USRE22656E - Filter control fob aircraft engines - Google Patents

Filter control fob aircraft engines Download PDF

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USRE22656E
USRE22656E US22656DE USRE22656E US RE22656 E USRE22656 E US RE22656E US 22656D E US22656D E US 22656DE US RE22656 E USRE22656 E US RE22656E
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air
filter
aircraft
landing gear
conduit
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B29/00Engines characterised by provision for charging or scavenging not provided for in groups F02B25/00, F02B27/00 or F02B33/00 - F02B39/00; Details thereof
    • F02B29/04Cooling of air intake supply
    • F02B29/0406Layout of the intake air cooling or coolant circuit
    • F02B29/0418Layout of the intake air cooling or coolant circuit the intake air cooler having a bypass or multiple flow paths within the heat exchanger to vary the effective heat transfer surface
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B37/00Engines characterised by provision of pumps driven at least for part of the time by exhaust
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T10/00Road transport of goods or passengers
    • Y02T10/10Internal combustion engine [ICE] based vehicles
    • Y02T10/12Improving ICE efficiencies

Definitions

  • the heat exchanger to be used as an intercooler must have relatively narrow passages for the flow of the air to be cooled and also preferably for the flow of the
  • a satisfactory heat exchanger used for this purpose is one of the laminar flow type which comprises flat plates of thin metal stacked fiatwise, spaced to provide passages of small height between them, and arranged for the flow of cooling air through the passages between some of the plates and for the flow of the air to be cooled through passages between other of the plates.
  • I provide a filtering means for the air supplied to the aircraft engine, or where an intercooler is used, for the air to be cooled. i. e., the air supplied to the engine, or for both the air to be cooled and the cooling air, so
  • means are provided for rendering the filter effective and ineffective and such means is arranged preferably to be operated either manually or automatically.
  • I may connect such means with a part of the aircraft which is normally moved from one position to another as the aircraft passes from a reion in the vicinity of the ground to a region more remote therefrom.
  • a mechanism for example. may be the landing gear of an aircraft which in the vicinity of the ground is down in landing position, and in regions more remote from the ground is retracted.
  • the means may be under the control of any other suitable condition appurtenant to the operation Sards the direction of the flow of air for separatlng out the foreign particles in the air.
  • the object of myinvention is to'provlde an improved construction and arrangement of iiltering mechanism in connection with an aircraft of the aircraft.
  • Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a construction embodyin y invention
  • Figs. 2, 3, 4, and 5 are similar views of modifications.
  • -I indicates an ai craft engine driving a propeller 2.
  • Air is supplied to the engine by a turbosupercharger comprising a gas driven turbine I and a centrifugal compressor I. Gases for operating the turbosupercharger are supplied to the gas driven turbine .through engine exhaust manifold 5.
  • the turbine wheel of the gas turbine is indicated at 8.
  • At 1 is the usualwasie conduit connected with the nozzle box of the gas turbine and Provided with a waste gate valve lwhichis operated in a well supercharger.
  • the inlet conduit for compressor 4 is indicated at I and the discharge conduit is indicated at ll.
  • Air to the compressor inlet 9 is supplied by a conduit i I which may face into and take air from the slip stream of the aircraft.
  • Compressor discharge conduit in is connected by a conduit I! to the inlet side of an intercooler i3.
  • Intercooler Air to be cooled fiows from conduit l2 through intercooler l3 and thence through an intercooler discharge conduit l4 to carburetor 15. From carburetor l5, the air is supplied to a gear driven supercharger I 6 which, in turn, distributes the air to intake pipes I1 leading to the several cylinders of the engine.
  • Intercooler It may be of any suitable construction. Preferably, as pointed out above, it comprises a plurality of flat plates of thin metal stacked flatwise and spaced to provide passages of small height between them, the air to be cooled flowing through every other passage in the direction indicated by the arrow A and the cooling air flowing through the remaining passages between the plates in the direction indicated by the arrow B. Cooling air may be conveyed from the slip stream to the intercooler through a suitable conduit II and may be conveyed therefrom through a conduit II to a suitable discharge point.
  • I provide conduit II with an enlarged section I! which is divided by a partition-l9- into two branches 2
  • flap valve 24 When the flap valve is moved to the position shown in the dotted lines, then the passage for flow of air through the filter is shut off and the air is directed through the passage 22.
