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Page Title: SYSTEM COMPONENTS
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EMERGENCY CANOPY JETTISON  SYSTEM
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Aviation Structural Mechanic E2 - How airplanes are built and how to maintain them
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CANOPY SEAL SYSTEM

using the ejection seat require ejection through the  canopy  unless  special  conditions  dictate  a deviation is necessary. In the A-6, a jettison sleeve is housed in the canopy actuator rod. Passages within the canopy actuator connect to a jettison cartridge  that  is  mounted  on  the  side  of  the cylinder head end. When the cartridge is fired, expanding  gases  create  the  necessary  pressure  to unlock the jettison sleeve from the rod end and force it and the canopy aft and off the aircraft (fig.  2-7).  The  jettison  cartridge  is  fired  by pneumatic pressure from a small (14.6 cu in.) air bottle pressured with nitrogen to 2,450 psi at 70°F prior  to  takeoff. Three air release valves are installed in the air- craft  for  jettisoning  the  canopy.  One  valve  is actuated from the cockpit, the other two by their respective  RESCUE  handle  on  the  engine  intake air ducts. Opening any one of these valves directs nitrogen pressure from the bottle to the canopy actuator  cap  assembly  (fig.  2-7)  and  fires  the pneumatic jettison cartridge. To manually release the canopy actuator from the  canopy  attachment,  pull  either  of  the  manual release handles located under access doors on the aft end of the canopy shell or the single manual release handle located on the canopy overhead center beam. SYSTEM   COMPONENTS The main components of the canopy jettison system   are   shown   in   figure   2-6.   The   relief valve   prevents   excessive   air   bottle   pressure increases  due  to  thermal  expansion  and  over- pressurization  during  charging.  The  valve  cracks to  relieve  pressure  at  3,800  psi  and  reseats  at 3,400  psi. The air gauge provides a means of checking proper system precharge. The gauge is tapped into the pressure line between the air bottle and the cockpit air release valve. The vent bleeder check valve is located on the forward side of the left boarding ladder well. The valve is located downstream of the three air release valves and vents any low-pressure nitrogen that may have leaked past the air release valves, thus preventing inadvertent cartridge actuation. The vent bleeder check valve is normally open at 40 to 80 psi. When an air release valve is actuated, the  bleeder  valve  closes  and  remains  closed throughout  the  jettison  operation.  The  bleeder valve will reopen when the pressure in the system is reduced below 40 psi. The bleeder valve also has a manual override that permits bleedoff of nitrogen pressure after jettison system testing as required during periodic inspections. Figure 2-7.—Canopy jettison schematic. 2-10

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