DFC90 System Robustness |
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Avidyne
Admin Group Joined: 12 Aug 2009 Status: Offline Points: 21 |
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Posted: 29 Jan 2010 at 4:08pm |
There has been some concern expressed over failure conditions and their affect on the Avidyne DFC90 and DFC100 autopilots. The following information is designed to address these concerns. For the purposes of this discussion, the DFC100 offers an added level of redundancy and safety simply because the vast majority of installations are in dual-ADAHRS equipped aircraft. In those configurations, the DFC100 autopilot is capable of taking input from either display or ADAHRS and this therefore, makes it less susceptible to any degraded capability. Unless specifically identified otherwise, all statements made about the DFC90 can be applied to a DFC100 when accompanied by only a single ADAHRS.
As the attached slides indicate, there are only two conditions that result in a non-functional DFC90 autopilot. Specifically, they are if the sole AHRS is unavailable (indicated by Red-Xs over the attitude display on the PFD) or if the PFD has no power whatsoever (thereby rendering the AHRS to be unavailable). After discussion with many Avidyne customers over the years, it has become very clear to us here at Avidyne that the understanding of what constitutes a failed PFD is commonly misunderstood. Many customers have associated a display issue (distorted or unreadable display, intermittent or non-functional buttons or knobs, etc) as a problem that would have rendered the autopilot unusable. This is not the case. The same misunderstanding exists over the loss of air data. Simply put, the loss of the display or air data, or almost any other failure mode does NOT render the DFC90 inoperative. In order to provide some additional reference points in this discussion, every PFD return for 2009 was individually analyzed to determine what, if any, impact it would have had on a DFC90. In parallel to that effort, we contacted the manufacturers of the turn coordinators (TC) that are on Cirrus aircraft and serve as the primary input to the S-Tec 55X system. The TC manufacturers were kind enough to supply their reliability numbers to us for comparison purposes. We in turn were able to integrate that data with our own reliability data for equipment found on Cirrus aircraft and produce the proportional failure rates data that is presented in the attached charts. Avidyne masked the vertical axis scale in order to honor our agreement with the TC manufacturers but the resulting proportional data is very telling. The rate at which displays experience some form of failure and the rate at which TCs experience some form of failure are nearly identical. And, they are both approximately 10 times higher than the rate at which the Avidyne solid-state AHRS experiences any kind of failure that would impact DFC90/100 autopilot operations. This conclusion comes from empirical data from all of 2009 and not some type of estimate and is presented on the provided pareto chart. The second part of the attached slides address each column of the pareto chart and attempt to provide the following for each failure mode:
< Click here to download Failure modes slides in PDF format > Edited by BigDaddyJake - 30 Jan 2010 at 2:56pm |
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Turrisi
Release 9 Insiders Joined: 18 May 2009 Location: Washington DC Status: Offline Points: 31 |
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This is very helpful data and should be shared with the Cirrus ownership. Is there a plan to post this on COPA?
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Brian
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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In reference to Brian's question (and thanks to him), there is now a pointer to this forum on COPA at http://www.cirruspilots.org/forums/p/116035/489994.aspx#489994
BTW, disregard the "Avidyne Confidential" tags on the bottom of the powerpoint slides. |
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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Ylinen
Newbie Joined: 20 Nov 2009 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Is there a reason why the "Y" axis does not have a legend or numbers?
While you say that it is 10X different; Having numbers would allow us to clearly understand the variance of the legend.
You should also clearly call out what each category on the BAR chart means.
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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Thanks for the questions.
The lack of labeling of the y-axis was done to protect the agreement we made with the turn coordinator manufacturers. That being said, there is no variability between the y-axis incremental markings. In other words, the proportionality between the bars is a 1-to-1. If one bar is one tick mark high and another bar is 5 tick marks high, the 2nd bar has a 5-time higher failure rate. I'll take a look at improving the labeling of each bar but the slides that are accessible via the green link try to add more description and explanation for each bar on the pareto. |
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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It's not directly related to this thread, but the DFC90 has no plans to integrate with any other ADAHRS other than Avidyne units. This means no Aspen or L3 Trilogy or other support in the plans.
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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John
Newbie Joined: 05 Sep 2010 Location: Cleveland, OH Status: Offline Points: 11 |
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Question - What control does either the DFC90 or the DFC100 have/exert over my rudder? Is yaw a consideration in climb? ... in turns?
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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Hi John,
Thanks for the question about DFC90/100 and yaw control. The short answer is "None." Neither the DFC90 or DFC100 have a yaw control channel. That means they do not act as a yaw damper or equivalent. It will still be the pilot's responsibility to manage yaw control in turns and climbs (or any other phase of flight) via rudder input. Using the skid'/slip trapezoid on the PFD ADI, you can tell if any rudder input is needed. Not keeping coordinated flight via rudder input may result in a potential steady state heading "error". In other words, if in HDG mode for example with a bugged target heading of 100 deg, uncoordinated flight may result in a degree or two of heading error while the rest of the DFC90/100 is fighting the effects of flying "sideways". High power and/or low airspeed situations should always have heightened pilot awareness of aircraft yaw and the DFC90/100 will not provide automatic input. Best regards, Steve Jacobson VP Product Management Avidyne Corporation sjacobson@avidyne.com
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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