  • flap valve 24 For operating flap valve 24, there is provided an arm 2' on the pivot pin of flap valve 14, which arm is connected by a link 26a to a floating lever Ilb, one end of which is connected to the piston rod of a piston 2'l which moves'in a cylinder II and is actuated by fluid pressure controlled by a pilot valve 2
  • the other end of floating lever 28 is connected byarodll toahandleverfl.
  • Pilot valve 20 is of known type, the directions of the flow of operating fluid through it being-indicated by the arrows.
  • the fluid pressure controlled by the pilot may be obtained from any suitable source.
  • the operator moves the hand lever 40 toward the right, as viewed in Fig. 1, to reverse the position of pilot valve 29, admitting fluid pressure to the lower end of cylinder 30 and permitting it to discharge from the upper end thereof whereupon piston 31 is moved up ward in cylinder 30 to retract the landing gear.
  • pilot valve 29 operates to connect the right-hand end of cylinder II to the fluid pressure supply, the left-hand end being connected to a discharge pipe of the pilot valve. Piston 21 is then moved toward the left to move flap valve 2
  • the filter is in use and when the landing gear is retracted, the filter is automatically put out of service, it being thenby-passed, so to speak.
  • valve 24 may be positioned manually by hand lever 32, the manual control overriding, so to speak, the automatic control.
  • the filter is arranged to filter only the air supplied to the compressor, i. e., the air to be supercharged.
  • Fig. 2 is shown an arrangement wherein the filter filters both the air to be supercharged and the cooling air.
  • conduit 45 corresponding to conduit ll of Fig. 1, which supplies cooling air to the intercool'er is connected with the air supply conduit 46, corresponding to air supply conduit ll of Fig. l, cooling air and air tojbe cooled being.
  • the arrangement shown in Fig. 2 may be the same as that shown in Fig. 1 and the same reference characters with a prime added have been used to designate corresponding parts.
  • the valve means for directing the flow of air through either the filter or the by-pass may be operated by means of a reversing electric motor, the circuits for which are controlledby the same switch lever which operates the landing gear.
  • Fig. 3 wherein It indicates a fiap valve corresponding to the flap valve 14 of Fig. 1 located in the air intake conduit II and operating to direct air through the filter or through the by-pass around the filter contained in the enlargement i2 corresponding to enlargement ll of Fig. 1.
  • the landing gear is shown only diagrammatically, one of the wheels of the landing gear being indicatedat I3 and being shown as carried by the arm I4 pivoted on a fixed support "as indicated at I.
  • the piston ll of the hydraulic motor for operating the landing gear is connected to arm 34 by a piston rod 38.
  • is connected by a rod ll 10 the landing gear control lever 4
  • the landing gear is shown as being in its down or landing position, pilot valve 20 being positioned to'supply actuating fluid to the upper end of cylinder ll and at the same I a worm wheel I, the bore of in an axial direction. Accordingly, when it turns,
  • the circuits for motor II are con- Y nectedtothehandswitchflwhiehisusedto oonil'ol the nursing electric motor which raises parallel to the control for the landing gear.
  • valve 50 At the end of its movement, head 66 opens limit switch 65 to stop motor 6
  • the pilot valve 10, corresponding to pilot valve 29 of Fig. i. has its stem connected to an absolute pressure gauge or altimeter II, the spring 12 of which may be adjusted by means of a hand screw 13.
  • the construction shown in Fig. 4 may be similar to that shown in Fig. l or that shown in Fig. 2.
  • the operator by adjusting hand screw 13 may set the altimeter to'operate at an altitude a certain amount higher than that of the landing field. it being set so that when an altitude a certain amount higher than that of the landing field is reached, bellows ll of the altimeter will be distended by spring 12 to reverse the position of pilot valve Ill, thereby effecting a reversal of the position of the fiap valve in the manner already described.
  • a suitable scale may be provided in connection with the hand screw 13 to enable the operator to correctly set the altimeter.
  • I may move the filter itself into and out of the path of flow of the air.
  • I may move the filter with respect to the air flow stream.
  • FIG. 5 Such an arrangement is shown in Fig. 5 wherein the filter 80 is movable from a position across the air flow conduit 8
  • is provided with a pocket on one side of a size to house the filter and into ment illustrated, the filter is connected by a rod 83 to a floating lever 84 one end of which is connected by a rod 85 to a hand lever 86 and the Fig. 5 may be used in any of the arrangements shown in Figs. 1 to 4 inclusive.
