Designing smarter landing gear

Ғылым және технология

Move your project from concept to completion faster through our engineering services: darkaero.com/services
In this video, we explain how we made the DarkAero 1 landing gear smarter through the addition of logic control and how we built our system to simplify the challenge of actuating all three gear struts.
Join the DarkAero Community! kzread.infojoin
(Exclusive, members only content including photos, videos, live Q&A and more!)
DarkAero Courses - www.darkaero.com/courses
DarkAero 1 Aircraft - www.darkaero.com/aircraft
DarkAero Services - www.darkaero.com/services
DarkAero Apparel - www.darkaero.com/shop
0:00 - Intro
0:52 - Retract Requirements
1:39 - The Path to Smarter Gear
3:37 - Let's Move the Gear!
5:59 - Electric vs Hydraulic
7:16 - What's Next?
If you enjoyed this video and would like to see more of this type of content, follow along as we work to engineer the fastest, longest-range aircraft you can build in your garage!
More information on DarkAero can be found on our website and other social media accounts:
www.darkaero.com
/ darkaeroinc
/ darkaero-inc

Пікірлер: 311

  • @scott_maclean
    @scott_maclean Жыл бұрын

    This is probably the first system in this airplane that I'm not enthralled with. So much complexity, so many things that all have to work perfectly. I've experienced gear problems before, when you're flying and trying to figure out why your gear is not showing down/locked, you want the simplest system possible, with the smallest number of failure modes, that can be easily overridden and manually actuated. A complex logic sequencing system run over CANBus with many potential points of failure does not instill me with confidence. Those small extend and retract latches, with beautiful tight clearances and tolerances that work so perfectly in your tests - what happens when those are contaminated with grease, or dirt, or bugs, or ice? What happens one of the motor sensors fails or mis-reads, and the logic controller drives the motor to extension at full speed? What happens if any of the logic controllers freezes or fails? What happens if any of the wires going to any of the gear gets pinched, shorted, broken? The answer is: gear-up landing, or worse (partial extension landing). In virtually every retractable aircraft I've flown, the default state of the gear is to be down and locked. That means that in most any failure mode, by design, the gear ends up down and locked. The system operates to keep the gear up, and if something fails, the gear comes down. I don't see this functionality in your design: I see multiple different failure modes in your design that result with the gear up and locked with no way of manually overriding it. You also state that the motor load on extraction is 100 watts - that's fine, but what about when it's extending the gear against relative wind in flight? Lastly, if your "gear up and locked" indication is LEDs off, then you need a "push to test" button next to them to illuminate the LEDs and ensure that they are operational, to rule out a failed LED giving a false indication of retracted gear.

  • @Mike-oz4cv

    @Mike-oz4cv

    Жыл бұрын

    Didn’t they show a purely mechanical cable-actuated fall-back solution which lets the gear drop through gravity (edit: and gas springs) in earlier videos? But I don’t know how that’s going to disengage the motors in a reliable way or make sure the latches lock in the down position.

  • @jcims

    @jcims

    Жыл бұрын

    It seems complex but these systems can be incredibly reliable. Steer by wire is coming to cars sold in the US (eg Lexus RZ450e) in which there is no mechanical link between the steering wheel and the front wheels. These systems are also extremely testable and able to provide lots of instrumented feedback at relatively low cost. Given they have a redundant system for emergency deployment, this is probably quite a bit more reliable (if engineered correctly) than it would appear at first sight.

  • @IainMcClatchie

    @IainMcClatchie

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mike-oz4cv Hmm. And gas springs are unreliable.

  • @SoloRenegade

    @SoloRenegade

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't disagree. the controls are interesting, but I want manual overrides. I want fail-down features. Too many light aircraft experience gear failures.

  • @mikhailjairnisbett441

    @mikhailjairnisbett441

    Жыл бұрын

    You must have missed the video where they show that the gear motors can be disconnected, and the gear will free-fall with the help of gas struts.

  • @Johnbobon
    @Johnbobon Жыл бұрын

    Wish I'd had the fearless ambition of these lads back in the day. This project is truly exceptional.

  • @mavigogun

    @mavigogun

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure they've had exactly their share of fear. "Courageous ambition", more apt, me thinks.

