Difference between revisions of "ISO-Plane TRL3"

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:ISO-Plane TRL3}}
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= ISO-Plane TRL3 =
 
= ISO-Plane TRL3 =
  
== Overview ==
+
'''ISO-Plane TRL3''' defines the transition of the ISO-Plane program from a validated conceptual architecture toward a technically substantiated engineering definition.
 
 
'''ISO-Plane TRL3''' marks the transition from validated conceptual architecture (TRL2) to detailed engineering definition.
 
  
At this stage, the objective is to demonstrate analytical and experimental proof of critical subsystems, validate structural hypotheses, and prepare the program for industrial engagement.
+
At this stage, the project is no longer limited to architectural feasibility. It enters a phase where the main assumptions must be supported by calculations, simulations, preliminary tests, subsystem sizing and structured technical risk reduction.
  
TRL3 focuses on transforming a coherent digital mock-up into an engineering-driven, simulation-supported aircraft definition.
+
TRL3 is therefore the first maturity level where the ISO-Plane becomes an engineering-driven aircraft concept, with the objective of preparing the program for demonstrator design, industrial dialogue and future TRL4 maturation.
  
 
----
 
----
  
== TRL Context ==
+
== Executive Summary ==
 
 
Technology Readiness Level 3 corresponds to:
 
 
 
* Analytical and experimental proof-of-concept
 
* Validation of key subsystems
 
* Identification of technical risks
 
* Structural and aerodynamic refinement
 
* Preparation for pre-industrial maturation
 
 
 
TRL3 is the first phase where engineering depth becomes the primary driver of development.
 
 
 
----
 
  
== TRL2 → TRL3 Transition ==
+
TRL3 corresponds to the analytical and experimental proof-of-concept phase of the ISO-Plane program.
  
=== Achieved at TRL2 ===
+
The purpose of this phase is to verify that the selected aircraft architecture can credibly support the transport, autonomous loading, unloading and flight operation of one standard 20-foot ISO container.
  
* Global aircraft architecture validated
+
The TRL3 work focuses on:
* 3D digital mock-up completed
 
* Loading system concept defined
 
* Engine selection confirmed (PW150A)
 
* Q400-based landing gear integration concept
 
* Preliminary performance and mass estimation
 
* Market and operational study
 
  
=== Objectives of TRL3 ===
+
* structural feasibility of the fuselage and ventral cargo opening;
 +
* validation of the cargo lifting and locking load paths;
 +
* aerodynamic refinement of the high-wing twin-engine configuration;
 +
* integration of Q400-derived landing gear into the nacelle architecture;
 +
* consolidation of mass, balance and mission performance;
 +
* preliminary systems architecture definition;
 +
* identification and reduction of major technical risks;
 +
* preparation of the project for industrial and pre-certification discussions.
  
* Detailed structural calculations (RDM)
+
TRL3 does not aim to produce a flying prototype. Its objective is to produce engineering credibility.
* Aerodynamic refinement and CFD validation
 
* Ventral cargo door structural sizing
 
* Central wing box optimization
 
* Mechanized arm load path validation
 
* Landing gear integration structural verification
 
* Weight breakdown consolidation
 
* Systems architecture refinement
 
* First industrial technical exchanges
 
  
 
----
 
----
  
== Technical Work Packages (TRL3) ==
+
== Program Context ==
  
=== 1. Structural Engineering ===
+
The ISO-Plane is a specialized cargo aircraft concept designed to transport a single 20-foot ISO container while remaining significantly smaller than conventional military transport aircraft capable of carrying containerized freight.
  
* Finite Element Analysis (FEA) of fuselage
+
The aircraft is intended to provide autonomous loading and unloading capability, either from the ground or directly from a truck trailer, without requiring heavy external airport handling equipment.
* Central wing box structural modeling
 
* Pressurized cargo bay analysis
 
* Ventral door reinforcement modeling
 
* Load cases: flight, landing, container lift
 
* Fatigue considerations
 
  
Primary objective:
+
The reference configuration includes:
Validate structural feasibility of a 4 m diameter fuselage integrating a ventral opening.
 
