"Ejection Seat": Department of Mechanical Engineering
"Ejection Seat": Department of Mechanical Engineering
"Ejection Seat": Department of Mechanical Engineering
EJECTION SEAT
By
Siddhant Sunil Chavan
Roll No-15
Guided by
(Prof.Pooja Thorat)
Date :
Place :
Head Department
Principal,
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. History
4. Definitions
5. Operating principle
6. Evolution of ejection seats
6.1 Application of rocket motors
6.2 More recent applications to escape system
7. Timing an Ejection
8. Modes of Ejection
9. Conclusion
10. Reference
ABSTRACT
A brief history of the use of propulsive elements in aircrew escape systems
is presented. For the purposes of this history, both closed propulsion elements (catapults),
as well as rocket motors are considered since early ejector seats depended solely on
catapults for their motive source. Applications of rocket motors other than for providing
the main impetus to the escape system are also considered in more recent systems.
Information contained in this history was obtained from all types of literature both
published and unpublished, as well as from discussions with individuals who have been
involved in the escape system arena from its infancy.
The use of an ejection seat is always a last resort when an aircraft is damaged and the
pilot has lost control. However, saving the lives of pilots is a higher priority than saving
planes, and sometimes an ejection is required in order to save a life.
1.INTRODUCTION
Early escape equipment consisted of a recovery parachute only. As aircraft
performance rapidly increased during World War II, it became necessary to assist the
crewmen in gaining clear safe separation from the aircraft. This was accomplished with
an ejector seat, which was powered by a propellant driven catapult - the first use of a
propulsive element in aircrew escape. Since then, this collection of componentry has
evolved through several generations into today's relatively complex systems, which are
highly dependent upon propulsive elements. Today, propulsive elements (rocket motors,
specifically) are used to stabilize the ejected mass, provide trajectory steering, jettison
aircraft canopies, provide positive separation of the ejected seat from the crew member,
generate the force necessary to rapidly extract a parachute from its container, all in
addition to the basic function of providing clear safe separation from the aircraft. Since
the first operational ejections from aircraft, nearly 6,800 successful non-combat ejections
have taken place from US Navy and US Air Force aircraft alone. In savings to the
taxpayer that amounts to over 8 billion dollars based on the current average training cost
of 1.2 million dollars per aircrew member.
Ejecting from an aircraft moving at speeds greater than the speed of sound
(mach 1: 750 miles per hour / 1,207 kph) can be very dangerous. The force of ejecting at
those speeds can reach in excess of 20 Gs -- one G is the force of Earths gravity. At 20
Gs, a pilot experiences a force equal to 20 times his or her body weight. Most military
aircraft, NASA research aircraft and some small commercial airplanes are equipped with
ejection seats to allow pilots to escape from damaged or malfunctioning airplanes.
2.HISTORY
Generations of Seat Designs
Bucket - This is the lower part of the ejection seat that contains the survival equipment.
Canopy - This is the clear cover that encapsulates the cockpit of some planes; it is often
seen on military fighter jets.
Drogue parachute - This small parachute is deployed prior to the main parachute; it
designed to slow the ejection seat after exiting the aircraft. A drogue parachute in an
ACES II ejection seat has a 5-feet (1.5-m) diameter. Others may be less than 2 feet (0.6
m) in diameter.
Egress system - This refers to the entire ejection system, including seat ejection, canopy
jettisoning and emergency life-support equipment.
Environmental sensor - This is an electronic device that tracks the airspeed and altitude
of the seat.
Face curtain - Attached to the top of some seats, pilots pull this curtain down to cover
his or her face from debris. This curtain also holds the pilot's head still during ejection.
Recovery sequencer - This is the electronic device that controls the sequence of events
during ejection.
Rocket catapult - This is a combination of a ballistic catapult and an under seat rocket
unit.
Under seat rocket - Some seats have a rocket attached underneath to provide additional
lift after the catapult lifts the crewmember out of the cockpit.
Zero-zero ejection - This is an ejection on the ground when the aircraft is at zero altitude
and zero airspeed.
