August 01, 2017 Volume 13 Issue 29
 

Designfax weekly eMagazine

Subscribe Today!
image of Designfax newsletter

Archives

View Archives

Partners

Manufacturing Center
Product Spotlight

Modern Applications News
Metalworking Ideas For
Today's Job Shops

Tooling and Production
Strategies for large
metalworking plants

Bluetooth sensors monitor health of military bridging systems

Engineers based at BAE Systems' site in Telford, U.K., are testing an integrated Bluetooth and sensing technology that reports the remaining service life of military bridging systems.

The new "fatigue monitoring" technology continuously detects the stress and strain on bridges designed to be used by tanks such as the more than 60-ton Challenger 2. The sensors then wirelessly transmit data to a handheld device, allowing soldiers to easily assess the health of the bridge.

Without the use of an automated fatigue monitoring system, the remaining service life of rapidly deployable military bridges is based on manual records and is difficult to judge, resulting in bridges being retired early or overused. The new technology uses a series of sensors fitted to the bridge components that undergo the most strain. These sensors record around a hundred strain readings per second. A computer analysis then gives a component-by-component overview of bridge health.

BAE Systems' use of fatigue monitoring technology aims to give military engineers the peace of mind that their bridges remain healthy, even on extended military campaigns where bridges can remain in place for many months.

The system is being tested by BAE Systems' 50-strong specialist military bridging team based in Telford, who operate Europe's most advanced Bridge Test Facility. The facility simulates thousands of bridge crossings by a variety of wheeled and tracked vehicles, allowing BAE Systems to assess bridge performance using comprehensive data records on how the various components perform.

General support bridge launching. [Image courtesy: BAE Systems]

 

 

Titan vehicle transporting a close support bridge. [Image courtesy: BAE Systems]

 

 

Two-span floating bridge using pontoons. [Image courtesy: BAE Systems]

 

 

John Lees, Bridging Business Manager for BAE Systems Land (U.K.), said: "The biggest obstacle to monitoring bridge health is achieving a continuous flow of accurate data telling you what the bridge is experiencing. Simply monitoring the number of crossings -- as most military users do now -- doesn't give an accurate picture. Our new solution monitors and analyzes all of these variables to give a real-time, accurate assessment of bridge condition. It will make it easier to use our bridges in civilian situations such as disaster relief, where keeping accurate data on crossings is very difficult. It will also reduce whole-life ownership cost by ensuring bridges are serviced only when required and that they can confidently be used for their entire service life."


VIDEO: Animation of BAE Systems' latest bridging deployments.

BAE Systems designed and manufactured the British Army's rapidly deployable military bridging system (BR90) in the 1990s. BR90 comprises 74 bridging systems and can be used in a variety of configurations, adding up to a total of 8.5 km of bridge trackway, and provides the most rapidly deployed and flexible gap-crossing capability in the world. Another variant of the bridge can be used to span gaps greater than 60 m.

BAE Systems' specialist team is now developing and testing a next-generation Modular Bridging System to be even more agile and reliable.

Source: BAE Systems

Published August 2017

Rate this article

[Bluetooth sensors monitor health of military bridging systems]

Very interesting, with information I can use
Interesting, with information I may use
Interesting, but not applicable to my operation
Not interesting or inaccurate

E-mail Address (required):

Comments:


Type the number:



Copyright © 2017 by Nelson Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction Prohibited.
View our terms of use and privacy policy