From an operational availability stand point, the US Navy is interested in the short term reliability of its ship based LM2500 gas turbine engines. That is the likelihood that an engine will operate successfully through a six-month deployment (usually 1500 to 2000 operational hours). From a maintenance and cost of ownership standpoint both the short term and long term reliability are of concern. Long term reliability is a measure in time (in operating hours) between engine removals. To address these requirements US Navy Fleet support maintenance activities employ a system of tests and evaluations to determine the likelihood that an LM2500 will meet its short and long-term goals. The lowest level inspection is the pre deployment inspection, which attempts to identify primarily mechanical faults with the engine. Gas Turbine Bulletin inspections are used to determine if predefined wear out modes exists. Performance evaluations can be performed which determine the ability of the LM2500 and its control system to meet expected power requirements. Lube oil system data can be analyzed to determine if excessive leakage or excessive scavenge temperatures exist. Engine vibration characteristics can be reviewed to identify the source of both synchronous and non-synchronous vibration and determine if corrective measures need to be taken. This paper will discuss how the lowest level inspections feed the more sophisticated analysis and how these inspections and evaluations work to provide a systematic method of insuring both short and long term LM2500 reliability.
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ASME Turbo Expo 2000: Power for Land, Sea, and Air
May 8–11, 2000
Munich, Germany
Conference Sponsors:
- International Gas Turbine Institute
ISBN:
978-0-7918-7854-5
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Systematic Evaluation of US Navy LM2500 Gas Turbine Condition Available to Purchase
Bruce D. Thompson,
Bruce D. Thompson
Fleet Technical Support Center, Pacific
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Ben Wainscott
Ben Wainscott
Fleet Technical Support Center, Pacific
Search for other works by this author on:
Bruce D. Thompson
Fleet Technical Support Center, Pacific
Ben Wainscott
Fleet Technical Support Center, Pacific
Paper No:
2000-GT-0667, V001T02A017; 7 pages
Published Online:
August 4, 2014
Citation
Thompson, BD, & Wainscott, B. "Systematic Evaluation of US Navy LM2500 Gas Turbine Condition." Proceedings of the ASME Turbo Expo 2000: Power for Land, Sea, and Air. Volume 1: Aircraft Engine; Marine; Turbomachinery; Microturbines and Small Turbomachinery. Munich, Germany. May 8–11, 2000. V001T02A017. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/2000-GT-0667
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