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The Little Arrow That Could
I've recently invested a bit of time reading about turbines.
And one thing I'm curious about is where they tend to fail.
Not necessarily while in service (I know they have remarkably high reliability), but during an inspection when something is found that disqualifies it from continuing service. What is it that they find? What are the common culprits? Aside from some abrupt problem that presents itself as an issue, what are symptoms that the turbine engine is worn or not behaving properly?
I've heard some about catastrophic failures, like where a fan or compressor blade breaks off and causes cascading damage through the successive components, but I'm curious about the slower more insidious types of failure that occur over a longer period (of good operation) which you only uncover during inspections. What are some of the root causes? Specifically curious about turboprop and commercial jet engines, not crazy military stuff that might be used + abused more (just a guess).
And one thing I'm curious about is where they tend to fail.
Not necessarily while in service (I know they have remarkably high reliability), but during an inspection when something is found that disqualifies it from continuing service. What is it that they find? What are the common culprits? Aside from some abrupt problem that presents itself as an issue, what are symptoms that the turbine engine is worn or not behaving properly?
I've heard some about catastrophic failures, like where a fan or compressor blade breaks off and causes cascading damage through the successive components, but I'm curious about the slower more insidious types of failure that occur over a longer period (of good operation) which you only uncover during inspections. What are some of the root causes? Specifically curious about turboprop and commercial jet engines, not crazy military stuff that might be used + abused more (just a guess).