JMarkWolf
Electrical
- Dec 20, 2001
- 40
I have a dynamic balancer I borrow from time to time, with which I balance the rotors on my helicopter.
It is a small hand-held self-contained unit to which you attach an accelerometer and a photo tach. After a data acquisition cycle, it will report the velocity of the imbalance and the phase angle at which it oocurs, on the integral 1-line LCD. This report typically looks like this:
"0.35ips @ 160 degrees"
You then manually plot this "dot" on a polar chart. The location of this dot on the chart "points" to the corrective action, which is either to add/remove weight from one blade or the other, lead/lag one blade or the other, or change the flight path of one blade or the other.
It works well.
I have fabricated a desktop rotor simulator from a small variable speed AC motor and an 8-inch diamter platter from a disk sander, with which I can capture and examine the waveforms generated by the accelerometer and opto-sensor, at the comfort of my own desk.
The acceleration signal is a near-perfect, near-noiseless sine wave. The 1-per phase marker strobes are crisp and clean.
The balancer instrument is connected to the simulator while I simultaneously acquire the same data with my digital storage oscilloscope. The balancer generates it's solution and reports the result on the LCD.
I have subsequently examined the waveforms generated by the simulator, integrated the accel waveform to velocity, and have tried to correlate the waveforms to the "report" from the balancer.
Disregarding the velocity amplitude, the phase angle reported by the instrument bears no obvious correlation to the peaks or zero intercepts of either the accel nor velocity waveforms.
Can anyone educate me a little as to specifically what analysis this instrument performs, that is not obvious by viewing and analyzing the waveforms? Or refer me to a consultant that can help me?
Like I said, I want to understand how it does what it does.
It is a small hand-held self-contained unit to which you attach an accelerometer and a photo tach. After a data acquisition cycle, it will report the velocity of the imbalance and the phase angle at which it oocurs, on the integral 1-line LCD. This report typically looks like this:
"0.35ips @ 160 degrees"
You then manually plot this "dot" on a polar chart. The location of this dot on the chart "points" to the corrective action, which is either to add/remove weight from one blade or the other, lead/lag one blade or the other, or change the flight path of one blade or the other.
It works well.
I have fabricated a desktop rotor simulator from a small variable speed AC motor and an 8-inch diamter platter from a disk sander, with which I can capture and examine the waveforms generated by the accelerometer and opto-sensor, at the comfort of my own desk.
The acceleration signal is a near-perfect, near-noiseless sine wave. The 1-per phase marker strobes are crisp and clean.
The balancer instrument is connected to the simulator while I simultaneously acquire the same data with my digital storage oscilloscope. The balancer generates it's solution and reports the result on the LCD.
I have subsequently examined the waveforms generated by the simulator, integrated the accel waveform to velocity, and have tried to correlate the waveforms to the "report" from the balancer.
Disregarding the velocity amplitude, the phase angle reported by the instrument bears no obvious correlation to the peaks or zero intercepts of either the accel nor velocity waveforms.
Can anyone educate me a little as to specifically what analysis this instrument performs, that is not obvious by viewing and analyzing the waveforms? Or refer me to a consultant that can help me?
Like I said, I want to understand how it does what it does.