Paper
7 June 1996 Improving the safety-of-flight certification process: helmet/HMD dynamics during aircraft ejection
Robert T. MacMillan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In the event that all pilot efforts to recover a serverely disabled aircraft have failed, the pilot may be forced to eject from the aircraft. A pull of the ejection handles launches the pilot into the violent, complicated environment of an aircraft ejection. Aircraft altitude and velocity, pilot physiology and body posture, pilot personal equipment, and helmet/HMD characteristics are just a few broad categories comprising the vast list of variables potentially influencing the pilot's chances of surviving an ejection. The nearly infinite number of permutations of these variables describing any given ejection makes predicting, modeling, and simulating such an environment very difficult. Moreover, developing criteria and designing test and evaluation methodologies for certifying advanced helmet systems as 'safe-to-fly' is an increasingly frustrating process characterized by too many unknowns and too little data. In order to accurately simulate the aircraft ejection environment in performing test and evaluation of advanced helmet systems, especially helmet-mounted displays (HMDs), a better understanding of helmet/HMD dynamics is required. This study attempts to develop a model combining the two major force contributions during aircraft ejection: windblast forces due to canopy jettison and g-forces imparted by rapid acceleration out of the aircraft. By superimposing data collected from windblast tests and from ejection-tower tests, more accurate resultant head/neck loads can be calculated in determining whether a given helmet/HMD design should receive the 'safe-to-fly' certification.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert T. MacMillan "Improving the safety-of-flight certification process: helmet/HMD dynamics during aircraft ejection", Proc. SPIE 2735, Head-Mounted Displays, (7 June 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.241891
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Head

Head-mounted displays

Rockets

Systems modeling

Aerodynamics

Heads up displays

Neck

RELATED CONTENT

Virtual HUD using an HMD
Proceedings of SPIE (August 22 2001)
F-16 helmet-mounted display flight evaluations
Proceedings of SPIE (October 01 1990)
I-NIGHTS and beyond
Proceedings of SPIE (October 30 1992)

Back to Top