  
----
+
{| class="wikitable"
 
+
! Parameter
=== 2. Aerodynamics & Performance ===
+
! TRL3 reference assumption
 
+
|-
* CFD analysis of high-wing twin-boom configuration
+
| Mission
* Drag breakdown refinement
+
| Air transport of one 20-foot ISO container
* Propeller slipstream interaction studies
+
|-
* High-lift device optimization
+
| Payload objective
* Takeoff and landing performance reassessment
+
| Up to approximately 8 tonnes of containerized payload
* Updated range analysis
+
|-
 +
| Loading concept
 +
| Autonomous loading and unloading through a ventral cargo access system
 +
|-
 +
| Propulsion
 +
| Twin turboprop configuration using Pratt & Whitney PW150A-class engines
 +
|-
 +
| Wing configuration
 +
| High-wing architecture
 +
|-
 +
| Landing gear concept
 +
| Main landing gear derived from Bombardier Q400 architecture, integrated into the nacelles
 +
|-
 +
| Cargo bay
 +
| Pressurized cargo compartment compatible with a 20-foot ISO container
 +
|-
 +
| Cockpit
 +
| Pressurized cockpit, crew of two, with operational access independent from the cargo bay
 +
|-
 +
| Design ambition
 +
| Long-range container air logistics with autonomous ground handling
 +
|}
  
Primary objective:
+
The TRL3 baseline remains a design target, not a certified aircraft definition.
Validate aerodynamic assumptions and refine mission envelope.
 
  
 
----
 
----
  
=== 3. Cargo Handling System Validation ===
+
== TRL Context ==
  
At TRL3, the cargo handling system moves from concept validation to engineering verification.
+
Technology Readiness Level 3 corresponds to an early proof-of-concept stage.
  
The objective is clear: confirm that the autonomous loading architecture is not only innovative, but structurally and mechanically sound.
+
For ISO-Plane, TRL3 means that the main technical principles selected during TRL2 must be tested against engineering reality.
  
This phase is structured around three main validation pillars.
+
TRL3 includes:
  
'''Kinematic realism'''
+
* analytical proof-of-concept;
 +
* preliminary experimental proof-of-concept when possible;
 +
* subsystem feasibility validation;
 +
* first-order structural verification;
 +
* aerodynamic model refinement;
 +
* mechanical integration studies;
 +
* preliminary failure and risk analysis;
 +
* preparation of subsystem demonstrators;
 +
* identification of technical gaps toward TRL4.
  
The robotic arms are analysed through detailed kinematic modelling. 
+
TRL3 is the first phase where the program must demonstrate that the architecture is not only innovative, but also technically defendable.
Their deployment sequence, articulation limits and retraction geometry are verified to ensure compatibility with the ventral door and fuselage structure. Clearance margins are carefully assessed, because small geometric assumptions at TRL2 can lead to significant mechanical constraints at TRL3.
 
  
'''Structural load transfer'''
+
----
 
 
Lifting an 8-ton container generates concentrated loads at the ISO corner interfaces. 
 
A complete load path analysis is therefore conducted — from the twist-lock connection, through the arm structure, into the fuselage primary frames.
 
 
 
Simulations include:
 
 
 
* Symmetric and asymmetric lifting cases 
 
* Dynamic load factors 
 
* Ground alignment tolerances 
 
* Local stress concentration zones 
 
 
 
The aim is to validate reinforcement strategies while keeping structural mass under control.
 
  
'''Safety & redundancy logic'''
+
== TRL2 to TRL3 Transition ==
  
Autonomous handling requires fault tolerance. 
+
=== Status Achieved at TRL2 ===
Emergency winch redundancy is evaluated, partial arm failure scenarios are simulated, and a structured Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is performed.
 
  
Ground clearance studies are also conducted to confirm operational feasibility on realistic airfield surfaces.
+
The end of TRL2 established a coherent conceptual architecture for the ISO-Plane.
  
----
+
The following elements are considered part of the TRL2 baseline:
  
Primary objective:
+
* global aircraft architecture selected;
 +
* high-wing twin-turboprop layout retained;
 +
* 3D digital mock-up created;
 +
* loading system concept defined;
 +
* ventral cargo door concept selected;
 +
* rear access and cargo bay layout investigated;
 +
* PW150A engine family selected as propulsion reference;
 +
* Q400-derived landing gear integration concept retained;
 +
* preliminary fuselage sizing completed;
 +
* preliminary mass and performance estimates produced;
 +
* initial market and operational studies performed;
 +
* first collaborative project structure established between academic contributors.
  
Demonstrate that the container lifting system can be integrated into the aircraft structure with credible load management, controlled risk, and aviation-level safety margins.
+
=== TRL3 Entry Logic ===
  
=== 4. Landing Gear Integration ===
+
The TRL3 phase starts when the aircraft is sufficiently defined to allow engineering verification.
  
