BrianG
Military
- Aug 28, 2001
- 357
Hi all,
I'm hoping someone here has practical experience of airborne circuit breaker specifications that claim to 'exceed MIL-STD-202 method 204 curve A, 10 to 500Hz'or others which state '10g from 10Hz to 500Hz'
If you know this MIL spec you will understand that between 5 Hz and 54Hz it shows a flat line double-amplituded displacement of 60 thou, changing to a constant slope at 10g from there up to about 2kHz. I am particularly looking for more information as to whether this can be true since if you project the 10g line backwards from the 54Hz breakpoint towards 10Hz you get about 1.5 inches displacement!
I'm ideally looking for a magnetic type of breaker rated at 3A to give fast tripping but these seem to adhere to the 60 thou line of the MIL spec. I need about 100 thou tolerance over the range 5-50 Hz and it's only the thermal types that claim better vibration tolerance in this low frequncy part of the profile, but these are quite slow to trip.
Any ideas?
I'm hoping someone here has practical experience of airborne circuit breaker specifications that claim to 'exceed MIL-STD-202 method 204 curve A, 10 to 500Hz'or others which state '10g from 10Hz to 500Hz'
If you know this MIL spec you will understand that between 5 Hz and 54Hz it shows a flat line double-amplituded displacement of 60 thou, changing to a constant slope at 10g from there up to about 2kHz. I am particularly looking for more information as to whether this can be true since if you project the 10g line backwards from the 54Hz breakpoint towards 10Hz you get about 1.5 inches displacement!
I'm ideally looking for a magnetic type of breaker rated at 3A to give fast tripping but these seem to adhere to the 60 thou line of the MIL spec. I need about 100 thou tolerance over the range 5-50 Hz and it's only the thermal types that claim better vibration tolerance in this low frequncy part of the profile, but these are quite slow to trip.
Any ideas?