Safe Life (Aircraft Design Principle)
In aviation, the safe-life aircraft design principle, also known as "safety by retirement," assumes that a structure can be designed to withstand a specific number of flight cycles or hours without significant degradation, and is then retired from service before any potential fatigue cracks can cause failure.
History and Evolution
Early Aviation
Initially, aircraft structures were designed based on engineering judgment, focusing on strength to withstand known loads.
Emergence of Safe-Life
As aviation moved towards metallic structures, the concept of "safe-life" emerged to address the potential for fatigue cracks.
Assumptions
The safe-life approach assumes that a structure, when properly designed and maintained, will remain free from defects and will not experience significant degradation before reaching its designated retirement point.
Fail-Safe and Damage Tolerance
Over time, the limitations of the safe-life approach became apparent, leading to the development of fail-safe and damage-tolerant design principles, which focus on redundancy and the ability to withstand damage.
Current Use
While safe-life principles are still used in some applications, especially for helicopter structures, fail-safe and damage-tolerant designs are now more common, particularly in larger aircraft.
Key Characteristics of Safe-Life Design
Defined Service Life
Structures are designed to have a specific, predetermined service life, expressed in flight cycles or hours.
No Redundancy
Safe-life structures typically do not rely on redundancy or alternative load paths to prevent failure.
Retirement
At the end of its designated service life, the structure is retired from service, regardless of its apparent condition.
Focus on Fatigue
Safe-life design emphasizes preventing fatigue cracks from initiating and propagating to critical sizes.
Examples
Safe-life design is often used in helicopter structures, where the entire structure is designed to be replaced after a certain number of flight hours.