Gear Coatings for Loss of Lubrication: System Level Transmission Experiment within VIPER

F-0082-2026-0040

5/5/2026

Authors
Abstract
Content

The Army requires rotorcraft drive systems to operate for 30 minutes following a loss of lubrication event to make an emergency landing. Coatings research has shown great promise for loss of lubrication, but coating repeatability and quality control is a primary hurdle. The Army partnered with Acree Technologies via a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) effort to develop an optimized gear coating for loss of lubrication. The research culminated in a system level transmission experiment that maintained flight relevant torque and speed through a helicopter gearbox without oil for three hours. The authors decided to shutdown the experiment for inspection after three hours of operation without oil because the temperature and vibration signals maintained steady state conditions without signs of failure. Teardown analysis showed the transmission gear surfaces did not scuff, scanning electron microscope analysis showed coating remained on the gear teeth, and cross-sectional SEM analysis showed a measurable coating thickness remaining on the gear teeth after three-hours of operation without oil.

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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4050/F-0082-2026-0040
Citation
Riggs, M., Pomplon, W., Fetty, J., Milligan, R., et al., "Gear Coatings for Loss of Lubrication: System Level Transmission Experiment within VIPER," Vertical Flight Society 82nd Annual Forum and Technology Display, West Palm Beach, Florida, May 5, 2026, https://doi.org/10.4050/F-0082-2026-0040.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 05
Product Code
F-0082-2026-0040
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English