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Mythbusters...
- Thread starter sawood12
- Start date
robwright
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You only had to ask...........[ORIGINAL: sawood12
I'm certainly surprised at the reference to the use of Nitrogen in tyres in aircraft as I thought it was for a totally different purpose:
poprock
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sawood12
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ORIGINAL: tscaptain
You only had to ask...........[ORIGINAL: sawood12
I'm certainly surprised at the reference to the use of Nitrogen in tyres in aircraft as I thought it was for a totally different purpose:] A wheel fire, a possibility especially after a high speed rejected take off, does not need oxygen in air filled tyres to help it along! Aircraft tyres are inflated to pressures up to 200psi [&:]
You're right, but the risk is not for those circumstances - it is due to the fuel tanks being ruptured and the close proximity of the wheels, i.e. nestled with the wings fuel tanks therefore surrounded on all sides bar one by fuel. If there was a fuel leak at high altitude you want to reduce the risk of it catching fire at altitude, or if there was a crash and maybe belly landing which may rupture the fuel tank.
What on earth is the Lexus article going on about? Who goes around sucking tyre valves? [&:]
A fuel leak will be into the air so a bit of air in the tyres won't make a lot of difference. A crash and you've got bigger problems on your hands and similarly a belly landing.[&:]ORIGINAL: sawood12
You're right, but the risk is not for those circumstances - it is due to the fuel tanks being ruptured and the close proximity of the wheels, i.e. nestled with the wings fuel tanks therefore surrounded on all sides bar one by fuel. If there was a fuel leak at high altitude you want to reduce the risk of it catching fire at altitude, or if there was a crash and maybe belly landing which may rupture the fuel tank.
If the fuel tanks are ruptured it will only be a problem if the brakes are hot or, a la Concorde, it feeds the engines. I always thought N2 is used in a/c tyres for two main reasons 1) It's inert in the case of fire and 2) Next to no water content - which at -56C in the cruise is an issue! There is another issue which is heatsoak from the brakes. Aircraft brakes can generate some impressive amounts of heat which will transfer through to the tyres over time. Commercial aircraft have brake cooling charts to show how much time is needed between landing and taking off again depending on how hard the brakes were used. Significant amounts of water vapour in the tyre would affect the pressure and at close to 200psi you don't need any more
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