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So would the chute be attached above the Jesus Nut? Otherwise if the blades
are turning, where would you connect the chute? "Steve R" wrote in message ... Exactly what I was thinking. :-o Notice they try to placate the ignorant by saying that they're working on a "ballistic emergency chute." As Stu points out, if you're low enough to not need autorotative capabilities, you're not going to be anywhere near high enough for a ballistic emergency chute to do you any good either. No thanks! Steve R. "Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote in message ... Lawn Dart comes to mind with the designs that ignore the need for autorotation. The claim that low altitude helicopters have little benefit from autorotation is false. I've seen autos done from 40' agl and 40mph. I asked Airscooter what was available to the pilot at 40 and 40 and got the same kind of answer. If the Airscooter engine stops, the fixed pitch of the blades will cause the rotor to slow quickly and you will be in instant ka ka. I wouldn't think of one of these birds until I saw an engine out demonstrated by their test pilot. -- Stu Fields Baby Belle driver www.vkss.com "JohnO" wrote in message oups.com... boB wrote: Shiver wrote: http://www.airscooter.com/pages/airscooter_main.htm I Want One - I Want One - I Want One http://www.airscooter.com/pages/airs...edia_files.htm I Want One - I Want One - I Want One Me too.... right up until I read this in the FAQ: "Question: Does the AirScooter auto-rotate? Answer: The AirScooter is designed for the recreational sport flyer and as such does not auto-rotate. The AirScooter is designed for recreational flying at low altitude where even traditional helicopters have little benefit from auto-rotation. Design efforts have been done on a ballistic emergency chute for the AirScooter." Yeah me too. That engine is a new design too so who knows how reliable it will be as used in the air scooter? No cyclic, swash plates, tail rotor etc is all great but if the engine quits, the belt breaks or anything else fails, you are history in this thing. *** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com *** |
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From what I remember reading in gyro circles, one group was looking at
mounting the chute on top of the rotor hub, attached via some kind of turn buckle. "Might" be a good idea but no one was brave enough to try it out. The only kit manufacturer that I know of that offers a ballistic chute on their gyro is Air Command. It's been a while since I've looked at their web site (www.aircommand.com) so I checked and a search showed that they offer a ballistic chute option on their two place machines. The one I saw for real was mounted below the gyro so if you ever set it off, you're going to be coming to the ground, "inverted." :-o I'm not sure I like that idea but it may be way better than the alternative. Again, I don't know if anyone's tried this yet. FWIW, Fly Safe, Steve R. "Ron Snipes" wrote in message om... So would the chute be attached above the Jesus Nut? Otherwise if the blades are turning, where would you connect the chute? "Steve R" wrote in message ... Exactly what I was thinking. :-o Notice they try to placate the ignorant by saying that they're working on a "ballistic emergency chute." As Stu points out, if you're low enough to not need autorotative capabilities, you're not going to be anywhere near high enough for a ballistic emergency chute to do you any good either. No thanks! Steve R. "Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote in message ... Lawn Dart comes to mind with the designs that ignore the need for autorotation. The claim that low altitude helicopters have little benefit from autorotation is false. I've seen autos done from 40' agl and 40mph. I asked Airscooter what was available to the pilot at 40 and 40 and got the same kind of answer. If the Airscooter engine stops, the fixed pitch of the blades will cause the rotor to slow quickly and you will be in instant ka ka. I wouldn't think of one of these birds until I saw an engine out demonstrated by their test pilot. -- Stu Fields Baby Belle driver www.vkss.com "JohnO" wrote in message oups.com... boB wrote: Shiver wrote: http://www.airscooter.com/pages/airscooter_main.htm I Want One - I Want One - I Want One http://www.airscooter.com/pages/airs...edia_files.htm I Want One - I Want One - I Want One Me too.... right up until I read this in the FAQ: "Question: Does the AirScooter auto-rotate? Answer: The AirScooter is designed for the recreational sport flyer and as such does not auto-rotate. The AirScooter is designed for recreational flying at low altitude where even traditional helicopters have little benefit from auto-rotation. Design efforts have been done on a ballistic emergency chute for the AirScooter." Yeah me too. That engine is a new design too so who knows how reliable it will be as used in the air scooter? No cyclic, swash plates, tail rotor etc is all great but if the engine quits, the belt breaks or anything else fails, you are history in this thing. *** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com *** |
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On 2006-04-19 00:06:18 -0400, "Steve R" said:
From what I remember reading in gyro circles, one group was looking at mounting the chute on top of the rotor hub, attached via some kind of turn buckle. "Might" be a good idea but no one was brave enough to try it out. probably a bad idea on a gyro. Weight above the gimbal head plays with flight control. The only kit manufacturer that I know of that offers a ballistic chute on their gyro is Air Command. It's been a while since I've looked at their web site (www.aircommand.com) so I checked and a search showed that they offer a ballistic chute option on their two place machines. The one I saw for real was mounted below the gyro so if you ever set it off, you're going to be coming to the ground, "inverted." Larry Neal developed that, I believe, when he was working with AC (he also centreline-thrusted their machines). Larry is now marketing his own line of gyros, including one that's roadable as a motorcycle. He promises a ballistic chute as a future option. The way the Air Command chute works is in two stages, in stage one it hangs you inverted, then when the rotation of the rotors is arrested, you pull handle #2, releasing the low-down attach point, and you drop around to normal orientation. No one has ever done it for real, and it has not been tested AFAIK with models, let alone full size. In theory it would work if everything went well and the pilot was conscious throughout. You'd probably want to consider a possible inverted landing at about 20-22 fps and construct an appropriate roll structure. A Spanish company that makes copies of the BRS chutes (under the "we're too small to be worth suing" licence apparently -- BRS are a bit cheesed about it) has installed some on gyros. I have seen this installation on an RAF and it is conceptually identical to Larry's Air Command install. I have heard that the Galaxy chute company, which I believe is Czech, has a gyro chute but haven't seen how they do it. I doubt the total number of ballistic chutes on rotorcraft worldwide reaches double digits. I know none has ever been deployed in angre. There is some talk that one of Larry's current dealers will assist in developing the chute including full size tests. A test pilot would bail out of a ballasted & instrumented gyro at altitude and then the ballistic would be fired by remote control. Win or lose, this would gather useful data, and it would be safe as the pilot would be down and away before the chute was fired. The tests will be done overseas where regulators are more cooperative and less timid than in the USA. :-o I'm not sure I like that idea but it may be way better than the alternative. Again, I don't know if anyone's tried this yet. Ballistic chutes have been saving lives for two decades on ULs, almost as long on experimentals, for five years on certified aircraft, and they're coming on jets. They would be big lifesavers if they could be made to work on gyroplanes, as the most typical gyroplane fatal is a tumble from around pattern altitude. They would also have potential for life savings on helicopters -- look at the double-fatal cop crash in Michigan last week. R22 went in vertically after apparent loss of power for reasons yet unknown. Witnesses reported he was hovering OGE at several hundred feet of altitiude. (Yes, he was operating in a dangerous part of the performance envelope, but he couldn't do what he was doing -- comb through a wooded area for a fleeing convict -- any other way, really). Of course, a chute isn't going to be much help on a fixed-pitch helicopter like the original subject of the thread. A gyro is always in autorotation, a helicopter has that option in most of its performance envelope, including the part where you always fly unless you can't avoid it. With a fixed-pitch helicopter, you are betting your life, or serious and painful injury, on the reliability of that motor. cheers -=K=- Rule #1: Don't hit anything big. |
#4
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Hi Kevin,
Thanks for the response. I hadn't heard bout the two stage deployment you mention. Seems to me you've have to have plenty of altitude to have time for everything to stabilize inverted, then deploy the second stage to right the machine before landing. I'm not sure I'd want to go through the flip that would occur at that point! :-o Besides, it seems to me that gyros as a rule, don't fly high enough to take advantage of that? Of course, all it has to do is save one life to be worth it I suppose. At least no one's been forced to find out whether or not this will work for real, so far! :-) Fly Safe, Steve R. "Kevin O'Brien" kevin@org-header-is-my-domain-name wrote in message news:2006042216351550073%kevin@orgheaderismydomain name... On 2006-04-19 00:06:18 -0400, "Steve R" said: From what I remember reading in gyro circles, one group was looking at mounting the chute on top of the rotor hub, attached via some kind of turn buckle. "Might" be a good idea but no one was brave enough to try it out. probably a bad idea on a gyro. Weight above the gimbal head plays with flight control. The only kit manufacturer that I know of that offers a ballistic chute on their gyro is Air Command. It's been a while since I've looked at their web site (www.aircommand.com) so I checked and a search showed that they offer a ballistic chute option on their two place machines. The one I saw for real was mounted below the gyro so if you ever set it off, you're going to be coming to the ground, "inverted." Larry Neal developed that, I believe, when he was working with AC (he also centreline-thrusted their machines). Larry is now marketing his own line of gyros, including one that's roadable as a motorcycle. He promises a ballistic chute as a future option. The way the Air Command chute works is in two stages, in stage one it hangs you inverted, then when the rotation of the rotors is