  • @NeroontheGoon

    @NeroontheGoon

    Жыл бұрын

    I wish I was 1/10th as smart as these kids!

  • @tbrowniscool

    @tbrowniscool

    11 ай бұрын

    Not to be a negative energy but its 5 years and no flight.

  • @mavigogun

    @mavigogun

    11 ай бұрын

    @@tbrowniscool this ain't a one-off- progress has been well paced.

  • @tbrowniscool

    @tbrowniscool

    11 ай бұрын

    @@mavigogun literally is a one off.. You just don't see the religious parents with millions of dollars backing this. You notice how crystal clean the work/hangers are? The large metal parts are outsourced. I would like to be proven wrong but after 5 years they are still developing landing gear? Like I said before I wish them all the best but this won't work as a business. Who will buy this "kit"?

  • @bobheide
    @bobheide Жыл бұрын

    Dear DarkAero crew - Green and Red can still confuse a pilot as to up and down, since those colors are port and starboard. And no light means not working or broken. Please use lighted icon symbols indicating Down/Locked or Up/Locked. Thank you. .

  • @josephc.9520

    @josephc.9520

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd assume you can easily customise that to your taste, no biggie

  • @flexairz

    @flexairz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephc.9520 Some will forget that -> will be a biggie. Better to make it fool proof by DA

  • @xb70valkyriech

    @xb70valkyriech

    5 ай бұрын

    many aircraft have the green and red lights for landing gear and it's no issue. There's no common light inside the cockpit I can think of that relies on green and red to indicate port and starboard, those are only the position lights on the wingtips. Icons are fine, but they need to be very easily recognizable at a glance.

  • @ggroombr

    @ggroombr

    Ай бұрын

    Almost every aircraft on the planet has green and red gear indication lights. The only place you see green and red lights indicating port and starboard in aviation is on the navigation lights on the exterior of the aircraft.

  • @Johnny-Too-Bad
    @Johnny-Too-Bad Жыл бұрын

    It's been a while. You guys must be crazy busy, thank you for sharing this journey with us. One of the YT video series I look forward to most!

  • @georgedreisch2662
    @georgedreisch2662 Жыл бұрын

    Might consider making the service stands and any unique specialty tools / equipment, available to purchasers, once y’all get into production.

  • @_Joy_Unleashed
    @_Joy_Unleashed Жыл бұрын

    How do you replicate the demand on the landing gear that you'd incur in flight? Will you do wind tunnel testing? What about the icing and humidity challenges that mid level and higher altitudes pose?

  • @duglmac
    @duglmac11 ай бұрын

    On the Lancairs, we have a similar gas piston for emergency deployment of our front gear. The mains will fall and lock by themselves. There is a gas pressure decline over time that results in the gas piston not having enough pressure to push the nose gear against the wind all the way until the over center links lock. If this occurs in an emergency, then there is no way around landing without the front gear being locked, and usually results in a prop strike and a scary landing. Owners are urged to routinely cause a deployment to check for this, however it is still happens way more than it should. Here, you have all 3 gear using this method, opening up the possibility of having more than one cylinder fail and not lock at the same time.

  • @markswain1
    @markswain1 Жыл бұрын

    Automotive electrical engineer here w/ experience w/ CAN based networks. Love the innovation. Not to be negative Ned here but I'd highly recommend a DFMEA before first flight. What happens if an ESD event takes out your CAN bus? Its not all that unusual in the automotive realm. May want some type of redundancy here. Sorry to throw a dart, just want to make sure your bases are covered.

  • @marcericdavis
    @marcericdavis Жыл бұрын

    As you work through the design, consider ice. Any number of planes have taken off from wet runways and had the water freeze the gear in the up position as the plane climbed to colder conditions. Just something to consider.

  • @cbale2000

    @cbale2000

    Жыл бұрын

    The gearbox assembly appears to be sealed, so it's unlikely icing would affect that part of it. The linkages look like they might have the potential to be exposed to some icing, but given how it looks like the linkages nest and articulate, as long as they design it with enough torque, I'd think it could probably break through ice fairly easily (at least on extension if nothing else, retraction might be more problematic in icy conditions). Still, definitely something worth testing.

