Technical data

13773-001
95-00
Page 1
95-00SPECIAL PURPOSE EQUIPMENT
SPECIAL PURPOSE EQUIPMENT
1. GENERAL
The airplane is equipped with a Cirrus Airplane Parachute System (CAPS) designed to bring the aircraft
and its occupants to the ground in the event of a life-threatening emergency.
CAPS consists of a parachute, a solid-propellant rocket to deploy the parachute, a rocket activation han-
dle, and a harness imbedded within the fuselage structure.
A composite enclosure containing the parachute and solid-propellant rocket is mounted to the airplane
structure immediately aft of the baggage compartment bulkhead. The enclosure is covered and protected
from the elements by a thin composite cover.
The parachute is enclosed within a deployment bag that stages the deployment and inflation sequence.
The deployment bag creates an orderly deployment process by allowing the canopy to inflate only after the
rocket motor has pulled the parachute lines taut.
The parachute itself is a 2400-square-foot round canopy equipped with a slider, an annular-shaped fabric
panel with a diameter significantly less than the open diameter of the canopy. The canopy suspension lines
are routed through grommets so that the slider is free to move along the suspension lines. Since the slider
is positioned at the top of the suspension lines near the canopy, at the beginning of the deployment
sequence, the slider limits the initial diameter of the parachute and the rate at which the parachute inflates.
The canopy inflates as the slider moves down the suspension lines.
A three-point attachment harness connects the airplane to the parachute. The harness consists of two for-
ward straps faired into the fuselage skin and attached to the firewall, and one rear strap attached to FS 222
bulkhead located directly forward of the CAPS enclosure. The harness system is designed to control the
pitch dynamics of the airplane during the deployment cycle by limiting the aft attachment straps length
until the cycle is complete. This is accomplished by utilizing a variable length aft strap section. The shorter
section, which initially supports the load, employes a mechanical release that is activated by two pyrotech-
nic cutters which fire when the short section is pulled taut during extraction. The harness strap then length-
ens and load is transferred to the longer section.
2. DESCRIPTION (See Figure 95-001)
Two separate and deliberate pilot actions are required to deploy the CAPS parachute. The first action
requires the pilot to remove the access cover from the activation handle enclosure. The second action
requires the pilot to pull the activation handle out, and down several inches.
Upon pulling the activation handle the following sequence occurs; the activation cable compresses the
igniters steel spring and cocks the plunger. When one half-inch of plunger travel is reached, captured ball-
bearings are released allowing the plunger to strike the firing pins. The firing pins strike two primers which
ignite the primary booster. The primary booster ignites a secondary booster ensuring ignition of the larger
rocket motor. Once ignited, the rocket propellants hot gases are exhausted through the nozzle and the
rocket bursts through the CAPS enclosure cover pulling the suspension lines and deployment bag from the
enclosure. The deployment bag then stages the deployment and inflation of the parachute. As the para-
chute inflates, the forward harness assembly grows taut, pulls free of the fuselage skin, and stops at the
firewall compression tube which supports the forward portion of the airplane. The rear harness shorter
section is pulled taut, initiates the pyrotechnic line cutters which sever the shorter lines, and allow the
longer harness section to support the aft load. The airplane then assumes its touchdown attitude; approxi-
mately ten degrees nose down, to optimize occupant protection.
30 Nov 2000