HyperStruct is a modern implementation of the SWEEP software originally produced by Rockwell International in 1974. The Structural Weight Estimation Program for Aircraft (SWEEP) was originally implemented in FORTRAN. The source code for this program is no longer publicly available, but the US Defence Technical Information Center has published all the original documentation from Rockwell (which is extensive).
This project aims to meet the same objectives as SWEEP: devlop analytical computer programs capable of predicting the weight of aircraft structural components suitable for use during the conceptual phase of the aircraft design cycle. It builds a very high level of fidelity in the weight estimates, with flexiblity to a plethora of design variables. All of this is predominantly derived from fundamental structural methods, or historically predicated empirical formulas.
- 😬 Not much! This project requires a lot of boilerplate before any meaningful results or demos.
- A major goal for 2025 is a functional demo of at least the Fuselage methods! Stay tuned!
- Even without the aircraft or fuselage synthesis routines, the fuselage component classes can still be used to size Cover panels (without cutouts), and pressure bulkheads. This includes sizing Covers for local panel flutter and acoustic fatigue!
- The majority of work at the moment revolves around the Fuselage synthesis. It is considered the second most complicated assembly for weight prediction, surpassed only by the Wing (there's more than 3 volumes of documentation Rockwell dedicated to that guy!).
- After a functional Fuselage primary structure module, and perhaps started before in support of the synthesis methods, the Airloads module will be worked to derive external loading on the aircraft from basic mission requirements.
- From that point, it may be beneficial to focus on the "simpler" sizing methods such as secondary structure, or Landing Gear (things that are mostly empirical or straight forward for weight approximations).
You can install Hyperstruct via pip from PyPI:
$ pip install hyperstruct
Please see the Command-line Reference for details.
Contributions are very welcome. To learn more, see the Contributor Guide.
Distributed under the terms of the MIT license, Hyperstruct is free and open source software.
If you encounter any problems, please file an issue along with a detailed description.
This project was originally generated from @cjolowicz's Hypermodern Python Cookiecutter template. Benjamin Crews is the creator and primary owner, with significant contributions from I. Maloney. Creation of this project would not be possible without the thorough documentation from Rockwell International (various authors).