* Structural integration of Q400-derived landing gear
+
The main TRL3 question is:
* Nacelle reinforcement studies
 
* Retraction mechanism packaging validation
 
* Ground stability assessment
 
* Brake energy evaluation
 
  
Primary objective:
+
''Can the ISO-Plane architecture withstand preliminary structural, mechanical, aerodynamic and operational scrutiny?''
Ensure compatibility between cargo bay geometry and gear integration.
 
  
----
+
To answer this, TRL3 must convert the digital mock-up into a structured engineering definition.
  
=== 5. Mass & Balance Consolidation ===
+
=== TRL3 Exit Logic ===
  
* Updated mass breakdown
+
TRL3 may be considered complete when the critical concepts are validated by analysis and supported by credible simulation or preliminary test evidence.
* CG envelope refinement
 
* Payload-range curve update
 
* Structural margin validation
 
  
Primary objective:
+
The expected TRL3 exit condition is not a prototype, but a mature technical dossier enabling the launch of TRL4 demonstrators.
Confirm feasibility of ~30 t MTOW configuration.
 
  
 
----
 
----
  
== Industrial Interface (TRL3) ==
+
== TRL3 Objectives ==
 
 
TRL3 initiates structured dialogue with industrial stakeholders:
 
 
 
Potential discussions with:
 
 
 
* Engine manufacturers
 
* Landing gear suppliers
 
* Aerospace structural partners
 
* Embedded systems suppliers
 
* Certification advisors
 
  
Objectives:
+
The main objectives of TRL3 are:
  
* Validate technical assumptions
+
* perform detailed structural calculations on critical zones;
* Identify certification pathways
+
* validate the feasibility of a large ventral opening in a pressurized fuselage;
* Evaluate manufacturability constraints
+
* refine the aerodynamic configuration using CFD and analytical methods;
* Explore partnership opportunities
+
* verify the mechanical logic of the autonomous cargo handling system;
 +
* assess the load paths generated by lifting an 8-tonne ISO container;
 +
* consolidate the central wing box configuration;
 +
* verify landing gear integration into nacelle structures;
 +
* update the aircraft mass breakdown;
 +
* refine the center-of-gravity envelope;
 +
* assess cargo loading and unloading stability;
 +
* identify the highest technical risks;
 +
* prepare subsystem demonstrator requirements for TRL4;
 +
* initiate structured technical exchanges with industrial partners.
  
 
----
 
----
  
== Risk Assessment at TRL3 ==
+
== TRL3 Engineering Philosophy ==
  
Major technical risks evaluated:
+
TRL3 is based on a conservative engineering approach.
  
* Structural reinforcement of ventral opening
+
The objective is not to optimize every parameter immediately, but to identify whether the core architecture is structurally and mechanically viable.
* Cargo bay pressurization constraints
 
* Robotic arm integration mass penalty
 
* CG shift during container lift operations
 
* Aeroelastic behavior of high-wing structure
 
  
Risk mitigation approach:
+
The guiding principles are:
  
* Analytical modeling
+
* prioritize feasibility before optimization;
* Redundancy concepts
+
* validate load paths before refining geometry;
* Conservative structural margins
+
* use conservative margins where uncertainty remains high;
* Iterative simulation
+
* separate architectural assumptions from verified engineering results;
 +
* document every major hypothesis;
 +
* identify the assumptions that must be tested physically at TRL4;
 +
* maintain compatibility with open-source collaboration while protecting potential industrial interfaces.
  
 
----
 
----
  
== Environmental & Sustainability Considerations ==
+
== Configuration Baseline at TRL3 Entry ==
  
TRL3 also integrates environmental refinement:
+
=== Aircraft Architecture ===
  
* Updated fuel burn model
+
The ISO-Plane TRL3 reference architecture is a high-wing twin-turboprop aircraft with a pressurized fuselage and a ventral container loading system.
* Structural weight reduction strategies
 
* Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) compatibility studies
 
* Preliminary lifecycle thinking (LCA preparation)
 
  
----
+
The aircraft is designed around the geometric constraints of a 20-foot ISO container.
  