  • Removing the filter from operation at hi h altitudes is very important since a filter in the air intake system may reduce the critical altitude of an aircraft an amount of the order of per cent or even more due to drop in pressure of the air in flowing through the filter; and, in the case of an aircraft provided with a turbosupercharger or other variable speed type supercharger, an operator may, in increasing the suwhich the filter may be moved. In the arrange- I percharger speed in attempting to hold a constant intake manifold pressure, overspeed and damage the supercharger.
  • a supercharger In an aircraft installation, a supercharger, an intercooler, a single conduit for supplying air to the supercharger and cooling air to the intercooler, a filter for such air, and automatic means actuated in response to changes in a force related to the altitude of the aircraft for removing said filter from the path of flow of such air.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Fluid-Pressure Circuits (AREA)

Description

July 31,1945. E. s. THOMPSON FILTER CONTROL FOR AIRCRAFT ENGINES AND SUPERCHARGERS r0 LAND/N6 GEAR cournoz.
I nvencor Edward S. 'T'hom Pson, 17% Z M His Attorney cooling air.
Reiaaued July 31, 1945' FILTER FOB AIRCRAFT ENGINES AND SUPEI'OHARGEBS Edward 8."!hompoon, Marbichead, Mala, as- Y 'signorto Generailieotrio tlon of New York Company, a corporaoriginal so. zmru, dated January so, 1945,
Serial No. 466,849, November 25, 1942.
cation for reissue April 21, 194?, Serial No.
Claims. (or. 244-102) In connection with aircraft provided with engine superchargers, the condition obtains that the air in being compressedby the compressor of the supercharger is raised to a temperature well above that-suited to engine operation, making it necessary to provide a cooling means for cooling. the air on its way from the compressor to the carburetor. Usually, such cooling means is in the form of an air-cooled heat exchanger termed an intercooler, thecooling air being obtained fromthe aircraft slip stream. Air to the comp es and cooling air to the intercooler may be supplietd by a single conduit or by separate air condui s.
To obtain effective cooling, the heat exchanger to be used as an intercooler must have relatively narrow passages for the flow of the air to be cooled and also preferably for the flow of the A satisfactory heat exchanger used for this purpose is one of the laminar flow type which comprises flat plates of thin metal stacked fiatwise, spaced to provide passages of small height between them, and arranged for the flow of cooling air through the passages between some of the plates and for the flow of the air to be cooled through passages between other of the plates.
engine or in connection with an aircraft engine and an intercooler whereby the filter will be in operation when the aircraft is flying in'regions in the vicinity of the ground but will be out of operation in regions more remote from the ground; 1
For a consideration of what I believe to'be novel and my invention, attention is directed to In the use of intercoolers having passages of small dimensions, trouble may be experienced due to the passages becoming clogged by particles of foreign matter, such as dust, sand or the like entering with the air. shame to provide a filter for the air in be cooled or for both the air to be cooled and the cooling air arranged in advance of the intercooler as re- To prevent this, it is dethe following specification and to the claims appended thereto. I
According to my invention, I provide a filtering means for the air supplied to the aircraft engine, or where an intercooler is used, for the air to be cooled. i. e., the air supplied to the engine, or for both the air to be cooled and the cooling air, so
arranged that it may be in operation at regions in the vicinity of the ground and removed from operation in regions remote from the ground.
To this end, means are provided for rendering the filter effective and ineffective and such means is arranged preferably to be operated either manually or automatically. For automatic operation, I may connect such means with a part of the aircraft which is normally moved from one position to another as the aircraft passes from a reion in the vicinity of the ground to a region more remote therefrom. Such a mechanism, for example. may be the landing gear of an aircraft which in the vicinity of the ground is down in landing position, and in regions more remote from the ground is retracted. However, the means may be under the control of any other suitable condition appurtenant to the operation Sards the direction of the flow of air for separatlng out the foreign particles in the air.
Also, itis important to separateout any particles, such as grit, sand or dirt, in the air-suppliedto an aircraft engine to protect the engine itself from abrasive action due to such foreign,
particles reaching moving parts Of the engine.
011 the otherhand, however, use of a fllter is objectionable in that it increases the drop iii pressure of the supercharged air, a thing it is important to avoid especially for high altitude, flying since any increase in drop in pressure of the supercharged air means a decrease in the obtainable altitude. In general, foreign particles in the air aremetwith only in regions in the vicinity of the ground, the air well'above the ground being free from foreign particles.
The object of myinvention is to'provlde an improved construction and arrangement of iiltering mechanism in connection with an aircraft of the aircraft.
Referring to the drawings, Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a construction embodyin y invention; and Figs. 2, 3, 4, and 5 are similar views of modifications.