4. OPERATING PRINCIPE
Ejecting from an airplane is a violent sequence of events that places the human
body under an extreme amount of force. The primary factors involved in an aircraft ejection are
the force and acceleration of the crewmember, according to Martin Herker, a former physics
teacher. To determine the force exerted on the person being ejected, we have to look at Newton's
second law of motion, which states that the acceleration of an object depends on the force acting
upon it and the mass of the object
Regarding a crewmember ejecting from a plane, M equals his or her body mass plus the
mass of the seat. A is equal to the acceleration created by the catapult and the under seat
rocket.
It's simple to determine the mass of the seat and the equipment attached to the seat. The
pilot's mass is the largest variable. A 180-pound person normally feels 180 pounds of
force being applied to him when standing still. In a 20-G impact, that same 180-pound
person will feel 3,600 pounds of force being exerted.
"To determine the speed of the [ejection] seat at any point in time, one solves the Newton
equation knowing the force applied and the mass of the seat/occupant system. The only
other factors that are needed are the time of the force to be applied and the initial velocity
present (if any). Herker provides this equation for determining the speed of the seat:
Initial speed refers to either the climb or the sink rate of the aircraft. It
may also be determined by the initial step of the ejection process in a seat that combines
an explosive catapult and an under seat rocket. The seat speed must be high enough to
allow separation of the seat and person from the aircraft as quickly as possible in order to
clear the entire aircraft.
5. EVOLUTION OF EJECTION SEATS
Fig: Ejection Seat
The second category of catapults utilized three tubes nested one inside the
other to achieve separation velocities as high as 83 feet per second from a total of 72
inches of stroke Typically, the US catapults of this type used a single propellant cartridge
and provided separation velocities closer to 60 feet per second, while the British catapults
(Martin-Baker) utilized a primary and two subsequently staged cartridges to achieve the
higher velocity.
The jet engine continued to increase the performance of post World War II
aircraft, and it was not long before the limitations of the simple ejector seat become
apparent. Two such areas of limitations were: (1) Inability of the ejected seat to clear the
aircraft's vertical tail at high speed, and (2) The potential for windblast injury to the
aircrew forced to eject under high "Q" conditions. Propulsive elements were involved in
As indicated earlier, the German approach was to jettison the vertical or dorsal surface.
One approach taken in the US was to eject the seat downwards, rather than upwards. This
approach had serious shortcomings when the ejection occurred at low altitudes. Another
approach was to increase the catapult output sufficiently to provide adequate tail
clearance. While successful in clearing the tail, this approach was also very successful in
motor with the catapult to form a two-stage propulsion system for the seat. The catapult
remained as the initial booster to get the seat/man mass clear of the cockpit, while the
rocket motor came on line, once clear of the cockpit, to act in a sustainer mode. When
combined into a single unit, this propulsive element was termed the rocket catapult. The
first USAF rocket catapult, the TALCO Engineering Co. 1057, was installed in the F-102
in 1958. Shortly after this, the first USN rocket catapults, the RAPEC I for the A-4 and
the TALCO Engineering Co. 1192 for the T-2, became operational. Propellants used in
the RAPEC were double base, as were most previous escape propulsion units. The 1057
and 1192 units were unique in that they used a composite propellant. This basic rocket
was maintained as separate component, and the rocket motor was located separately
under the seat bottom. This configuration is illustrated in figure 2, and is, if not unique,
certainly rare in its use of multiple propellant tubes feeding into a single nozzled
manifold. Propellant is double base. This propulsion concept was extensively tested,
culminating in a live static (zero airspeed and zero altitude) test on 1 April 1961. The test
utilizes separate catapult and rocket motors. However, their system consists of twin catapult
tubes, which also do duty as the main seat structural beams. Rocket motors are located on both
sides of the seat at the aft extremity, and they are termed "SBR's" for "Seat Back Rockets." figure
In summary, then, the next major step in escape propulsion evolution was the
addition of the rocket motor to the ejection seat to compliment the catapult. In general, the first
rocket catapults were categorized as "low impulse" units, indicating that the rocket motor
delivered from 800-1,000 pound-seconds of impulse, in addition to that provided by the catapult.
This additional impulse was sufficient to provide tail clearance at high speed and to provide
recovery from ground level at speed, when used in conjunction with other ejection seat
improvements.
