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This AIR provides information about the specific requirements for missile hydraulic pumps and their associated power sources.
This SAE Recommended Practice provides a method for determining the Effective Projected Luminous Lens Area (EPLLA) of a lamp function using design analysis. This standard was created to clarify and address how to determine EPLLA with traditional and new technologies.
This SAE Recommended Practice provides test protocols with performance requirements for camera monitor systems (CMS) to replace existing statutorily required inside and outside rearview mirrors for U.S. market road vehicles. This practice expands specific technical content while retaining harmonization with the FMVSS 111 rear visibility standard and other international standards. This is accomplished by defining required roadway fields of view as specific fields of view (FOV) displayed inside the vehicle. Specific testing protocols and/or specifications are added to enhance ease of use using straightforward language, and any specifications are intended to be independent of different camera and display technologies unless otherwise explicitly stated.
This specification covers a free-machining, corrosion-resistant steel in the form of bars, wire, forgings, and forging stock.
This specification covers a titanium alloy in the form of bars, wire, forgings, flash-welded rings 4.000 inches (101.60 mm) and under in diameter or least distance between parallel sides, and stock of any size for forging or flash-welded rings (see 8.6).
The scope of this SAE Recommended Practice is to promote compatibility between child restraint systems and vehicle seats and seat belts. Design guidelines are provided to vehicle manufacturers for certain characteristics of seats and seat belts and to child restraint system (CRS) manufacturers for corresponding CRS features so that each can be made more compatible with the other. The CRS accommodation fixture (see Figure 1) is used to represent a CRS to the designers of both the vehicle interior and the CRS for evaluation of each product for compatibility with the other. The features of the accommodation fixture are described as each is used.
Three levels of fan structural analysis are included in this practice: a Initial structural integrity. b In-vehicle testing. c Durability (laboratory) test methods. The initial structural integrity section describes analytical and test methods used to predict potential resonance and, therefore, possible fatigue accumulation. The in-vehicle (or machine) section enumerates the general procedure used to conduct a fan strain gage test. Various considerations that may affect the outcome of strain gage data have been described for the user of this procedure to adapt/discard depending on the particular application. The durability test methods section describes the detailed test procedures for a laboratory environment that may be used depending on type of fan, equipment availability, and end objective. The second and third levels build upon information derived from the previous level. Engineering judgment is required as to the applicability of each level to a different vehicle environment or a
This SAE Recommended Practice is intended to cover plastic safety glazing for use in motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment. Nominal specifications for thickness, flatness, curvature, size, and fabrication details are presented principally for the guidance of body engineers and designers. For additional information on plastic safety glazing materials for use in motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment, please refer to SAE J673.
Applies to hydraulic fluid power valves as applied to Off-Road Self-Propelled Work Machines defined in SAE J1116.
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant nickel alloy in the form of sheet, strip, and plate.
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant nickel alloy in the form of bars, forgings, flash-welded rings, and stock for forging, flash-welded rings, or heading.
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant steel in the form of sheet, strip, and plate.
This specification covers a corrosion-resistant steel in the form of investment castings.
This SAE Recommended Practice establishes uniform procedures for testing BEVs that are capable of being operated on public and private roads. The procedure applies only to vehicles using batteries as their sole source of power. It is the intent of this document to provide standard tests that will allow for the determination of energy consumption and range for light-duty vehicles (LDVs) based on the federal test procedure (FTP) using the urban dynamometer driving cycle (UDDS) and the highway fuel economy driving schedule (HFEDS) and provide a flexible testing methodology that is capable of accommodating additional test cycles as needed. Additionally, this SAE Recommended Practice provides five-cycle testing guidelines for vehicles performing supplementary testing on the US06, SC03, and cold FTP procedures. Realistic alternatives should be allowed for new technology. Evaluations are based on the total vehicle system’s performance and not on subsystems apart from the vehicle.
This specification covers one type of brass in the form of forgings and forging stock.
This specification covers one type of carpet cleaner in the form of a liquid.
This specification covers a titanium alloy in the form of bars, wire, flash-welded rings 3.00 inches (76.2 mm) and under in nominal diameter or least distance between parallel sides and 16 square inches (103 cm2) and under in cross-sectional area, and stock of any size for flash-welded rings (see 8.6).
This specification covers an acrylonitrile-butadiene rubber in the form of molded rings, compression seals, O-ring cord, and molded-in-place gaskets for aeronautical and aerospace applications.
This specification describes the engineering requirements for producing a non-powdery anodic coating on titanium and titanium alloys and the properties of such coatings.
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of permanent mold castings (see 8.6).
This specification covers established manufacturing tolerances applicable to titanium and titanium alloy tubing. These tolerances apply to all conditions, unless otherwise noted. The term "excl" is used to apply only to the higher figure of the specified range.
This specification covers a premium aircraft-quality, corrosion-resistant steel in the form of bars, wire, forgings, flash-welded rings, and extrusions up to 12 inches (305 mm) in nominal diameter or least distance between parallel sides (thickness) in the solution heat-treated condition (see 8.4) and stock of any size for forging, flash-welded rings, or extrusions.
This document establishes the minimum curriculum requirements for training, practical assessments, and certifying composite structure repair personnel and metalbond repair personnel. It establishes criteria for the certification of personnel requiring appropriate knowledge of the technical principles underlying the composite structural repairs and/or metalbond they perform. Persons certified under this document may be eligible for licensing/certification/qualification by an appropriate authority, in addition to this industry-accepted technician certification. Teaching levels have been assigned to the curriculum to define the knowledge, skills, and abilities graduates will need to make repairs to composite or metalbond structure. Minimum hours of instruction have been provided to ensure adequate coverage of all subject matter, including lecture and laboratory. These minimums may be exceeded and may include an increase in the total number of training hours and/or increase in the teaching
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant steel in the form of bars, forgings, and forging stock.
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of clad sheet 0.006 to 0.249 inch (0.015 to 6.32 mm), inclusive, in thickness (see 8.6).
This specification covers an aircraft-quality, low-alloy steel in the form of bars, forgings, and forging stock.
This specification covers one type of copper-beryllium alloy in the form of sheet and strip up to 0.188 inch (4.78 mm) in nominal thickness (see 8.7).
This specification covers the specific requirements for 7075 aluminum alloy alclad plate and sheet; the general requirements are covered in AMS-QQ-A-250. The plate and sheet covered by this specification shall be an integral composite product consisting of a heat-treatable aluminum alloy (7075) core with thin layers of an aluminum alloy (7072) anodic to the core and of approximately equal thickness bonded to both surfaces.
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of die castings.
This specification covers disinfectants or chemicals for use in disinfecting aircraft after carrying livestock.
This document describes an inspection procedure for detecting, by use of a radiographic opaque tracer and fluoroscopy or radiography methods, flaws which have been produced as the result of cutting, machining, or drilling operations in composite or laminate structures.
This specification covers the requirements for electrodeposited hard chromium plate.
This specification covers a corrosion-resistant steel product 8 inches (203 mm) and under in nominal diameter, thickness, or for hexagons least distance between parallel sides in the solution and precipitation heat-treated (H1100) condition.
This specification covers the requirements for producing a continuous compound zone (white layer) with controlled extent of porosity by means of a gaseous process, automatically controlled to maintain nitriding and carburizing potentials that determine properties of the nitrocarburized surface. Automatic control is intended to ensure repeatability of nitrogen and carbon content of the compound zone, which influences properties such as wear and corrosion resistance, ductility, and fatigue strength.
This specification covers an aluminum bronze alloy in the form of centrifugal and continuous-cast castings (see 8.6).
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