In the drawings I have elected to illustrate my invention in a system wherein an intercooler is provided. It is to be understood, however, that the invention has utility in protectin an aircraft engine and that it may be used where no intercooler is provided.
Referring to the drawings, -I indicates an ai craft engine driving a propeller 2. Air is supplied to the engine by a turbosupercharger comprising a gas driven turbine I and a centrifugal compressor I. Gases for operating the turbosupercharger are supplied to the gas driven turbine .through engine exhaust manifold 5. The turbine wheel of the gas turbine is indicated at 8. At 1 is the usualwasie conduit connected with the nozzle box of the gas turbine and Provided with a waste gate valve lwhichis operated in a well supercharger. The inlet conduit for compressor 4 is indicated at I and the discharge conduit is indicated at ll. Air to the compressor inlet 9 is supplied by a conduit i I which may face into and take air from the slip stream of the aircraft. Compressor discharge conduit in is connected by a conduit I! to the inlet side of an intercooler i3.
- Air to be cooled fiows from conduit l2 through intercooler l3 and thence through an intercooler discharge conduit l4 to carburetor 15. From carburetor l5, the air is supplied to a gear driven supercharger I 6 which, in turn, distributes the air to intake pipes I1 leading to the several cylinders of the engine. Intercooler It may be of any suitable construction. Preferably, as pointed out above, it comprises a plurality of flat plates of thin metal stacked flatwise and spaced to provide passages of small height between them, the air to be cooled flowing through every other passage in the direction indicated by the arrow A and the cooling air flowing through the remaining passages between the plates in the direction indicated by the arrow B. Cooling air may be conveyed from the slip stream to the intercooler through a suitable conduit II and may be conveyed therefrom through a conduit II to a suitable discharge point.
The construction and arrangement so far described is a known one and is to be taken as typical of any suitable supercharger arrangement for an aircraft engine.
Referring to the embodiment of my invention shown in Fig. 1, I provide conduit II with an enlarged section I! which is divided by a partition-l9- into two branches 2| and 22 in one of -which there is provided a suitable filter II. In
advance of the filter, I provide a suitable valve means, in the present instance in the form of a in full lines, the air is directed through filter u.
When the flap valve is moved to the position shown in the dotted lines, then the passage for flow of air through the filter is shut off and the air is directed through the passage 22. For operating flap valve 24, there is provided an arm 2' on the pivot pin of flap valve 14, which arm is connected by a link 26a to a floating lever Ilb, one end of which is connected to the piston rod of a piston 2'l which moves'in a cylinder II and is actuated by fluid pressure controlled by a pilot valve 2| which is the same pilot valve which controls the supply of actuating fluid to a fluid actuated motor 30 for actuating the landing gear. The other end of floating lever 28 is connected byarodll toahandleverfl.
known way for regulating the speed of the turbo- 1 time supplying actuating fluid to the left-hand end of cylinder II, "thus holding flap valve II in the position shown in Fig. 1. Pilot valve 20 is of known type, the directions of the flow of operating fluid through it being-indicated by the arrows. The fluid pressure controlled by the pilot may be obtained from any suitable source. To retract the landing gear, the operator moves the hand lever 40 toward the right, as viewed in Fig. 1, to reverse the position of pilot valve 29, admitting fluid pressure to the lower end of cylinder 30 and permitting it to discharge from the upper end thereof whereupon piston 31 is moved up ward in cylinder 30 to retract the landing gear. At the same time, movement of pilot valve 29 operates to connect the right-hand end of cylinder II to the fluid pressure supply, the left-hand end being connected to a discharge pipe of the pilot valve. Piston 21 is then moved toward the left to move flap valve 2| from the full line position to the dotted line position. Thus it will be seen that as long as the landing gear is down, the
filter is in use and when the landing gear is retracted, the filter is automatically put out of service, it being thenby-passed, so to speak.
At any time, valve 24 may be positioned manually by hand lever 32, the manual control overriding, so to speak, the automatic control.
. In the arrangement shown in Fig. ,l, the filter is arranged to filter only the air supplied to the compressor, i. e., the air to be supercharged. In Fig. 2 is shown an arrangement wherein the filter filters both the air to be supercharged and the cooling air. To this end, conduit 45, corresponding to conduit ll of Fig. 1, which supplies cooling air to the intercool'er is connected with the air supply conduit 46, corresponding to air supply conduit ll of Fig. l, cooling air and air tojbe cooled being. thus supplied to the compressor and to the intercooler from a common inlet in which the filter is located. Cooling air is discharged from the intercooler through a conduit 4?. Otherwise, the arrangement shown in Fig. 2 may be the same as that shown in Fig. 1 and the same reference characters with a prime added have been used to designate corresponding parts.
