Match the situations to their respective Design Philosophies: An engine is removed from a wing for shop visit due to several compressor fan blades requiring replacement close to 15... Match the situations to their respective Design Philosophies: An engine is removed from a wing for shop visit due to several compressor fan blades requiring replacement close to 15,000 TSN hours; During a 'C' Check, a riveted joint was discovered with water ingress between the layers and the adhesive in between rendered useless; 1 out of 8 tires on a landing gear wheel bogey is deflated, but overall is within design capability to support landing forces and the aircraft mass.

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Understand the Problem

The question is asking to match specific situations related to aircraft engineering to their corresponding design philosophies, which include Safe Life, Fail Safe, and Damage Tolerance. This involves identifying the appropriate philosophy for each given situation based on its context.

Answer

1. Safe Life, 2. Damage Tolerance, 3. Fail Safe

The final answer is:

  1. Safe Life
  2. Damage Tolerance
  3. Fail Safe
Answer for screen readers

The final answer is:

  1. Safe Life
  2. Damage Tolerance
  3. Fail Safe

More Information

The 'Safe Life' philosophy involves replacing components before they fail according to predetermined life limits. 'Damage Tolerance' ensures structures can sustain some damage while remaining functional. The 'Fail Safe' philosophy designs to prevent catastrophic failure even if a part fails.

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