== Deliverables of TRL3 ==
+
The general layout includes:
  
By the end of TRL3, the ISO-Plane program is expected to transition from a validated concept to a technically supported aircraft definition.
+
* forward cockpit;
 +
* pressurized cargo bay;
 +
* high wing and central wing box;
 +
* twin turboprop propulsion;
 +
* rear empennage structure;
 +
* nacelle-mounted main landing gear;
 +
* ventral cargo door;
 +
* mechanized cargo handling system;
 +
* twist-lock-based container attachment interfaces.
  
This stage does not produce a flying prototype yet — but it produces something equally important: engineering credibility.
+
=== Cargo Bay Architecture ===
  
The main deliverables include:
+
The cargo bay must accommodate one standard 20-foot ISO container while preserving sufficient structural continuity around the fuselage.
  
'''Structural validation package'''
+
Key design constraints include:
  
* Validated structural calculation reports (global and local load cases)
+
* container external length compatibility;
* Finite Element Analysis (FEA) models and results
+
* lateral clearance for loading operations;
* Reinforcement strategy definition for critical zones (cargo bay, wing box, landing gear integration)
+
* vertical clearance for container motion;
 +
* structural clearance around the ventral opening;
 +
* compatibility with pressurization loads;
 +
* integration of lifting arms or mechanized load transfer elements;
 +
* integration of locking points;
 +
* access to emergency securing systems;
 +
* maintainability of the cargo handling equipment.
  
'''Aerodynamic refinement'''
+
=== Ventral Door Architecture ===
  
* CFD simulation results
+
The ventral cargo door is one of the defining systems of the ISO-Plane.
* Updated drag breakdown
 
* Refined performance and mission analysis
 
* Updated payload–range assessment
 
  
'''Subsystem maturity documentation'''
+
At TRL3, the retained concept is a three-panel opening system allowing ground-level access for loading and unloading a 20-foot ISO container.
  
* Detailed cargo handling system architecture
+
The ventral door must:
* Landing gear structural integration dossier
 
* Systems interface documentation
 
* Updated risk and mitigation analysis
 
  
'''Aircraft definition consolidation'''
+
* preserve aerodynamic continuity in flight;
 +
* support pressurization sealing requirements;
 +
* avoid structural weakening of the fuselage beyond acceptable limits;
 +
* provide sufficient opening clearance for the container;
 +
* remain compatible with internal floor or guide structures;
 +
* withstand local loads from cargo handling interfaces;
 +
* support emergency closing and locking logic;
 +
* remain inspectable and maintainable.
  
* Updated and coherent digital mock-up
+
=== Landing Gear Architecture ===
* Consolidated mass statement and CG envelope
 
* Refined aircraft configuration freeze for next stage
 
  
'''Forward roadmap'''
+
The main landing gear is derived from the Bombardier Q400 concept and is integrated into the nacelles below the high-mounted wings.
  
* Identified technical gaps toward TRL4
+
This architecture is retained because it avoids occupying the lower fuselage volume required by the cargo bay and ventral opening.
* Demonstrator priorities
 
* Preliminary industrial engagement framework
 
* Structured TRL4 preparation roadmap
 
  
----
+
The TRL3 landing gear integration studies must verify:
 
 
The objective of these deliverables is to demonstrate that the ISO-Plane architecture can withstand detailed engineering scrutiny, and that the project is ready to enter a demonstrator-oriented phase with reduced technical uncertainty.
 
 
 
== Path Toward TRL4 ==
 
  
TRL4 will focus on:
+
* nacelle structural reinforcement;
 +
* landing load transfer into wing and engine support structures;
 +
* retraction kinematics;
 +
* wheel well packaging;
 +
* gear door integration;
 +
* compatibility with propeller clearance;
 +
* ground stability during loading;
 +
* compatibility with truck and ground loading scenarios.
  
* Subscale structural demonstrators
+
=== Propulsion Architecture ===
* Ground testing of loading mechanism
 
* Wind tunnel validation (if feasible)
 
* Certification pre-discussions
 
* Early industrial feasibility assessment
 
  
----
+
The TRL3 propulsion reference remains the Pratt & Whitney PW150A engine class.
  
== Strategic Vision ==
+
This engine family is used as a sizing and integration reference for:
  
TRL3 transforms ISO-Plane from an architectural concept into an engineering program.
+
* power-to-weight estimation;
 +
* nacelle sizing;
 +
* propeller clearance studies;
 +
* fuel consumption modelling;
 +
* operational range estimation;
 +
* integration with Q400-derived systems and landing gear concepts.
  
It is the stage where:
+
At TRL3, the engine selection is not yet a procurement decision. It is a technical baseline for configuration development.
 
