ACES II: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Ejection seats]]
[[Category:Ejection seats]]
<1><History of ACES Family of Seats SAFE Paper, Bob Billings Author>
<1><History of ACES Family of Seats, SAFE Paper 2012, Bob Billings Author>

Revision as of 02:20, 7 February 2014

Template:Infobox aviation

ACES II is an ejection seat system manufactured by the United Technologies Aerospace Systems (UTAS) division of the United Technologies Corporation (UTC). ACES is an acronym for Advanced Concept Ejection Seat. It is used in A-10, F-15, F-16, F-22, F-117A, B-1B, WB-57, and B-2 aircraft. Over 10,000 ACES II seats have been produced with over 5,000 actively flying throughout the world as of 2013. It is known throughout the industry as the lowest life cycle cost seat due to the USAF owning the rights to the seat, facilitating competitive replacement part procurement. In addition, the buying power of 5,000 in-service seats and previous service life extension programs have further driven down support costs.
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The seat is considered third generation and includes advanced features. For example, it senses the conditions of the ejection and selects the appropriate drogue and main parachute deployments to minimize the forces on the occupant. The seat has been updated over the years to include digital sequencing, additional redundancy, and structural upgrading.

The A-10, F-15, F-117, B-1, and B-2 use connected firing handles that activate both the canopy jettison systems, and the seat ejection. Both handles accomplish the same task, so pulling either one suffices. The F-22, WB-57, and F-16 have only one handle located between the pilot's legs, due to cockpit space limitations.

The minimal ejection altitude for ACES II seat in inverted flight is about 140 feet (43 m) above ground level at 150 KIAS. The seat performance is in accordance with MIL-S-9479.[citation needed]

In 2012, United Technologies acquired the Goodrich Corporation which originally produced the seat. The seat is manufactured in Colorado Springs, Colorado.[citation needed]

External links

<1><History of ACES Family of Seats, SAFE Paper 2012, Bob Billings Author>