  • @z400racer37

    @z400racer37

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow good call @marcericdavis. Totally didn't even think of that.

  • @smark1180

    @smark1180

    7 ай бұрын

    "Any number of planes have taken off from wet runways and had the water freeze the gear in the up position as the plane climbed to colder conditions." Source?

  • @donanders2110
    @donanders2110 Жыл бұрын

    I can't wait to see this thing fly! I hope you live stream it!

  • @jj4791
    @jj4791 Жыл бұрын

    I've been following this project for a couple years. I'm always blown away by the quality engineering and workmanship. Best of luck in upcoming test flights. Hope it will do everything you want it to. (It will certainly be fast!).

  • @veryimmature
    @veryimmature Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for another well produced and really informative/interesting video. You guys amaze me.

  • @samuelhayes5198
    @samuelhayes5198 Жыл бұрын

    Just curious but why didn't you guys use a tail-dragger design for the landing gear? Wouldn't it be lighter and simpler?

  • @BrianPhillipsRC
    @BrianPhillipsRC Жыл бұрын

    Awesome system! Thanks for sharing

  • @wjenkins96
    @wjenkins96 Жыл бұрын

    It’s amazing how complex some of the systems these guys have built. Pretty amazing to see some highly motivated people working towards the finish of the plane they imagined.

  • @772CODEMASTER
    @772CODEMASTER Жыл бұрын

    I recognize those CIM style motors/Gearbox anywhere lol (We used them a lot in FRC) 0:01

  • @diosanto2022nuevomundo.
    @diosanto2022nuevomundo. Жыл бұрын

    Es perfecto ..felicidades .. Exelente trabajo

  • @milxl
    @milxl Жыл бұрын

    100k subs congrats !

  • @widgeonrblx8543
    @widgeonrblx8543 Жыл бұрын

    Congrats on 100k!

  • @yououtuber4176
    @yououtuber4176 Жыл бұрын

    Nice work. Try to avoid "off" LED's as you do not know whether the LED is broken, without power or in the stored position.

  • @purchasingagent1780

    @purchasingagent1780

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree- a color to indicate retracted would be ideal

  • @mwsiviero
    @mwsiviero Жыл бұрын

    100K! Congrats

  • @romanlightman4937
    @romanlightman493711 ай бұрын

    I operated a Baron on a Part 135 certificate. One of the very important preflight items was checking the the gear down locks for grease. If they werent properly visibly externally greasy, the bare metal to metal part can bind when under an air load. Gear that work just fine on the ground can act differently under an air load. Im sure that you guys are already aware of this potential severe problem, some of your viewers may not. In spite of my knowledge of this problem, I had a gear failure on my Baron. I was able to help the sticky gear to break loose by pulling some negative then positive Gs. At the moment that I reversed from negative to positive Gs I hit the gear switch down and they broke loose. The left main gear torque tube had already twisted into a pretzel because the main gear up lock held even though the torque tube was still spinning trying to put both gear down simultaneously. When I didnt get a green on the left main, I made sure that it wast just an indication problem by doing control tower flyby. Then I went out and did my G loading gear assist procedure. (I was schooled on this procedure at the time of purchase by a highly experienced AI Beechcraft mechanic.) The left main gear fell down hard under G loading and clunked into place. I got 3 green the second time I put the gear down. My AI mechanic saved me from a huge repair bill.

  • @Alex-yq2tf
    @Alex-yq2tf2 ай бұрын

    A long coil-over spring with an oil/gas damper might help to alleviate concerns with the gas spring leaking or failing with age. I know they make similar springs for automotive lift gates that are basically the same geometry as your gas strut, but have a coil over spring around it. Stabilus makes them!

  • @ThomasSchick
    @ThomasSchick Жыл бұрын

    …congrats on 100K…Please, accept this virtual “high-five” 🖐🏻

  • @victomeyezr
    @victomeyezr Жыл бұрын

    Awesome stuff!!

  • @luffy858
    @luffy858 Жыл бұрын

    How do you plan for the increased wattage / power requirement to overcome drag when in use real world? Ie. do you know roughly what the additional power requirement would be? Very cool video, thanks for sharing.

