Vespa Posted January 16, 2016 Report Posted January 16, 2016 In "The Boeing 737 Technical guide" book by Chris Brady I read that there were many different APUs available for the 737. Each model requires, even if slightly, different operating techniques.I'm wondering which model IXEG ac implements and if correct warm-up, cool-down times, EGT limits, starter limits and so on are implementd.Thanks 1 Quote
Litjan Posted January 16, 2016 Report Posted January 16, 2016 (edited) We model the Sundstrand APS 2000 APU. It is FADEC controlled - and in our V1.0 it always starts up (below a certain altitude, iirc) and will not "break" if you don´t adhere to the various limits. I feel that this is realistic enough, because in 10 years of flying this plane I only had to refer to the starting limits only a few times (you can start it 3 times without any waiting, but then have to wait 30mins before the 4th and subsequent attempts). Usually the APU starts up just fine. the procedure is: Toggle APU switch to ON. Release. Ta-da! We plan to have a "wear and tear" model in future updates and versions - but I will vote strongly to not make it a "gamey" model. If you bust a limit, it usually does not mean that the affected component will fall apart into a 1000 pieces. The limits on operations are usually designed to keep the component running without damaging it in the long run. So if you have a limit of 2 minutes between start attempts, and you only wait 1:55, the starter most likely will not fail right away... I don´t think we will make this totally "realistic", because then you would have to fly the plane for thousands of hours before you see any "wear", but it will not be a "bust the limit by one degree and the plane will instantaneously combust" model, either. Some middle ground. Jan Edited January 16, 2016 by Litjan 9 Quote
Morten Posted January 16, 2016 Report Posted January 16, 2016 (edited) For those who wonder what they look like Edited January 16, 2016 by Morten 9 Quote
Vespa Posted January 16, 2016 Author Report Posted January 16, 2016 Thanks a lot for feedback Jan and Morten... I really like to get a look deeper into each aircraft's cage ...just for love of details 1 Quote
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