Engine oil temperature indicating system --
- device electrically connected to the 28 VDC system which
transmits temperature readings to the indicator in
degrees centigrade.
-
- Engine speed notation --
- the capital letter N, which represents the rotational
speed of the engine. When a number is placed after the N
(as in "N1"), it indicates a
specific system on the engine.
-
- Engine stations --
- specific locations on the engine designating temperature
or pressure-measuring locations. For example, T3
means the third temperature pickup on the engine.
-
- Engine surge --
- result of compressor stall. The complete engine in stall.
- Exhaust --
- hot gases discharged from the engine through the exhaust
diffuser section.
-
- Exhaust diffuser --
- section composed of an inner and outer housing, separated
by hollow struts across the exhaust passage. It forms a
divergent flow path for the exhaust gases.
-
- Exhaust gas temperature indicator --
- sensitive millivoltmeter calibrated in degree centigrade,
activated by an electrical force generated by its
thermocouple.
-
- Feedback --
- relay through the controls of aerodynamic forces exerted
on the control surfaces and felt by the pilot.
-
- Fir tree mount --
- manner of attaching the blades to the disk in the turbine
rotor assembly. The root of the blade where it is
attached to the disk is shaped like a fir tree.
-
- Foreign object --
- any object such as a tool, piece of equipment, engine
part (nut, bolt, lockwire) that could in any way damage
the engine.
-
- Foreign object damage --
- commonly called FOD, harm or destruction to the turbine
engine caused by foreign objects sucked into the inlet
area of the engine with the required air.
-
- Forged --
- shaped by hammering. Only the malleable metals are worked
successfully. The application of heat increases
plasticity.
-
- Free-power turbine engine --
- the turbine engine used by the Army. Sixty percent of the
energy produced by combustion is extracted by the gas
producer turbine to drive the gas producer rotor. The
rest of the energy is converted to shaft horsepower to
drive the output shaft of the engine.
-
- Frictional loss --
- resistance to the relative motion of air flowing along a
duct.
-
- Frontal area --
- front part of a gas turbine engine, smaller than that of
a reciprocating engine, therefore producing less drag.
-
- Front of engine --
- end from which power is extracted. An exception is the
T73 engine on the CH-54, in which the power is extracted
at the end where the exhaust gas is expelled.
-
- Fuel-air ratio --
- see air-fuel ratio.
-
- Fuel atomizer --
- see atomizer.
-
- Fuel controls --
- devices to control fuel flow. They are usually
hydromechanical and include speed governors, servo
systems, valves, metering systems, and sensing pickups.
-
- Fuel divider --
- device that meters fuel to the engine nozzles according
to a predetermined schedule of secondary flow versus
primary flow.
-
- Fuel nozzle --
- device to inject fuel into the combustion chamber in a
highly atomized and accurately shaped spray.
-
- Fuel pressure indicating system --
- device that gives continuous readings in psi of fuel
pressure in the main fuel supply line.
-
- Gas producer--
- the compressor in a free-power turbine engine.
-
- Gas turbine engine --
- aircraft power plant that is adaptable for both airplanes
and helicopters.
-
- Gerotor pump --
- modified gear-type pump with two moving parts, an inner
toothed element and an outer toothed element. The inner
one has one less tooth than the outer.
-
- Glow plug --
- device that consists of a heating element in a short
conventional-looking spark plug.
-
- Ground angle --
- angle between the wing chord and the horizontal plane
when the airplane is at rest on the ground.
-
- Heat exchanger --
- fuel-oil cooler, to help cool the oil. The exchanger is a
cylindrical oil chamber surrounded by a jacket through
which the fuel passes. Heat from the oil is transferred
to the fuel by conduction.
-
- Hot start --
- overtemperature during starting.
-
- Hung start --
- failure to reach normal idling RPM during starting.
-
- Igniter plugs--
- spark plugs which function only during starting and cut
out of the circuit as soon as combustion is
self-supporting.
-
- Imbalance --
- uneven distribution of weight resulting in rotating parts
being out of balance. Measured in inch-grams or
inch-ounces.
-
- Impeller rotor --
- rotor in a compressor that revolves at high speed,
drawing air into the blades.
-
- Induced angle of attack --
- that part of any given angle of attack in excess of the
effective angle of attack.
-
- Induced drag --
- the part of the total dragon an airplane induced by the
airflow about the lifting surfaces.
-
- Inlet guide vanes --
- devices positioned by the inlet guide vane actuator pilot
valve. They are located in front of the first compressor
rotor, and they control the angle of incidence of the
inlet air, thus ensuring a compressor surge margin.
-
- Inlet housing assembly --
- forward structural support of the engine.
-
- Jam acceleration --
- rapid movement of the power lever, calling for maximum
rate of rotor-speed increase.