  • @z400racer37
    @z400racer37 Жыл бұрын

    Happy 100k!!!!!🥳🍾🎊🎉🍻

  • @pilotmiami1
    @pilotmiami1 Жыл бұрын

    Bravo.Go Ahead

  • @lancewilliams5726
    @lancewilliams5726 Жыл бұрын

    I cant wait to see you guys do your flight testing, i love great job you guys are doing, keep it up.

  • @ginginthing
    @ginginthing Жыл бұрын

    I like the idea of electric power over hydraulic retracts especially on smaller home builts. For one reason, the smaller hydraulic pumps now are almost impossible to get repaired if something goes wrong since Parker decided to condemn their use on aircraft. Also hydraulic systems can get messy at times and in general are more difficult to install compared to wires. Not sure of the eventual cost of this system electric system will be, but if they it is about the same as hydraulic, I would go with the electric, as long as it was adequately tested. And as far as testing is concerned, one thing that caught my attention was the mention of how fast the gear came down due to gravity, compared to how fast it went up. That will be the opposite during flight. The gear will take much more power to come down than it does to go up in this configuration due to drag forces. Your main gear legs have much more drag then say like the Cessna Cardinal RG main gear legs have, which have the same gear swing as your system or Lancair aircraft. There's a reason why many of these RG systems have single tube main gear as opposed to bulkier gear designs like your gear. Two reasons really, weight and air drag. More the drag, the more the power requirement. Your main gear look nice and beefy, but at least 3 times the width of single tube design such as used on a lot of home builts with hyd RG.

  • @jonfife3637
    @jonfife3637 Жыл бұрын

    Bravo Dark Aero Team, bravo

  • @jimx1169
    @jimx1169 Жыл бұрын

    How far aft does the CG move when the gear retracts?

  • @telecomwiz2004
    @telecomwiz2004 Жыл бұрын

    This project looks so good in white. Well done boys.

  • @Acbaker23
    @Acbaker23 Жыл бұрын

    How did you decided the power of the actuator motor taking into account airspeed? When folding the undercarriage back in, does the software take into account the potential increase in the folding speed due to the air pushing on the gear?

  • @markeilertsen6619
    @markeilertsen6619 Жыл бұрын

    Are you using a absolute encoder at the main gear arm for feedback? What kind of feedback control are you using for the speed control? PID?

  • @Oberkaptain
    @Oberkaptain Жыл бұрын

    Quick question about your use of OnShape, have they added ITAR/EAR compliance to their systems or if not how are you able to use it for aerospace design?

  • @herrjonna2007
    @herrjonna2007 Жыл бұрын

    This is great to see! Can I ask what kind of system yu are using for the CAN bus? Which CAN bus protocol etc, and do you make your own controllers? In addition, I noticed that the left main landing gear was slower than the right landing gear in both retracting and extending motion, what's the reason for that?

  • @daveinwla6360
    @daveinwla6360 Жыл бұрын

    Under what G-loading (positive and negative) does the gear-retract/extend system work reliably?

  • @tireballastserviceofflorid7771
    @tireballastserviceofflorid7771 Жыл бұрын

    I just recently saw that a mini turboprop had received or was about to receive certification. Is that something you guys would consider on V2 or V?? Obviously they burn more fuel, but they are crazy light. Wonder if there is some sweet spot with a feather weight plane and power plant. Can't wait to see it fly. You guys are great ambassadors for engineers.

  • @runtr8389
    @runtr8389 Жыл бұрын

    have you done a with and balance with the wheels up, and down ? , as it looks like? it may? shift the c/g ,

  • @sharpx777
    @sharpx777 Жыл бұрын

    what about aerodynamic forces when in flight and extending the gear, would you test that at some point (I see you're adding gas struts which would make sense to aid against air flow over the gear, would be interesting to see what the power draw is in a simulated in flight extension).

  • @JH-tc3yu

    @JH-tc3yu

    Жыл бұрын

    They've already addressed this 100 times. The gas struts are enough to fully extend the landing gear with no motors. That means the power draw when extending gear in flight will be ~nothing.

  • @sharpx777

    @sharpx777

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@JH-tc3yu what's the rating on the struts? (it was probably mentioned but I missed those 100 vids where it was explained)

  • @zmanmd1641
    @zmanmd1641 Жыл бұрын

    This is a very smart system. I have one question. How much additional power will be required to push against the airflow at maximum landing gear deployment speed?

