JMarkWolf
Electrical
- Dec 20, 2001
- 40
I've used several dynamic balancers (Chadwick, DSS and others) on my two-bladed helicopter.
They all provide a velocity reading (ips) at a phase angle (zero to 359 degrees), relative to a opto-electronic trigger that starts (and presumably stops) the acquisition cycle when the "master" blade is directly "out front".
This reading is then manually plotted on a polar chart to find the corrective action.
A typical reading would be "0.5ips at 24 degrees".
Guys I've talked to that balance machinery for a living don't understand what the "24 degrees" refers to. They say that pure imbalances generate sine waves, and that maximum velocity always occur at 0 degrees and 180 degrees.
My question: If this is true, what does the 24 degrees in a typical readout "specifically" refer to? Is it the zero crossing "lag or lead" of the raw acceleration waveform?
They all provide a velocity reading (ips) at a phase angle (zero to 359 degrees), relative to a opto-electronic trigger that starts (and presumably stops) the acquisition cycle when the "master" blade is directly "out front".
This reading is then manually plotted on a polar chart to find the corrective action.
A typical reading would be "0.5ips at 24 degrees".
Guys I've talked to that balance machinery for a living don't understand what the "24 degrees" refers to. They say that pure imbalances generate sine waves, and that maximum velocity always occur at 0 degrees and 180 degrees.
My question: If this is true, what does the 24 degrees in a typical readout "specifically" refer to? Is it the zero crossing "lag or lead" of the raw acceleration waveform?