Affiliation:
1. Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, DC
Abstract
A procedure has been developed by the U.S. Navy to trim balance, in-place, the gas generator and power turbine rotor of the LM2500 Marine Gas Turbine Engine. This paper presents the theoretical background and the techniques necessary to optimize the procedure to balance the gas generator rotor. Additionally, a method was developed to trim balance LM2500 power turbines. To expand the implementation of both gas generator and power turbine trim balancing, a capability had to be developed to minimize the effort required (trial weight runs etc.). The objective was to able to perform consistently what are called “First Shot” trim balances. “First Shot” trim balances require only one weight placement to bring the engine vibration levels to within the specified goals (less than .002 of an inch maximum amplitude) and that being the final trim weight. It was realized that the Least Squares Influence Coefficient method, even with a good set of averaged influence coefficients, can lead to a number of trial weight experiments before the final trim weights can be placed. The method used to maximize the possibility of obtaining a “First Shot” trim balance was to use modal information to tailor the influence coefficient sets to correct the most predominant and correctable imbalance problem. Since the influence coefficients were tailored, it became necessary to be able to identify, in the initial vibration survey, the type of response a particular LM2500 has. Using modal information obtained from a LM2500 rotor dynamics model and from the early trim balance efforts it was possible to identify the modal response of a given LM2500 and optimize the trim balance of that engine. With these improved techniques a 70% success rate for “First Shot” trim balance has been achieved and the success rate of the trim balance procedure, as a whole, has been near 100%.
Publisher
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Systematic Evaluation of U.S. Navy LM2500 Gas Turbine Condition;Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power;2002-06-19