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NASA NTRS · Other - NASA Memorandum (MEMO)
Crash-Fire Protection System for T-56 Turbopropeller Engine Using Water as Cooling and Inerting Agent
Attribution
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Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
A crash-fire protection system to suppress the ignition of crash-spilled fuel that may be ingested by a T-56 turbopropeller engine is described. This system includes means for rapidly extinguishing the combustor flame and means for cooling and inerting with water the hot engine parts likely to ignite engine-ingested fuel. Combustion-chamber flames were extinguished in 0.07 second at the engine fuel manifold. Hot engine parts were inerted and cooled by 52 pounds of water discharged at ten engine stations. Performance trials of the crash-fire prevention system were conducted by bringing the engine up to takeoff temperature, stopping the normal fuel flow to the engine, starting the water discharge, and then spraying fuel into the engine to simulate crash-ingested fuel. No fires occurred during these trials, although fuel was sprayed into the engine from 0.3 second to 15 minutes after actuating the crash-fire protection system.
Authors
- Busch, Arthur M. NASA Lewis Research Center
- Campbell, John A. NASA Lewis Research Center
Citation: Busch, Arthur M., Campbell, John A. (2019). Crash-Fire Protection System for T-56 Turbopropeller Engine Using Water as Cooling and Inerting Agent. Headquarters. NASA NTRS ID 19980228242. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19980228242 ↗