 
* Feasibility becomes quantifiable
 
* Industrial credibility begins
 
* Technical maturity increases
 
* Program risk is reduced
 
 
 
ISO-Plane TRL3 is the foundation for future prototype development.
 
  
 
----
 
----
 
''ISO-Plane – Engineering the next generation of container air logistics.''
 

Latest revision as of 12:11, 24 April 2026

ISO-Plane TRL3

ISO-Plane TRL3 defines the transition of the ISO-Plane program from a validated conceptual architecture toward a technically substantiated engineering definition.

At this stage, the project is no longer limited to architectural feasibility. It enters a phase where the main assumptions must be supported by calculations, simulations, preliminary tests, subsystem sizing and structured technical risk reduction.

TRL3 is therefore the first maturity level where the ISO-Plane becomes an engineering-driven aircraft concept, with the objective of preparing the program for demonstrator design, industrial dialogue and future TRL4 maturation.


Executive Summary

TRL3 corresponds to the analytical and experimental proof-of-concept phase of the ISO-Plane program.

The purpose of this phase is to verify that the selected aircraft architecture can credibly support the transport, autonomous loading, unloading and flight operation of one standard 20-foot ISO container.

The TRL3 work focuses on:

  • structural feasibility of the fuselage and ventral cargo opening;
  • validation of the cargo lifting and locking load paths;
  • aerodynamic refinement of the high-wing twin-engine configuration;
  • integration of Q400-derived landing gear into the nacelle architecture;
  • consolidation of mass, balance and mission performance;
  • preliminary systems architecture definition;
  • identification and reduction of major technical risks;
  • preparation of the project for industrial and pre-certification discussions.

TRL3 does not aim to produce a flying prototype. Its objective is to produce engineering credibility.


Program Context

The ISO-Plane is a specialized cargo aircraft concept designed to transport a single 20-foot ISO container while remaining significantly smaller than conventional military transport aircraft capable of carrying containerized freight.

The aircraft is intended to provide autonomous loading and unloading capability, either from the ground or directly from a truck trailer, without requiring heavy external airport handling equipment.

The reference configuration includes:

Parameter TRL3 reference assumption
Mission Air transport of one 20-foot ISO container
Payload objective Up to approximately 8 tonnes of containerized payload
Loading concept Autonomous loading and unloading through a ventral cargo access system
Propulsion Twin turboprop configuration using Pratt & Whitney PW150A-class engines
Wing configuration High-wing architecture
Landing gear concept Main landing gear derived from Bombardier Q400 architecture, integrated into the nacelles
Cargo bay Pressurized cargo compartment compatible with a 20-foot ISO container
Cockpit Pressurized cockpit, crew of two, with operational access independent from the cargo bay
Design ambition Long-range container air logistics with autonomous ground handling

The TRL3 baseline remains a design target, not a certified aircraft definition.


TRL Context

Technology Readiness Level 3 corresponds to an early proof-of-concept stage.

For ISO-Plane, TRL3 means that the main technical principles selected during TRL2 must be tested against engineering reality.

TRL3 includes:

  • analytical proof-of-concept;
  • preliminary experimental proof-of-concept when possible;
  • subsystem feasibility validation;
  • first-order structural verification;
  • aerodynamic model refinement;
  • mechanical integration studies;
  • preliminary failure and risk analysis;
  • preparation of subsystem demonstrators;
  • identification of technical gaps toward TRL4.

TRL3 is the first phase where the program must demonstrate that the architecture is not only innovative, but also technically defendable.


TRL2 to TRL3 Transition

Status Achieved at TRL2

The end of TRL2 established a coherent conceptual architecture for the ISO-Plane.

The following elements are considered part of the TRL2 baseline:

  • global aircraft architecture selected;
  • high-wing twin-turboprop layout retained;
  • 3D digital mock-up created;
  • loading system concept defined;
  • ventral cargo door concept selected;
  • rear access and cargo bay layout investigated;
  • PW150A engine family selected as propulsion reference;
  • Q400-derived landing gear integration concept retained;
  • preliminary fuselage sizing completed;
  • preliminary mass and performance estimates produced;
  • initial market and operational studies performed;
  • first collaborative project structure established between academic contributors.

TRL3 Entry Logic

The TRL3 phase starts when the aircraft is sufficiently defined to allow engineering verification.

The main TRL3 question is:

Can the ISO-Plane architecture withstand preliminary structural, mechanical, aerodynamic and operational scrutiny?