  • @matthewspaccarelli5007
    @matthewspaccarelli5007 Жыл бұрын

    How do you test for the wind resistance when lowering the gear at 100 knots let's say? Will the system use a lot more power to overcome the forces of the head wind when lowering the gear during flight?

  • @jetski7611
    @jetski761111 ай бұрын

    Have you given any thoughts about designing a circuit which will allow the landing gear lights perform a flashing mode during transitioning or an unsafe condition?

  • @AwestrikeFearofGods
    @AwestrikeFearofGods3 ай бұрын

    3:19 Rather than autodeploying, it might be preferable to issue an audio warning. At low altitude and airspeed, a sudden change in drag or pitching moment is not always a welcome surprise. Furthermore, each time it autodeploys (especially without warning the pilot), it trains the pilot to forget gear-extension in retractable-gear aircraft.

  • @michaelklepacz
    @michaelklepacz Жыл бұрын

    Great job y’all

  • @Tenright77
    @Tenright77 Жыл бұрын

    How will you be simulating Air Loads on the Gear to validate reliability and function? In the automotive applications, CAN/BUS systems are not user serviceable without OBD type readers. What Service Units will be applicable to this aircraft? While Electro/Servo seems simplest, Electro/Hydraulic may be needed with air Loads. Will watch for development with interest.

  • @peckerwood780
    @peckerwood780 Жыл бұрын

    Killer project man

  • @wavewaker2
    @wavewaker2 Жыл бұрын

    I love the engineering application here,, question regarding the CG when landing gear is extended and retracted, will it affect?

  • @simonbaxter8001
    @simonbaxter8001 Жыл бұрын

    How much does it shift the CofG when the gear retracts? Also, regarding the logic board(s), are they coded to safety standards that consider self diagnostics, fault detection, sensor faults, gear motor over current, etc? Only asking because I develop ECU's for automotive and the level of fault tolerance in the CAN systems is huge! Even to the point of rolling counters in CAN messages to validate loss of CAN messages and messages that may arrive out of sequence due to bus arbitration.

  • @iamjtjoyce
    @iamjtjoyce Жыл бұрын

    Do you guys plan on using a weight on wheels switch to prevent pilots from accidentally raising the gear on the ground? I've really enjoyed the aircraft I've flown where this is a feature and its also included an aural tone that alerts the pilot when the gear isn't down after crossing an AoA or Airspeed threshold. That way if the pilot is trying to maneuver the aircraft in a way that would appear to be landing configuration but actually isn't, the gear wouldn't auto-extend and risk being oversped when the pilot completed the maneuver and recovered.

  • @e.sstudios1015
    @e.sstudios1015 Жыл бұрын

    Love it!! ❤❤❤

  • @brianb-p6586
    @brianb-p6586 Жыл бұрын

    Indicator lights off when retracted is a bit of a concern to me. There's no way to distinguish between an indication of normal retracted status and a complete lack of display functionality, since both correspond to lights off. Another colour of each indicator would provide a positive indication of system functionality. The locks are not currently installed. What happens to the indications if a gear extends or retracts all the way, but the lock doesn't engage? Are the locks monitored by position switches?

  • @sammcbride2464
    @sammcbride2464 Жыл бұрын

    Is there a sensor to only allow retract when the plane is sitting on the ground? I didn't see it in the wiring diagram. Maybe it will come later.

  • @burntsider8457
    @burntsider84579 ай бұрын

    How do you test that there is enough power in the gear extension mechanism to overcome the wind resistance in flight?

  • @zsebi66
    @zsebi66 Жыл бұрын

    May I ask what is the weight of the main wheel-tire-shock absorber and the front wheel-tire-shock absorber?

  • @timpierce6708
    @timpierce6708 Жыл бұрын

    Needs ground proximity sensor …. How does the panel know if altitude at any runway or off runway excursions… ref. Emergency extend / retract

  • @luggie111
    @luggie111 Жыл бұрын

    What's the airspeed where the electrical actuators can't achieve deployment against the airflow?

