Airbus Donates A300 Flap to Penn State

Students will measure strain on the structure to develop loading models.


Recent inventory checks at Airbus’ Spares Center in Ashburn, Va., revealed a treasure which has been handed over to Penn State University’s College of Engineering.
 
Airbus has donated a like-new flap for an A300 aircraft to school leaders in University Park, Pa. The flap, from a twin-engine/twin-aisle A300 that Airbus ceased producing in 2007, will be used for student research. The structure, used on the aircraft to safely shorten takeoff and landing distances, has a catalog value of more than $900,000, and represents a major research opportunity for both undergraduate and graduate students in the college’s aviation and aerospace programs
 
Specifically, Penn State intends to use the flap in its aerospace structures courses. Study plans include installing strain gauges inside the flap to measure strain on the internal ribs and structure of the flap by applying loads to various locations of the flap.
 
The students will examine the design of the structure, and develop models to predict how it should deform, then apply loads to the actual flap to see how close their hypotheses are. 
 
Source: Airbus 
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