-
- Jetcal analyzer --
- device used to check the exhaust gas temperature during
periodic maintenance inspections or when abnormally high
or low temperatures are noted.
-
- Jet propulsion --
- propulsion of a body by means of a jet or stream of gas,
obtaining all or most if its thrust by reaction to the
ejection of the combustion products (gas).
-
- Jet silencer --
- a device used to reduce and change the lower-frequency
sound waves emitting from the engine's exhaust nozzle,
and thus reducing the noise factor.
-
- Joule --
- unit of energy or work used in rating gas turbine
ignition systems. A joule is equal to the amount of
energy expended in one second by an electric current of
one ampere through a resistance of one ohm.
-
- Labyrinth seal --
- device for preventing leakage of gas on the gas generator
shaft in a turbine. A labyrinth consists of a series of
projections on the rotating element running in close
contact with grooves on the stationary element.
-
- Maintenance allocation chart --
- chart in a -20 TM that assigns maintenance tasks to the
lowest level capable of doing them, based on experience,
skills, tools, and time available.
-
- Mean aerodynamic chord --
- chord of an assumed rectangular airfoil representing the
mean chord of an actual airfoil.
-
- Metal fatigue--
- weakening of metal due to microscopic changes in
molecular structures caused by vibration or exposure.
-
- Micron --
- one millionth of a meter.
-
- N1 system --
- gas producer.
-
- N2 system --
- power turbine and shaft.
-
- Nacelle --
- an enclosed shelter (cowling) on an aircraft for a power
plant.
-
- Nozzle --
- channel through which gas is conveyed to the rotor vanes
of a turbine. Its purpose is to convert pressure into
velocity.
-
- Orifice --
- opening having a closed perimeter through which a fluid
may discharge. It may be open to the atmosphere, or it
may be partially or completely submerged in the
discharged fluid.
-
- Otto cycle --
- a constant volume cycle, with four distinct operations
performed intermittently. Reciprocating engines operate
on this cycle.
-
- Outside air temperature --
- commonly abbreviated as OAT, the temperature of the air
outside the engine.
-
- Overspeed --
- RPM in excess of design; 100 percent RPM.
-
- Overspeed governor, N2 --
- gearbox mounted on engine inlet housing and driven from
the power shaft.
-
- Overspeed governor, fuel control --
- part of the torquemeter system, an individual pumping
unit which, with the tachometer drive assembly, sets the
torquemeter oil pressure.
-
- Overtemperature --
- temperature in excess of maximum allowable design
temperature at the turbine exit.
-
- PD 680 --
- cleaning solvent for exterior of engine and its attached
components.
-
- Planform --
- form or shape of an object, as of an airfoil, as seen in
plan view or from above.
-
- Power --
- the rate of doing work; work per unit of time.
-
- Power-to-weight ratio --
- relationship between power and weight. Turbine engines
produce more power for weight than reciprocating engines.
-
- Power turbine (N2) --
- turbine that is free and independent of the gas producer
system. It develops rotational shaft power.
-
- Pressure oil system --
- method of supplying oil under pressure to engine parts.
-
- Pressure pumps --
- devices to put oil into the system.
-
- Pressurizing and drain dump valve --
- device to prevent flow of fuel to the nozzle until enough
pressure is built up in the fuel control. One also drains
the fuel manifold at engine shutdown and traps fuel in
the upper portion of the system to keep the fuel control
primed for faster starts.
-
- Primary air --
- air that mixes with fuel in the combustion chamber to
form a combustible mixture. The ratio is 15 parts of air
to 1 part of fuel.
-
- Radial inflow turbine --
- type of turbine made by some manufacturers, not used in
any Army aircraft today, even though it is rugged and
simple, relatively inexpensive, and easy to manufacture.
Similar in design and construction to the
centrifugal-flow compressor.
-
- Ram --
- the amount of pressure buildup above ambient pressure at
the engine's compressor inlet due to the forward motion
of the engine through the air (initial momentum of the
air).
-
- Ram air pressure --
- free stream air pressure, provided by the forward motion
of the engine,
-
- Ram ratio --
- the ratio of ram pressure to ambient pressure.
-
- Ram recovery --
- the ability of an engine's air inlet duct to take
advantage of ram pressure.
-
- Rear of engine --
- end of engine from which exhaust gas is expelled.
-
- Reverse flow --
- change in direction of airflow in the combustion chamber
of a gas turbine engine.
-
- Rotational direction --
- direction of movement of the rotating part, determined by
viewing the engine from the rear.
-
- Rotational speed --
- speed at which a propeller, rotor, or some other rotating
part rotates; measured in revolutions per minute.
-
- Scavenge oil system --
- method of returning oil from the engine to the oil tank
for cooling and reuse.
-
- Scavenger pumps --
- those that drain oil from the sumps at various parts of
the engine, return it through the oil cooler, and back to
the oil tank.
