cabin

Cabin pressurization is a process in which conditioned air is pumped into the cabin of an aircraft or spacecraft in order to create a safe and comfortable environment for humans flying at high altitudes. For aircraft, this air is usually bled off from the gas turbine engines at the compressor stage, and for spacecraft, it is carried in high-pressure, often cryogenic, tanks. The air is cooled, humidified, and mixed with recirculated air by one or more environmental control systems before it is distributed to the cabin.The first experimental pressurization systems saw use during the 1920s and 1930s. In the 1940s, the first commercial aircraft with a pressurized cabin entered service. The practice would become widespread a decade later, particularly with the introduction of the British de Havilland Comet jetliner in 1949. However, two catastrophic failures in 1954 temporarily grounded the Comet worldwide. The causes were investigated and found to be a combination of progressive metal fatigue and aircraft skin stresses caused from pressurization. Improved testing involved multiple full scale pressurization cycle tests of the entire fuselage in a water tank, and the key engineering principles learned were applied to the design of subsequent jet airliners.
Certain aircraft have unusual pressurization needs. For example, the supersonic airliner Concorde had a particularly high pressure differential due to flying at unusually high altitude: up to 60,000 ft (18,288 m) while maintaining a cabin altitude of 6,000 ft (1,829 m). This increased airframe weight and saw the use of smaller cabin windows intended to slow the decompression rate if a depressurization event occurred.
The Aloha Airlines Flight 243 incident, involving a Boeing 737-200 that suffered catastrophic cabin failure mid-flight, was primarily caused by the aircraft's continued operation despite having accumulated more than twice the number of flight cycles that the airframe was designed to endure. For increased passenger comfort, several modern airliners, such as the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and the Airbus A350 XWB, feature reduced operating cabin altitudes as well as greater humidity levels; the use of composite airframes has aided the adoption of such comfort-maximizing practices.

View More On Wikipedia.org
  1. tsedge

    Removing the always-on overhead light?

    One thing that still bugs me is the little white light that is always on in the overhead light cluster. It stops the cabin being properly dark at night. Has anyone successfully removed this and is it difficult?
  2. S

    Preheat Cabin & Battery Not Working

    Hey. Had my SE SR since September 2022. Cabin preheating has worked most of the time, but now it’s refusing which given this week’s weather is beyond frustrating. Is the issue with cabin preheating not working when the car is plugged in but not charging still a thing? Also noticed when the...
  3. mgrdink

    MG EHS cabin heating issue: warm air turns cold after a while

    Hello, on our MG EHS we bought a month ago (2021, second hand), we're having trouble maintaining the temperature inside the cabin. For example, right now, it's cold outside at 5°C, and we have the setting on "auto" at 21°C. The heating works well until it reaches (it seems) the right...
  4. S

    Interior heating

    A question that occurred to me today.... Is the MG4 interior heating only electrical or is there any use of the battery/motor cooling systems to provide heat to the interior? Is there anyone here that works for MG or a dealership that can shed any light?
  5. P

    Pre Heat Issues

    So, I am interested to hear from the collective... Have any of you suffered from issues when trying to Pre-Heat? I can Pre-Heat the cabin when the car is plugged in and charging, but crucially I cannot Pre-Heat when the car is not plugged in? I get a failure to execute. Code 47. I have the...
  6. T

    Cabin heater issues

    Hi members. Has anyone been experiencing issues with the heater in their MG ZS Long range? The heater works initially heating the cabin but then it reduces the temperature of the air coming out of the vents. It then doesn't come back on until the car temperature has dropped around 5 degrees from...
  7. J

    Preheating the cabin sucks a lot of juice

    Just turned on my cabin preheating whilst charging, charging app states 7.1kw draw, I always lose 10% so the mg app would show approx 6.4kw charging rate but was surprised to see the battery recieving 2 kw less meaning all that's going into heating the car! On a good note though it's the first...
  8. R

    2022 MGZS, freezing, drafty cabin

    Has anyone noticed the cold drafts when driving. They don't just come from drivers side but passenger also. There is a thread about using non flammable insulation, but that has made little difference when I did it.
Back
Top Bottom