  • @jtuttle11
    @jtuttle1110 ай бұрын

    So what happens when you add in the aerodynamic loads of the plane at approach and landing speeds? It would seem that added load of moving through the air would have a significant force on the components.

  • @hugoastroalcala
    @hugoastroalcala Жыл бұрын

    How do yo test the movement of the landing gear with a front wind at the landing speed?. As the deployment is forward , this fight against the wind might be considered. Will 100 wats be enought in that case? (those were all constructive questions 😁)

  • @DustyLambert
    @DustyLambert Жыл бұрын

    Thinking from a systems safety/failure modes analysis: How is “off” an indication of anything other than an open circuit?

  • @j121212100
    @j121212100 Жыл бұрын

    this is quite possibly the most challenging part of the whole build executed like industry experts.

  • @FiferSkipper
    @FiferSkipper Жыл бұрын

    2:45 Full disclosure, I paused to post this, so I admit I haven't watched the rest... I have been migrating yachts away from direct circuit control to CAN control for over a decade. I am so satisfied to know that you have chosen this route. If it has been good enough for factory automation since the '80s and good enough for the auto industry since the '90s I'm excited to see the reliability and weight savings being applied to the aviation industry by such a forward-thinking group like yours! Kudos... and I look forward to the rest of the video.

  • @FiferSkipper

    @FiferSkipper

    Жыл бұрын

    Another great video guys! Well done so far and we are all (of course) excited to see the upcoming maiden!

  • @karlwilliams8208
    @karlwilliams8208 Жыл бұрын

    Will you have wheel bay doors that close to aid aerodynamic flow?

  • @ReedEzra
    @ReedEzra11 ай бұрын

    Killer info and demo! One thing, as per electric vs. hydraulic retract gear system...large passenger jets use almost always hydraulics, except the Boeing 787 which is all electric/electronic.

  • @AeroworksProductions
    @AeroworksProductions Жыл бұрын

    What is your back up for a failed motor or electrical system?

  • @yahwey12001
    @yahwey1200111 ай бұрын

    looks like Cessna 210 landing gear, but this system doesn't seem to have the emergency extension mode. how do you get the gear down when you lose electric power? and you will loose electric power. is the plan to just belly land and hope for the best? balistic chute?

  • @speedbird8326
    @speedbird8326 Жыл бұрын

    Will the landing gear have doors which close around the retracted landing gear in flight to reduce drag ?

  • @JohnGBeckett
    @JohnGBeckett Жыл бұрын

    Is "off" as an indicator of closed a good safety option as there's no way to tell the difference between a light circuit malfunction and closed landing gear? I know there have been several industrial accidents stemming from the use of "off" as an indicator, so I'm surprised that it's allowed in aircraft.

  • @nothingtoseehere5760
    @nothingtoseehere576011 ай бұрын

    Good lord I can't wait for this beast to fly!

  • @drakonzebra
    @drakonzebra Жыл бұрын

    What controllers are you using for the CAN BUS system?

  • @yellowajah
    @yellowajah Жыл бұрын

    With your comment that the DarkAero 1 straddles the blurred line between hydro and leccy, does cost/ease of maintenance and reliability factor in? I would imagine that an electric system is much more reliable and maintainable, weight aside. Would it by hypothetically feasible with your current setup to get telemetry on the retraction system to detect problems ahead of time? e.g. if there's an current draw that might be indicative of premature wear.

  • @smithtorreysmith
    @smithtorreysmith Жыл бұрын

    We are huge fans of this crew.

  • @lawrencecarlson2425
    @lawrencecarlson2425 Жыл бұрын

    Curious how much load is added to the gear when in flight.

  • @-GBD-
    @-GBD- Жыл бұрын

    Very cool! Chuckled when you said 100w bulb and then showed an LED! I assume you'll be testing repetitive cycling of gear? What if system fails to deploy...is there any manual action if motors aren't working?

  • @SolarWebsite
    @SolarWebsite11 ай бұрын

    When the switch is operated, I think I hear two clicks, so it seems like a three-position switch. Is that correct? If so, why is it a three-position switch?

  • @johnjensen2217
    @johnjensen2217 Жыл бұрын

    Will you eventually add fairings/doors to cover the landing gear while retracted?