arrested, you pull handle #2, releasing the low-down attach point, and you drop around to normal orientation. No one has ever done it for real, and it has not been tested AFAIK with models, let alone full size. In theory it would work if everything went well and the pilot was conscious throughout. You'd probably want to consider a possible inverted landing at about 20-22 fps and construct an appropriate roll structure. A Spanish company that makes copies of the BRS chutes (under the "we're too small to be worth suing" licence apparently -- BRS are a bit cheesed about it) has installed some on gyros. I have seen this installation on an RAF and it is conceptually identical to Larry's Air Command install. I have heard that the Galaxy chute company, which I believe is Czech, has a gyro chute but haven't seen how they do it. I doubt the total number of ballistic chutes on rotorcraft worldwide reaches double digits. I know none has ever been deployed in angre. There is some talk that one of Larry's current dealers will assist in developing the chute including full size tests. A test pilot would bail out of a ballasted & instrumented gyro at altitude and then the ballistic would be fired by remote control. Win or lose, this would gather useful data, and it would be safe as the pilot would be down and away before the chute was fired. The tests will be done overseas where regulators are more cooperative and less timid than in the USA. :-o I'm not sure I like that idea but it may be way better than the alternative. Again, I don't know if anyone's tried this yet. Ballistic chutes have been saving lives for two decades on ULs, almost as long on experimentals, for five years on certified aircraft, and they're coming on jets. They would be big lifesavers if they could be made to work on gyroplanes, as the most typical gyroplane fatal is a tumble from around pattern altitude. They would also have potential for life savings on helicopters -- look at the double-fatal cop crash in Michigan last week. R22 went in vertically after apparent loss of power for reasons yet unknown. Witnesses reported he was hovering OGE at several hundred feet of altitiude. (Yes, he was operating in a dangerous part of the performance envelope, but he couldn't do what he was doing -- comb through a wooded area for a fleeing convict -- any other way, really). Of course, a chute isn't going to be much help on a fixed-pitch helicopter like the original subject of the thread. A gyro is always in autorotation, a helicopter has that option in most of its performance envelope, including the part where you always fly unless you can't avoid it. With a fixed-pitch helicopter, you are betting your life, or serious and painful injury, on the reliability of that motor. cheers -=K=- Rule #1: Don't hit anything big. |
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Kevin O'Brien wrote:
Larry Neal developed that, I believe, when he was working with AC (he also centreline-thrusted their machines). Larry is now marketing his own line of gyros, including one that's roadable as a motorcycle. He promises a ballistic chute as a future option. Is there a web site I can look at the combination Gyro? I always thought a person could license an RAF as a motorcycle but the wheels aren't able to handle any serious "on ground" driving. -- boB Wing 70 U.S. Army Aviation (retired) Central Texas - 5NM West of Gray Army Airfield (KGRK) |
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#7
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URL should have been sorry for the screw up..
http://www.thebutterflyllc.com/ PATENT ISSUED FOR FLYING MOTORCYCLE THAT’S FLYING NOW! Press Release January 16, 2006 It’s official: Larry Neal, inventor of a new flying motorcycle concept, received a U.S. patent for it Dec. 27. “And I’m flying it now!” said Neal, president of The Butterfly LLC company that makes gyroplane kits. “Every flying vehicle we design and build will be based on this patent,” Neal said. “It means we’re free to develop practical flying vehicles without infringing on patent rights of other inventors.” A two-place flying car version is also being developed. Neal said he was granted U.S. Patent No. 6,978,969 on Dec. 27, and the next day he successfully test-flew the new folding rotor blades. He said the patent covers a “fly-drive vehicle” with a folding rotor shaft and a transmission to power either the drive propeller or wheels. “The problem with flying cars in the past was what to do with the wings once you were on the ground,” said Neal. “With a “fly-drive” gyroplane, just fold the rotor blades and drive on down the road.” “Using rotor blades for the wings of a flying car makes the fly-drive Super Sky Cycle a new kind of vehicle.” Neal said. “There’s nothing else like it, a gyroplane that can fly at freeway speeds, land in 20 feet, be driven home as a motorcycle, and fit in you garage.” The Super Sky Cycle is based on a Monarch single-place gyroplane kit, Neal said. First flown in the Super Sky Cycle configuration on Dec. 23, the new fly-drive vehicle can fly at 20 mph, cruise at 50 mph at half throttle, and tops out at 65 mph. He said a Rotax 582 engine is used with a three-blade 60-inch propeller. Neal said that he plans to demonstrate the Super Sky Cycle in both flying and driving modes at the Experimental Aircraft Association’s “Sun’n Fun” fly-in at Lakeland, Fla., April 4-10. For more information; write The Butterfly LLC, P.O. Box 927, Boyd, Texas 76023 phone 940-627-9887 email Larry Neal at: |
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