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Lectromec LECTROGRAMAugust 2004 NewsletterA Resource for your Wire Maintenance Program When it comes to wiring maintenance, consider the basic rule in medicine: “First, do no harm.” But where to find the best guidance to avoid inadvertent maintenance malpractice? Fortunately, for those in need of a quick reference, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has produced a single, well-illustrated document known as the Aircraft Wiring Practices Job Aid 1.0. It presents essential examples of good, bad and outright dangerous wiring practices. Job Aid 1.0 is an outgrowth of the need for better training in wiring maintenance identified by the Aging Transport Systems Rulemaking Advisory Committee (ATSRAC). The inspections done by the members of this government-industry task force showed that wire ages in service, it can be abused during maintenance, and that the problems fall into clear categories of improper installation, aging or traumatic damage. Job Aid 1.0 offers cautionary cases of what to avoid while illustrating “best practices” for prudent and proactive wiring maintenance, modification or modernization. 1. Thou shalt not consider wire as immortal. At least a half-dozen agents of aging are involved: degraded wire repairs or splices, heat-damaged or burnt wire, vibration damage or chafing, cracked insulation, arcing, and delaminated insulation. 2. Thou shalt hold Job Aid 1.0 as the first guidance before thee. Job Aid 1.0 warns that there are many texts: “For now, there is no one rule or AC [advisory circular] that ties everything together.” But Job Aid 1.0 may come the closest of any of the materials produced to date. Moreover, it points out conflicting information that can mislead the layman. For example, one AC says the circuit breaker must protect against any downstream component failure. But this same AC also says that breakers are designed such that they DO NOT protect components. Job Aid 1.0 clarifies the matter: “Breakers are sized to protect the aircraft wiring as the main design constraint.” Job Aid 1.0 also notes that most circuit breaker (CB) failures are latent in nature, “So you won’t know they have failed until you need them.”
3. Thou shalt not take proven wiring routing practices in vain. The overarching guidance in Job Aid 1.0 is to eliminate the potential for chafing against structure or other components. Above all, the doctrine of three applies: wires should not ride on structure, wires should not ride on other wires, and wires should not ride on weight-reducing lightening holes cut into bulkheads, ribs, spars, etc. 4. Thou shalt honor clamping criteria. Supporting the wiring with proper clamping can minimize the deleterious effects of vibration and mechanical strain. As a general rule, support clamps should be spaced at least every 24 inches. In high vibration areas, or locations where the wiring must be routed around structural intrusions, the clamping intervals should be reduced. To minimize strain at the terminal, some slack should be allowed between the last clamp and the termination of a wire run. |
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