Abstract

Skin, as the crucial component of aircraft, should be milled along the edges of the frame to ensure the mounting accuracy. Traditional skin milling uses visual measurement and offline planning to generate a machining path that corresponds to the overall shape of the frame edge. To enhance adaptability and processing efficiency, an online planning method is proposed. However, it imposes greater demands on the computational efficiency, accuracy, and stability of the algorithm. In this paper, a real-time path planning method based on frame feature extraction and chronological feature optimization is proposed for the milling of attached frame-skin. The method uses a line laser to scan the surface features of both skin and frame structures, facilitating real-time extraction of feature structures. Periodic calculations of position and posture are conducted based on the time series, and a non-fitting method is used to generate a smooth and high-precision machining trajectory. The efficacy in achieving real-time path planning for the milling module is verified by experiments on prototypes of aircraft skin. The algorithm exhibits a duration of less than 8 ms in a run cycle, while maintaining accuracy within ±0.5mm.

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