In the case of an electrically operated landing gear, the valve means for directing the flow of air through either the filter or the by-pass may be operated by means of a reversing electric motor, the circuits for which are controlledby the same switch lever which operates the landing gear. Such arrangement is illustrated in Fig. 3 wherein It indicates a fiap valve corresponding to the flap valve 14 of Fig. 1 located in the air intake conduit II and operating to direct air through the filter or through the by-pass around the filter contained in the enlargement i2 corresponding to enlargement ll of Fig. 1. On the The landing gear is shown only diagrammatically, one of the wheels of the landing gear being indicatedat I3 and being shown as carried by the arm I4 pivoted on a fixed support "as indicated at I. The piston ll of the hydraulic motor for operating the landing gear is connected to arm 34 by a piston rod 38. The movable element of pilot valve 2| is connected by a rod ll 10 the landing gear control lever 4|.
In the drawings, the landing gear is shown as being in its down or landing position, pilot valve 20 being positioned to'supply actuating fluid to the upper end of cylinder ll and at the same I a worm wheel I, the bore of in an axial direction. Accordingly, when it turns,
it effects-a longitudinal movement of the threaded rod 88. The circuits for motor II are con- Y nectedtothehandswitchflwhiehisusedto oonil'ol the nursing electric motor which raises parallel to the control for the landing gear. The
electric leads to the landing gear control are indicated at 63. In the circuits for the reversin motor 6| are suitable limit switches GI and 65.
tion of flap valve 50. At the end of its movement, head 66 opens limit switch 65 to stop motor 6|. During the operation limit switch 64 is permitted to close. The parts will remain in this position as long as switch 62 is left in the position to which it has been moved. When switch 62 is reversed in position to lower the landing gear, then it closes the circuit on motor 61 to operate motor Si in the opposite direction to move flap valve 50 back to the position shown in Fig. 3. limit switch 65 being closed and limit switch 64 being open during the operation. At any time valve 50 may be operated manually by means of hand lever In Fig. 4 is shown, an arrangement wherein the valve means controlling the fiow of air through the filter is operated automatically by means responsive to the altitude of the aircraft; To this end. the pilot valve 10, corresponding to pilot valve 29 of Fig. i. has its stem connected to an absolute pressure gauge or altimeter II, the spring 12 of which may be adjusted by means of a hand screw 13. Otherwise, the construction shown in Fig. 4 may be similar to that shown in Fig. l or that shown in Fig. 2. With this arrangement, the operator by adjusting hand screw 13 may set the altimeter to'operate at an altitude a certain amount higher than that of the landing field. it being set so that when an altitude a certain amount higher than that of the landing field is reached, bellows ll of the altimeter will be distended by spring 12 to reverse the position of pilot valve Ill, thereby effecting a reversal of the position of the fiap valve in the manner already described. A suitable scale may be provided in connection with the hand screw 13 to enable the operator to correctly set the altimeter.
Instead of. moving a valve to direct the fiow of air through the filter, I may move the filter itself into and out of the path of flow of the air. In other words, instead of moving the air flow stream with respect to the filter, I may move the filter with respect to the air flow stream. Such an arrangement is shown in Fig. 5 wherein the filter 80 is movable from a position across the air flow conduit 8| (corresponding to conduit ll of Fig. 1, conduit 45 of Fig. 2, conduit 5| of Fig. 3 or the inlet air conduit of Fig. 4) to a position at one side of the conduit. To this end, conduit 8| is provided with a pocket on one side of a size to house the filter and into ment illustrated, the filter is connected by a rod 83 to a floating lever 84 one end of which is connected by a rod 85 to a hand lever 86 and the Fig. 5 may be used in any of the arrangements shown in Figs. 1 to 4 inclusive.
By operating the filter control flap valve automatically by a means appurtenant to an operating condition of the aircraft, such as the landing gear operating means, I avoid adding to the aircraft another device which the operator of the aircraft is called upon to operate manually. This is important for already an aircraft operator has many controls to take care of and it is undesirable to add to the number. At the same time, th result is effected that the filter is in operation only at such times as it is needed.
