Eureka
Home Advertise Magazine Events Eureka TV Directory
  


Subscribe




Flying high
14/11/2008 Email to a friend   Comment on this article
Tom Shelley reports on a particulary complicated multinational development in aerospace, only possible with the help of IT

Flying high

A new Russian-Italian airliner, powered by Russian-French engines, has successfully taken to the skies thanks to collaborative design using 3D CAD and PLM management.
The Sukhoi Superjet 100 regional airliner is designed to be 10% more fuel efficient and have 10% lower operating costs “compared with its closest competitors”, according to Victor Subbotin, president of the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company.
It represents a triumph of collaborative development, being designed in conjunction with the Italian company Alenia Aeronatica and using engines produced by Power Jet – itself a collaboration between Snecma of France and the Russian company NPO Saturn, who joined forces to create the SaM146 propulsion system.
Sukhoi, according to Subbotin, had 1,500 engineers working on the project at its design office in Moscow, with production in Novosibirsk, and final assembly in Eastern Siberia. Alenia Aeronautica has its R&D department in Naples. Parts are supplied by a number of different suppliers including hydraulic systems by Parker, landing gear by Messier Dowty and electrical systems by Hamilton Sundstrand.
Structural design at Sukhoi has all been undertaken using Siemens PLM NX, while Alenia Aeronautica used Vistagy’s FiberSIM for its composite design work, which has been crucial to the weight saving and enhanced energy efficiency of the design. Other suppliers have used a variety of CAD systems including Catia. However, in order to co-ordinate the design, development and manufacturing processes, both Alenia Aeronautica and Sukhoi Civil Aircraft standardised on the Siemens PLM Teamcenter solution.
“We set out with an aggressive plan and succeeded because of our collaboration with partners and suppliers powered by Teamcenter”, Subbotin said.
While Sukhoi Civil Aircraft was only set up in 2000, the new airliner has now flown more than 30 hours in tests, and deliveries are expected to begin in Q3 of 2009. As a testament to the efficacy of the design process, Subbotin said: “Fuel consumption confirmed our anticipated design data. There was a good match of the first flight test results with estimations done at bench testing, including control of balance.”
The aircraft’s first four pre-production prototypes (numbers 2, 3, 4 and 5) are going through the various certification processes, which Tim Nichols, managing director of aerospace and defense global marketing for Siemens PLM, described as a “painful expensive process”. Even for just Russian certification, this will involves 624 test flights. Aircraft number 6 will be subjected to fatigue testing. While the design and development process has been, “paperless” in that data was transferred between all the different design and production departments electronically, Nichols says that organisations such as the FAA still require the signing off of paper documents.
So far the aircraft – which can be configured to have 78 or 98 seats – has 97 orders, including an order for 24 placed at the recent Farnborough Airshow. All orders received so far are from Russian airlines, but the target has always been to sell both the aircraft and the engines on a worldwide basis, with a target of 800 eventual sales.

Pointers

* Multinational collaboration managed by the Teamcenter PLM packages has enabled the successful development of a Russian-Italian aircraft with Russian-French engines

* First test flights show that fuel consumption, balance and other parameters are close to those predicted by the design process


 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright 2012.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
 
Your comments / feedback
Do you have any comments or feedback on this article? Please contact us by filling in the form below.
NameHide name
Your Email Address
Comments
Send
Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Terms and Conditions

To comment on news stories or blogs you need to complete our 60 second registration process. Once completed this then allows you to download any and all white papers, register for e-zines and access our detailed supplier directory for FREE.

If you are all ready a registered user then enter your e-mail address and login.

You will need to have logged in prior to entering your comments in the boxes provided.

Please enter your email address to login and gain free access to this site.
 
If you are using this site for the first time registration is quick and completely free.
 
Register Now - Register Now


Email Address :  

Remember Me: - If this box is ticked you will be automatically logged in when you return.

Important: To protect your privacy, do not select 'Remember Me' if other users have access to the computer you are using.

View Privacy Policy
 
Related News
Autodesk announces new PLM offering
 
BAE selects PTC's Windchill platform as enterprise standard
 
Dassault Systèmes reports strong Q3, announces Elsys acquistion
 
Success for Strathclyde at SET awards
 
AMD professional graphics now supported by Simulia analysis software
 
 
Related Technology
Autodesk to enter PLM market
 
Bridging the divide
 
Beyond PLM
 
PDM show makes plastic fantastic
 
Sponsored story: CAD and PLM – The next 30 years
 
 
Related Technology Spotlight
Award-Winning Gripple Uses PTC’s CAD & FEA Tools to Cut Design Time
 
 
Related Blogs
The case for PLM
 
 
Related Videos
Windchill Business Value: A Single Source of Truth