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This AIR provides information about the specific requirements for missile hydraulic pumps and their associated power sources.
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant steel in the form of investment castings.
This specification covers an aluminum-lithium alloy in the form of extruded profiles with a maximum cross-sectional area of 19 square inches (123 cm2) and a maximum circle size of 11 inches (279 mm) from 0.040 to 0.499 inch (1.00 to 12.50 mm) in thickness (see 8.6).
This specification covers a titanium alloy in the form of sheet 0.020 to 0.1874 inch (0.51 to 4.760 mm), inclusive, in nominal thickness (see 8.6).
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of extruded bars, rods, wire, profiles, and tubing up to and including 1.000 inch (25.4 mm) in diameter, least thickness, or tube wall thickness (see 8.6).
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of bars and rods 0.500 to 8.000 inches (12.7 to 203.2 mm) in nominal diameter or least difference between parallel sides and up to 50 square inches (322.6 cm2) in cross-sectional area (see 8.6).
This specification covers a premium aircraft-quality, low-alloy steel in the form of bars, forgings, mechanical tubing, and forging stock.
This document presents design and application information which will allow optimized utilization of filter line wire and cable purchased to AS85485. Filter line wire is defined and design information is presented. The electrical and mechanical performance characteristics of the wire, along with recommended harnessing methods and techniques, are also presented.
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of sand castings (see 8.6).
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant nickel alloy in the form of investment castings.
This SAE Standard applies to machines as defined in Appendix A. Some of these machines can travel on-highway but function primarily off-highway.
SAE J1978-1 specifies a complementary set of functions to be provided by an OBD-II scan tool. These functions provide complete, efficient, and safe access to all regulated OBD (on-board diagnostic) services on any vehicle which complies to SAE J1979. The content of this document is intended to satisfy the requirements of an OBD-II scan tool as required by current U.S. OBD regulations. This document specifies: A means of establishing communications between an OBD-equipped vehicle and an OBD-II scan tool. A set of diagnostic services to be provided by an OBD-II scan tool in order to exercise the services defined in SAE J1979. In addition, SAE J1978-1 covers first generation protocol functionality defined in SAE J1979 plus automatic protocol determination for all SAE J1979/J1979-2/J1979-3 application content. The presentation of the SAE J1978 document family, where SAE J1978-1 covers first generation protocol functionality defined in SAE J1979 and protocol determination for SAE J1979, SAE
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of castings (see 8.6).
It is recommended that all helicopter engine development programs include an evaluation of engine starting requirements. The evaluation should include starting requirement effects on helicopter weight, cost, and mission effectiveness. The evaluation should be appropriate to the engine stage of development.
This specification covers the requirements for an electroless nickel-thallium-boron or nickel-boron deposit on various substrates.
This specification covers a corrosion- and heat-resistant steel in the form of bars, wire, forgings, mechanical tubing, flash-welded rings, and stock for forging, flash-welded rings, or heading.
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of sheet and plate with a thickness of 0.125 to 0.499 inch (3.20 to 12.67 mm), inclusive (see 8.5).
This specification covers an aluminum alloy in the form of hand forgings 8 inches (203 mm) and under in nominal thickness and of forging stock (see 8.6).
This specification covers a copper-beryllium alloy in the form of bars, rods, shapes, and forgings (see 8.5).
This document applies to the development of Plans for integrating and managing COTS assemblies in electronic equipment and Systems for the commercial, military, and space markets, as well as other ADHP markets that wish to use this document. For purposes of this document, COTS assemblies are viewed as electronic assemblies such as printed wiring assemblies, disk drives, servers, printers, laptop computers, etc. There are many ways to categorize COTS assemblies1, including the following spectrum: At one end of the spectrum are COTS assemblies whose design, internal parts2, materials, configuration control, traceability, reliability, and qualification methods are at least partially controlled, or influenced, by ADHP customers (either individually or collectively) or by industry standards. An example at this end of the spectrum is a VME circuit card assembly. At the other end of the spectrum are COTS assemblies whose design, internal parts, materials, configuration control, and
This specification covers a titanium alloy in the form of welding wire (see 8.5).
This specification covers a titanium alloy in the form of sheet 0.025 through 0.100 inch (0.63 through 2.54 mm), inclusive, in thickness (see 8.6).
This specification covers flash-welded rings made of titanium and titanium alloys (see 8.5).
This SAE Recommended Practice was developed primarily for passenger car and truck applications but may be used in marine, industrial, and similar applications. It addresses nonmetallic caps and both metallic and nonmetallic filler necks.
This specification covers one type of carpet cleaner in the form of a liquid.
This specification covers an aluminum bronze alloy in the form of centrifugal and continuous-cast castings (see 8.6).
This specification covers a low-alloy steel in the form of investment castings.
This material has resistance to diester-based engine oil (MIL-PRF-7808) and fuel, but usage is not limited to such applications. This material is not suitable for use in synthetic phosphate ester based hydraulic fluids (AS1241) or helicopter transmission lubricating oils (DOD-PRF-85734, MIL-PRF-32538). For gas turbine engine lubricating oils (AS5780, MIL-PRF-23699), resistance varies by class and should be evaluated individually (see Note regarding high performance oils). This material has a typical service temperature range of -70 to +392 °F (-56.7 to +200 °C) for Class 1 and Class 2 and -70 to +437 °F (-56.7 to +225 °C) for Class 3. The service temperature range of the material is a general temperature range, but the presence of particular fluids and specific design requirements may modify this range. Each application should be considered separately. It is the responsibility of the user to determine that this specification is appropriate for the environments (temperature range
This specification covers a dilute aluminum/TiB2 metal matrix composite in the form of sand castings.
This specification covers flash welded rings made of corrosion and heat-resistant austenitic steels and austenitic-type iron, nickel, or cobalt alloys, or precipitation-hardenable alloys.
This specification covers a beryllium aluminum alloy in the form of investment castings.
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 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 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
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