  • @mikhailjairnisbett441

    @mikhailjairnisbett441

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah they did make some in an earlier episode

  • @GT500NSX
    @GT500NSX Жыл бұрын

    How much does the cg move when the gear is retracted?

  • @SoloRenegade
    @SoloRenegade Жыл бұрын

    how do you determine, in flight, if an LED has failed (off) versus stuck gear? What if the right main LED failed, and so never illuminated, but the gear came down and locked? What if the right main gear failed to unlock and extend, how would you know the LED wasn't bad? What if the right main LED failed, and the gear was extended but not locked?

  • @flexairz
    @flexairz Жыл бұрын

    Whats the maximum gear extension retraction speed?

  • @NuttySwiss
    @NuttySwiss Жыл бұрын

    Any concerns with having radar interfere with the CAN bus? Some cars had to implement extra things for wake-up control due to car batteries going flat at airport parking…

  • @TheStuartstardust

    @TheStuartstardust

    Жыл бұрын

    Related to airport parking or just general long term parking? 🤔

  • @NuttySwiss

    @NuttySwiss

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheStuartstardust airport parking. The radar pulse would wake up the CAN bus.

  • @John-wk2fd
    @John-wk2fd Жыл бұрын

    Speaking from personal experience with hydro. One less system to cover in hydro is a win. If the electric motor is reliable I say go for it.

  • @mariocremajr2476
    @mariocremajr24768 ай бұрын

    Hello guys, Are you intended to use any kind of steering system? Or the turning will be made using differential brake and propulsion? great work, guys! keep it on!

  • @rdyer8764
    @rdyer8764 Жыл бұрын

    In general I don't like having the "LED-OFF" state as being the indication is a valid system state. It doesn't allow for the possibility of a malfunction. I think it would be better to have a different color for each position -- 1) up and locked, 2) down and locked, and 3) in-between. With your current system you don't reliably know if a gear is up, or there is a malfunction somewhere. Yes, with LEDs having practically unlimited life, there's little danger of burning one out. However, with your existing indicator system you won't know if the gear is up, or you have a bad LED, or a broken wire, or a bad switch, etc, in your indicator circuitry. You're obviously using Red/Green bi-color LEDs. Why not use Yellow (both on) to indicate one of the states? That might let you get away without any rewiring. Though Red/Green/Blue LEDs would probably look more polished, since Yellow is often an indication of caution. Like you said, "Make your landing gear smarter!" :)) Just my 2-bits...

  • @mausball

    @mausball

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. LED off should only indicate a failure or power-off state. Red/Yellow/Green has been a standard for decades for a reason.

  • @brois841

    @brois841

    Жыл бұрын

    Not a pilot or engineer, but doesn't preflight checklist cover checking all instruments? I assume the LED's would go through their sequence when starting up (like in a car dashboard). Additionally, if the lights are constantly on while the gears are retracted it'll be super distracting, especially when flying at night. I like their implementation because I'm sure you'd feel/hear the drag if the wheels aren't fully retracted (equivalent to the LED being out as you've mentioned). It's not just the LED that has to malfunction, but also the system. All this is to say that I like their approach; there are indications of what's happening when it's needed, without distractions when not needed.

  • @s14slide

    @s14slide

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone who specialized on landing gear and flight controls for over a decade, I agree that an off led gives to little information. Maybe look into: Green=down Alternating G/R=gear in transition Red=up LED's are reliable, but not infallible.

  • @Johnbobon

    @Johnbobon

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@brois841 Just thinking aloud here, a pre-flight check wouldn't indicate an in-flight system failure. I think the 3-color, never-off concept makes good sense.

  • @rdyer8764

    @rdyer8764

    Жыл бұрын

    @@s14slide I'm definitely not experienced in aircraft, but I really like the idea of a flashing LED indicating movement between valid states. Great idea, and also only changes the software. No additional hardware/wiring required.

  • @s14slide
    @s14slide Жыл бұрын

    Will there be a mechanical backup to indicate gear is down and locked as an emergency backup? I know weight is an important factor in this aircraft, but I think a pilot already has a lot to deal with while managing an in-flight emergency, especially if there is an electrical failure.