To answer this, TRL3 must convert the digital mock-up into a structured engineering definition.

TRL3 Exit Logic

TRL3 may be considered complete when the critical concepts are validated by analysis and supported by credible simulation or preliminary test evidence.

The expected TRL3 exit condition is not a prototype, but a mature technical dossier enabling the launch of TRL4 demonstrators.


TRL3 Objectives

The main objectives of TRL3 are:

  • perform detailed structural calculations on critical zones;
  • validate the feasibility of a large ventral opening in a pressurized fuselage;
  • refine the aerodynamic configuration using CFD and analytical methods;
  • verify the mechanical logic of the autonomous cargo handling system;
  • assess the load paths generated by lifting an 8-tonne ISO container;
  • consolidate the central wing box configuration;
  • verify landing gear integration into nacelle structures;
  • update the aircraft mass breakdown;
  • refine the center-of-gravity envelope;
  • assess cargo loading and unloading stability;
  • identify the highest technical risks;
  • prepare subsystem demonstrator requirements for TRL4;
  • initiate structured technical exchanges with industrial partners.

TRL3 Engineering Philosophy

TRL3 is based on a conservative engineering approach.

The objective is not to optimize every parameter immediately, but to identify whether the core architecture is structurally and mechanically viable.

The guiding principles are:

  • prioritize feasibility before optimization;
  • validate load paths before refining geometry;
  • use conservative margins where uncertainty remains high;
  • separate architectural assumptions from verified engineering results;
  • document every major hypothesis;
  • identify the assumptions that must be tested physically at TRL4;
  • maintain compatibility with open-source collaboration while protecting potential industrial interfaces.

Configuration Baseline at TRL3 Entry

Aircraft Architecture

The ISO-Plane TRL3 reference architecture is a high-wing twin-turboprop aircraft with a pressurized fuselage and a ventral container loading system.

The aircraft is designed around the geometric constraints of a 20-foot ISO container.

The general layout includes:

  • forward cockpit;
  • pressurized cargo bay;
  • high wing and central wing box;
  • twin turboprop propulsion;
  • rear empennage structure;
  • nacelle-mounted main landing gear;
  • ventral cargo door;
  • mechanized cargo handling system;
  • twist-lock-based container attachment interfaces.

Cargo Bay Architecture

The cargo bay must accommodate one standard 20-foot ISO container while preserving sufficient structural continuity around the fuselage.

Key design constraints include:

  • container external length compatibility;
  • lateral clearance for loading operations;
  • vertical clearance for container motion;
  • structural clearance around the ventral opening;
  • compatibility with pressurization loads;
  • integration of lifting arms or mechanized load transfer elements;
  • integration of locking points;
  • access to emergency securing systems;
  • maintainability of the cargo handling equipment.

Ventral Door Architecture

The ventral cargo door is one of the defining systems of the ISO-Plane.

At TRL3, the retained concept is a three-panel opening system allowing ground-level access for loading and unloading a 20-foot ISO container.

The ventral door must:

  • preserve aerodynamic continuity in flight;
  • support pressurization sealing requirements;
  • avoid structural weakening of the fuselage beyond acceptable limits;
  • provide sufficient opening clearance for the container;
  • remain compatible with internal floor or guide structures;
  • withstand local loads from cargo handling interfaces;
  • support emergency closing and locking logic;
  • remain inspectable and maintainable.

Landing Gear Architecture

The main landing gear is derived from the Bombardier Q400 concept and is integrated into the nacelles below the high-mounted wings.

This architecture is retained because it avoids occupying the lower fuselage volume required by the cargo bay and ventral opening.

The TRL3 landing gear integration studies must verify:

  • nacelle structural reinforcement;
  • landing load transfer into wing and engine support structures;
  • retraction kinematics;
  • wheel well packaging;
  • gear door integration;
  • compatibility with propeller clearance;
  • ground stability during loading;
  • compatibility with truck and ground loading scenarios.

Propulsion Architecture

The TRL3 propulsion reference remains the Pratt & Whitney PW150A engine class.

This engine family is used as a sizing and integration reference for:

  • power-to-weight estimation;
  • nacelle sizing;
  • propeller clearance studies;
  • fuel consumption modelling;
  • operational range estimation;
  • integration with Q400-derived systems and landing gear concepts.

At TRL3, the engine selection is not yet a procurement decision. It is a technical baseline for configuration development.