Emphasis was initially placed, however, on high-speed recovery. As time
progressed it became obvious that many ejection fatalities were occurring at low speed
close to the ground. Hence, in the mid-1960's, the "high impulse" rocket/catapult system
was put into service to provide static (zero airspeed, zero altitude) recovery capability in
conjunction with the current seats. High impulse generally designated that the rocket
Function time of the rocket was 0.5-0.6 seconds, and the increase in impulse compared to
the low impulse unit generally provided additional trajectory height, which translated into
additional time available for all of the automatic ejection seat functions to occur.
Today the advent of high performance aircraft operating at very high speed
and very close to the ground have necessitated that the escape system designer reduce the
total time from ejection initiation to full parachute to the absolute minimum consistent
with human physiological tolerances. This has necessitated shortening rocket function
time and hence impulse. Current generation rocket propulsion units are again sized to
parachute systems, the low impulse units can still provide zero-zero recovery capability
while at the same time provide greatly improved adverse attitude recovery capability.
Stanley Aviation Yankee (now produced by Stencel Aero engineering and called the
Ranger extraction System. This system utilizes a tractor rocket, which is ejected or
catapulted away from the aircraft above the cockpit. It is attached to the crewmember by
a pendant. When the rocket motor reaches pendant line stretch, It Is fired and tows or
extracts the crewmember clear of the aircraft. This concept is illustrated in figure 4.
some type of encapsulation for the aircrew. This approach was heavier than the open seat,
necessitating larger propulsion systems. The first such capsule was developed by Douglas
Aircraft Company under contract to the US Navy for the F-4D Skyray. While this capsule
never was installed in the aircraft, it was tested at China Lake. The propulsion system was
developed by AeroJet Engineering and provided approximately 9000 pounds of thrust for
0.3 seconds. It also provided bleed gas for drogue parachute deployment and fin
extension. Testing was accomplished in 1951 - 1952. Other capsules, encapsulated seats,
etc., were designed and tested, including a separable nose section for the F-104. Rocket
motor impulses ranged from under 1000 pound-seconds, all the way to 40800 pound-
assist the aircrew in achieving safe escape. Their functions included limb positioning and
restraint, torso positioning and restraint, seat positioning, canopy jettison, seat/man
ESCAPE SYSTEMS
5. Seat stabilization
7.TIMING AN EJECTION
0 seconds - Pilot pulls cord; canopy is jettisoned or shattered; catapult initiates, sending
seat up rails.
0.15 seconds - Seat clears ejection rails at 50 feet (15 m) per second and is clear of
surrounding cockpit; rocket catapult ignites; vernier motor fires to counteract any pitch
changes; yaw motor fires, inducing slight yaw to assure man-seat separation. (Burn time
of all motors equals 0.10 seconds.)
0.50 seconds - Seat has lifted to about 100 to 200 feet (30.5 to 61 m) from ejection
altitude.
In the ACES II ejection seat produced by Goodrich Corporation, there are three
possible ejection modes. The one used is determined by the aircraft's altitude and airspeed
at the time of ejection. The environmental sensor and recovery sequencer in the back of
the ejection seat measure these two parameters.
The environmental sensor senses the airspeed and altitude of the seat and
sends data to the recovery sequencer. When the ejection sequence begins, the seat travels
up the guide rails and exposes pitot tubes. Pitot tubes, named for physicist Henri Pitot, are
designed to measure air-pressure differences to determine the velocity of the air. Data
about the airflow is sent to the sequencer, which then selects from the three modes of
ejections:
The rocket motor has proven to be the only stored energy source, which can provide the needed
force versus time output consistent with both the human physiological limitations and the
necessity to decrease escape system total functioning time to the absolute minimum.
Since the human physiological limits are not likely to change as rapidly as the
performance envelope of the next generation of combat aircraft, it seems likely that the
rocket motor will continue to be a key part of future escape systems.
The use of an ejection seat is always a last resort when an aircraft is damaged and the
pilot has lost control. However, saving the lives of pilots is a higher priority than saving
planes, and sometimes an ejection is required in order to save a life.
10. REFERENCES
1. http://www.globalsecurity.org
2. http://www.instituteofarmamenttechnology.com
3. http://www.howstuffworks.com