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Collins Aerospace Opens Wolverhampton Test Centre for Electric Thrust Reverser Systems

The fully operational modular facility is intended to speed certification of electric nacelle actuation and cut aircraft-system weight by up to 20 percent through elimination of hydraulic interfaces.

Overview

  • Collins announced the Wolverhampton Engineering Center of Excellence is fully operational on Thursday and houses a modular, reconfigurable test facility for aircraft actuation systems.
  • The centre can simulate conditions from individual components to fully integrated systems so engineers can find and fix issues earlier in development and reduce programme delays.
  • Collins says its elecTRAS electric thrust reverser actuation removes hydraulic interfaces and fluids and can lower nacelle actuation weight by 15–20 percent at the aircraft-system level.
  • The facility co-locates elecTRAS development with nacelle actuation design work to speed engineering collaboration on motor control, algorithms and system integration.
  • Collins built the centre on proven elecTRAS experience: the system is in service on the Airbus A350 family and had logged more than 15 million flight hours and 2.2 million cycles on over 700 aircraft by 2025.