  • @itsmorepaul
    @itsmorepaul Жыл бұрын

    Very elegant! I'm not red/green colorblind, but I'm curious if the red/green landing gear LEDs offer enough color differentiation for those that are?

  • @erichocean8746

    @erichocean8746

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, they really need two lights per landing gear. All lights off? Landing gear is up. One (left) light on? In motion. Both lights on? Fully extended, ready to land. (And to +1 other comments, a separate push-and-hold button to verify that the LEDs aren't actually burnt out, as well as piping heat from the engine to the landing gear bays to combat icing-related failures. This is one area of the plane where over-engineering for failure is money/weight well spent. If it were my build, I'd also add cameras to the landing gear bays so I could see what the hell was going on down there in flight.)

  • @biondanishgenomeinstitute8193
    @biondanishgenomeinstitute8193 Жыл бұрын

    Surely you have factored in the air pressure that must be overcome when lowering the gears?

  • @microcolonel
    @microcolonel Жыл бұрын

    Your solution is cool :+ ) Retraction-only motors would be another interesting option; you could solve the soft-extension problem with mechanical design. Couple the retracting motor with a clutch/dog coupling and a ratchet, and you'll have the option to extend the gear during electrical failure. Torque limiters are another elegant way to prevent damage from overdriving an assembly like this; it won't look as graceful as the computer control option, but also doesn't have to involve sensitive electronics of any sort, nor software correctness (take it from a software guy... betting on the correctness of software is a fool's errand), just crude electric limit switches.

  • @physicsbystanprisajny6284
    @physicsbystanprisajny6284 Жыл бұрын

    Landing gear is a Garmin wacume cleaner piston back wards?

  • @GalaxyTheMantledBeast
    @GalaxyTheMantledBeast Жыл бұрын

    Was that a vex pro gearbox? Because that looks like a versa-planetary gearbox powered by a BAG Motor

  • @palletcolorato
    @palletcolorato8 ай бұрын

    Cool !

  • @jackfisher4061
    @jackfisher4061 Жыл бұрын

    Are you using vexpro aluminum gears?

  • @Patshes
    @Patshes Жыл бұрын

    Unbelievable what you have achieved so far.

  • @Smokeyr67
    @Smokeyr67 Жыл бұрын

    I'm getting Cessna 337 vibes from the rears 😀

  • @alyoungwerth9908
    @alyoungwerth9908 Жыл бұрын

    Did you consider pneumatic actuators? Extremely reliable, high forces, relatively small actuators, flexible hoses that are easy to route, push-to-connect fittings, off-the-shelf components, easy to add redundancy, etc.

  • @jtuttle11
    @jtuttle1111 ай бұрын

    It's actually much more common to find the landing gear in model planes driven by pneumatics.

  • @lohikarhu734
    @lohikarhu734 Жыл бұрын

    there's actually a move toward full-electric actuation, from what I've seen, as there are no issues with leaking hydraulics, or leaks from incoming fire/shrapnel, and it's easier to use distributed control and monitoring. BTW, I think I'd prefer, personally, that you had amber lights during correct extend/retract cycles, only going to red if a fault is detected... over-current, under-speed, locked /stuck, sensor/feedback failures. Funnily, I was thinking of how simple one could make the functions that you are using a computer to control, with relays (solid-state or not), resistors/potentiometers, switches...a bit more complicated wiring, but operation that anyone with basic electro-mechanical understanding could make work, while still providing the feature set that you have... but, CANbus works fine in cars, and quite robust systems can be designed with CAN/LIN, smart drivers and actuators. Looks good.

  • @alexanderarnett4966

    @alexanderarnett4966

    Жыл бұрын

    CAN/Bus is also extensively used in commercial aircraft, I think in many military aircraft as well.

  • @atorrance
    @atorrance Жыл бұрын

    Which FRC team were ya'll on? People rarely just randomly put BAG + versaplanetaries in their airplanes.

  • @seamuscashin2606
    @seamuscashin2606 Жыл бұрын

    i notice your gear is canted forward to get cg on front wheel as you cannot use wing spar the load paths are forward on gear not vertical is their extra load on gear in this config

  • @mithrandir133
    @mithrandir13311 ай бұрын

    so the "Drag Link" in the main gear is in tension?

Келесі