AIR6160 Magnesium Alloys in Aircraft Seats - Developments in Magnesium Alloy Flammability Testing

Current

05/16/2014

Features
Issuing Committee
Scope
Content
This document provides informational background, rationale and a technical case to allow consideration of the removal of the magnesium alloy restriction in aircraft seat construction as contained in AS8049B. The foundation of this argument is flammability characterization work performed by the FAA at the William J. Hughes Technical Center (FAATC), Fire Safety Branch in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA. The rationale and detailed testing results are presented along with flammability reports that have concluded that the use of specific types of magnesium alloys in aircraft seat construction does not increase the hazard level potential in the passenger cabin in a post-crash fire scenario. Further, the FAA has developed a lab scale test method, reference DOT/FAA/TC-13/52, to be used as a certification test, or method of compliance (MOC) to allow acceptability of the use of magnesium in the governing TSO-C127 and TSO-C39C.
Other flammability studies are also cited in the AIR document to substantiate the FAA findings.
Rationale
Content
This SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) is offered to support the use of magnesium alloys in aircraft seat applications by removal of the restrictive paragraph in AS8049B, paragraph 3.3.3, ‘magnesium alloys shall not be used.’
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR6160
Pages
9
Citation
SAE International Information Report, Magnesium Alloys in Aircraft Seats - Developments in Magnesium Alloy Flammability Testing, SAE Standard AIR6160, Issued May 2014, https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR6160.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 16, 2014
Product Code
AIR6160
Content Type
Information Report
Status
Current
Language
English

Revisions