Removing the filter from operation at hi h altitudes is very important since a filter in the air intake system may reduce the critical altitude of an aircraft an amount of the order of per cent or even more due to drop in pressure of the air in flowing through the filter; and, in the case of an aircraft provided with a turbosupercharger or other variable speed type supercharger, an operator may, in increasing the suwhich the filter may be moved. In the arrange- I percharger speed in attempting to hold a constant intake manifold pressure, overspeed and damage the supercharger.
While I have described my invention as applicable particularly in protecting an intercooler, an internal combustion engine, or both, it is to be understood that the invention, in its broader aspects, is not limited thereto necessarily but may be utilized for the protection of other aircraft parts or elements.
In accordance with th provisions of the patent statutes, I have described the principle of operation of my invention, together with the apparatus which I now consider to represent thebest embodiment thereof, but I desire to have it understood that the apparatus shown is only illustrative and that the invention may be carried out by other means.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
1. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable -landing gear, a supercharger for supplying supercharged air to the aircraft engine, and an intercooler for cooling th supercharged air, of an air filter for the supercharger.
and means connected with the landing gear for 1 and means operated from the landing gear control for rendering said filter effective or ineffective. I
3. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear, a supercharger for supplying supercharged air to'the aircraft engine, and an intercooler for cooling the supercharged air. of a conduit through which air is supplied to the supercharger, a filter for such air, and means operated simultaneously with the op-' eration of the landing gear for effecting flow of such air through said filter only when the landing gear is down.
4. The combination with an aircraft, a supercharger for supplying supercharged air to the aircraft engine, an intercooler for cooling-the supercharged air and a conduit through which air is supplied to the supercharger, of afilter for such air which is normally out of the path of fiowof the air, and means operated automatically by an operating force related to the altitude of the aircraft for effecting fiow of such air through the filter when the aircraft is in the vicinity of the ground.
5 5. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear and an engine, of an air filter for the air supplied to the engine, and means connected with the landing gear for rendering said filter effective or ineffective.
6. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear and an engine, of an air filter for the air supplied to the engine, and means operated simultaneously with the operation of the landing gear for effecting flow of such air through said filter only when the landing gear is down.
7. In combination,'an aircraft having an engine, an air intake for the engine, a filter for the intake air normally out of the path of fiow of such air, and means operated automatically by an operating force related to the altitude of 9. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear and a part to which air is supplied, of a filter for such air, and means connected with the landing gear for rendering said filter effective and ineffective.
10. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear, and a part to which air is supplied, of a filter for such air and means operated simultaneously with the operation of the landing gear for efiecting flow of such air through said filter only when the landing gear is down.
'11. In an aircraft installation, a supercharger, an intercooler, a single conduit for supplying air to the supercharger and cooling air to the intercooler, a filter for such air, and automatic means actuated in response to changes in a force related to the altitude of the aircraft for removing said filter from the path of flow of such air.
.12. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear, a supercharger for supplying supercharged air to the aircraft engine, and an intercooler for cooling the supercharged air, of an air filter for the supercharger, means connected with the landing gear for rendering said filter effective or ineffective, and manual means operable independently of said firstnamed means for rendering said filter effective or ineffective.
13. The combination with an aircraft having a retractable landing gear, and a supercharger for supplying supercharged air to the aircraft I engine, of a conduit through which air is supplied to the supercharger, a filter for such air,
means operated simultaneously with the operation of the landing gear for effecting fiow of such air through said filter only when the landing gear is down, and manual means operable independently of said first-named means for rendering said filter effective or ineffective.
14. The combination with an aircraft having plying supercharged air to the aircraft engine,
and an intercooler for cooling the supercharged air, of a conduit through which air is supplied to the supercharger, a filter, means operated by the landing gear for moving the filter into and out of the path of fiow of the air through said conduit when the landing gear is lowered and raised, and manual means for moving the filter I into and out of the path of fiow of the air through said conduit independently of said landing gear.
EDWARD S. THOMPSON.
US22656D Filter control fob aircraft engines Expired USRE22656E (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20160146511A1 (en) * 2014-11-24 2016-05-26 Hamilton Sundstrand Corporation Heat exchanger assembly for aircraft ecs
US11111024B2 (en) 2018-01-12 2021-09-07 Honeywell International Inc. Foldable RAM air inlet filter

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20160146511A1 (en) * 2014-11-24 2016-05-26 Hamilton Sundstrand Corporation Heat exchanger assembly for aircraft ecs
US11111024B2 (en) 2018-01-12 2021-09-07 Honeywell International Inc. Foldable RAM air inlet filter

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