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FlyVeryHigh- 6th Mar 2015 13:17

A320
 
Hi there. Can anyone tell me how many brake units there are on an A320? Is there one on the nose gear?


Cheers!


*Apologies, title is meant to say A320 Brakes*

spo 6th Mar 2015 14:34

Hi There are 4 Brake Units. One for each Mainwheel. Nothing on the Nosewheels.

TomU 6th Mar 2015 14:54

Technically, and I really don't mean this to sound pedantic or smart - some A320s have "Spin Brakes" on the nosewheels. That is, friction brakes in the top of the NLG Bay that stop the nosewheel spin on retraction. I don't know if it was abandoned on later production aircraft, but there is an optional SB to remove them as they were deemed not necessary.

As an aside, the B727 is the only aircraft I have encountered with actual brakes on the nosewheels, are there any others?

FlyVeryHigh- 6th Mar 2015 17:18

Many thanks for the information. Much appreciated spo!

FlyVeryHigh- 6th Mar 2015 17:43

I have another question if you guys don't mind! If we are talking about carbon/carbon a320 braking units, does this mean that both rotors & stators are made from the carbon/carbon material?

TURIN 6th Mar 2015 21:47


As an aside, the B727 is the only aircraft I have encountered with actual brakes on the nosewheels, are there any others?
I think Concorde did. Something to do with having a long leg and gyroscopic precession as the nose gear retracted.

dixi188 8th Mar 2015 10:37

Indian Airlines have bogie main gear with 4 wheels on each main leg, so I presume there are 8 brake units on these aircraft.

Terry McCassey 8th Mar 2015 12:27

I believe the Convair CV880/990 had nose gear brakes too.

FlyVeryHigh- 15th Mar 2015 18:46

Hello again.


Am I correct in thinking the following brake assembly has 4 stators, 3 rotors?


https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/i...8IHv-F6cXb8ZVJ

TURIN 15th Mar 2015 18:52

Looks like four of each to me. :ok:

Thinking about it, there would be a stator at each end of the pack so four rotors and five stators.

FlyVeryHigh- 15th Mar 2015 19:11

Many thanks TURIN! Its surprisingly difficult to find this information on the internet, meaning having to resort to counting them from an image is all I can really do at the moment!


Thanks again!

jaja 16th Mar 2015 09:45

TomU

"As an aside, the B727 is the only aircraft I have encountered with actual brakes on the nosewheels, are there any others?"

Yes, MAERSK AIR (Denmark) had brakes on the nose wheels on some of their B737, that flew into the Faroe Islands

FlyVeryHigh- 16th Mar 2015 13:42

Back again. Does anyone have any idea what the brake temperature would usually be after a landing or rto? Im aware that t/o with a temp exceeding 150 degrees isn't allowed, but not sure which kind of temperature range would be hit after the landing or rto. Am I right in assuming approximately 600 degrees would be a good ball park figure?

Terry McCassey 17th Mar 2015 01:38

Very difficult to cite average temperatures as too many variables. 600°C not good, likely something wrong somewhere if it's just one brake at this temp ! Max take off temp for an A330/A340 from FCOM is 300°C


Don't quote me - memory items only

Terry McCassey 17th Mar 2015 01:48

The A320 brake unit has 4 rotors and 5 stators.


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