Iron bird (aviation)

An iron bird is a ground-based test device used for prototyping and integrating aircraft systems during the development of new aircraft designs.[1] Aircraft systems are installed into the iron bird so that their functions can be tested both individually and in correlation with other systems.

Overview

Iron birds are used for system integration, reliability testing, and shakedown testing of aircraft systems such as landing gear, avionics, hydraulics, and flight controls. The components may be arranged roughly in the same layout as they will be in the final aircraft design, but left accessible for ease of maintenance.[2] Some iron birds also include a flight deck so that testing can include pilot inputs and simulated flight profiles, and can be used in pre-flight pilot training.[3] Others are used for testing of propulsion systems.[4]

Iron birds can also be used after aircraft certification for troubleshooting ongoing issues and for testing of proposed modifications prior to fleet integration.[2]

gollark: It's possible that I have some fundamental misunderstanding of how to make the networking stack happy with all this, but the examples I found did basically the same stuff so WHO KNOWS.
gollark: It's going onto my pile of "abandoned until I can find a non-eldritch way to do this" things.
gollark: "Interesting" and highly cursed: Google appear to have implemented some sort of horrible BASIC-y language encoded in YAML for "cloud workflows": https://cloud.google.com/workflows/docs/reference/syntax
gollark: I don't really know about the details at all, but I think the way it works is that when you observe one end, it collapses into one of two random states, and the other one collapses into the other. Or something vaguely like that.
gollark: It doesn't allow FTL communications.

See also

References

  1. "Regional Aircraft". www.cleansky.eu. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  2. "Taking flight with the Airbus "Iron Bird"". airbus.com. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  3. Jacazio, G (March 1, 2007). "Real-time loading actuator control for an advanced aerospace test rig". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part I: Journal of Systems and Control Engineering. 221 (2). doi:10.1243/09596518JSCE269. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  4. Perry, Dominic. "Airbus Helicopters powers up CityAirbus 'iron bird' rig". Flight Global. Retrieved 13 July 2020.


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