-
- Scoring --
- multiple scratches, usually parallel and resulting from
the same cause.
-
- Secondary air --
- large surplus of air that cools the hot sections of a gas
turbine engine to lower temperatures.
-
- Shaft horsepower (SHP) --
- energy used to drive the compressor and accessories in a
turbine engine.
-
- Shot peening --
- process used to work-harden metals.
-
- Shroud --
- device used with turbine rotor to prevent blade tip
losses and excessive vibrations. The shrouded blades can
be thinner than unprotected ones.
-
- Simplex nozzles --
- single-orifice channels through which highly atomized and
accurately shaped sprays of fuel go into the combustion
chamber.
-
- Solvent immersion --
- cleaning method in which parts are immersed in solvent to
remove carbon, gum, grease, and other surface
contaminants.
-
- Span --
- dimension of an airfoil from tip to tip or from root to
tip.
-
- Spar --
- any principal structural member in an airfoil running
from tip to tip or root to tip.
-
- Specific heat --
- the ratio of the thermal capacity of a substance to the
thermal capacity of water.
-
- Speed governor --
- device to relieve the pilot from resetting the power
lever when outside air temperature and pressure change.
Consists of flyweights balanced by a spring.
-
- Splines --
- teeth in a gear.
-
- Stable operation --
- condition where no appreciable fluctuation, intentional
or unintentional, is occurring to any of the engine's
variables such as RPM, temperature, or pressure.
-
- Standard day conditions --
- 59º F, sea level barometric pressure (29.92 inches of
mercury).
-
- Static-balanced surface --
- surface that is in balance about its hinge axis.
-
- Stator --
- part of assembly that remains stationary with respect to
a rotating part. Stator vanes are a stationary set of
airfoils in a compressor.
-
- Stress --
- resultant condition of strain or pressure.
-
- Tachometer generator --
- device that supplies power at a frequency proportional to
the driven speed which drives the synchronous motors in
the indicator.
-
- TBO --
- time between overhauls. This is established by the Army
and the engine manufacturer.
-
- Test cell --
- building, usually concrete, that contains both a control
room and an engine room, used for testing engines. The
test cell is at the manufacturer's; a mobile engine-test
unit is used in the field.
-
- Thermodynamic cycle --
- succession of processes which involve changes in
temperature, pressure, and density in which the substance
acts as a means of transformation of energy. See Otto and
Brayton cycles.
-
- Thrust --
- a reaction force in pounds.
-
- Thrust, gross --
- the thrust developed by the engine, not taking into
consideration any presence of initial-air-mass momentum.
-
- Thrust, net --
- the effective thrust developed by the engine during
flight, taking into consideration the initial momentum of
the air mass prior to entering the influence of the
engine.
-
- Thrust, reverser --
- a device used to partially reverse the flow of the
engine's nozzle discharge gases and thus create a thrust
force in the rearward direction.
-
- Thrust, specific fuel consumption --
- the fuel that the engine must burn per hour to generate 1
pound of thrust.
-
- Thrust, static --
- same as gross thrust without any initial airmass momentum
present due to the engine's static condition.
-
- Torque --
- a force, multiplied by its lever arm, acting at right
angles to an axis.
-
- Torquemeter --
- hydromechanical torque-measuring device located in the
reduction-gear section of the inlet housing. The
measurement is read as torque oil pressure in psi.
-
- Torquemeter indicating system --
- pressure indicator for continuous readings of engine
output-shaft torque.
-
- Transient conditions --
- conditions which may occur briefly while accelerating or
decelerating or while passing through a specific range of
engine operation.
-
- Turbine nozzle --
- stationary nozzle which discharges a jet of gas against
the blades on the periphery of a turbine wheel.
-
- Turbine rotor --
- rotating portion of a turbine engine. It is made of
specially alloyed steel because of severe centrifugal
loads, the result of high rotational speeds.
-
- Turbine section --
- part of the turbine engine that extracts the kinetic
energy of the expanding gases and transforms it into
shaft horsepower.
-
- Turbojet --
- engine most commonly used in high-speed, high-altitude
aircraft.
-
- Vapor blasting --
- abrasive method used to clean combustor parts. Not to be
used on ceramic, magnesium, painted, or aluminum
surfaces.
-
- Vapor decreasing --
- cleaning method used on unpainted metal parts or
aluminum-painted steel parts.
-
- Vaporizing tubes --
- devices used instead of fuel nozzles in a T53-L-11
engine.
-
- Variable inlet guide vanes --
- devices located in front of the first compressor rotor to
guide the angle of incidence of the inlet air to the
first compressor rotor.
-
- Vermatherm element--
- device which senses outlet fuel temperature and closes
the core valve and opens the bypass valve.
-
- Vibration meter --
- device for measuring vibrations.
HOMEPAGE