Agreed G-G, & while Ti was largely reserved for the likes of CIA 'Blackbirds' & BSA Works Comp Dept's way back then..
Now, with a well fettled 2-stroke mill - such as designed by our talented contributors here, it'd have to be a goer..
Ahh traction. That is where the large diameter rotor has the advantage - much better traction.J.A.W. wrote:I have a decades old engineering text which examines the published power curves for a Kawasaki 750/3,
- the then gun 'Superbike' & the review concluded with some surprise & admiration that this 2-stroke had
such an impressive power to weight ratio - that it could go up vertically at ~40mph - if traction was available..
Rolls Royce refuse to build engines for the F35 because of this,riff_raff wrote:The principles behind VTOL aircraft have been well established, and it a basic fact that a small diameter fixed pitch rotor system operating at high speed is far less efficient at producing lift for a given amount of power than a large rotor system operating at low speed. Consider that the F-35B needs over 30,000hp to produce just 20,000lbf of thrust from its small diameter, high speed lift fan.
100% accurateriff_raff wrote:The principles behind VTOL aircraft have been well established, and it a basic fact that a small diameter fixed pitch rotor system operating at high speed is far less efficient at producing lift for a given amount of power than a large rotor system operating at low speed. Consider that the F-35B needs over 30,000hp to produce just 20,000lbf of thrust from its small diameter, high speed lift fan.
An autogyro has a small diameter prop and a large main rotor so no compromise.gruntguru wrote:OTOH a smaller prop is far better at high speed horizontal flight, so VTOL fixed wing machines like the Osprey and Manolis' portable flyer have to compromise on rotor diameter.
Ken was simply explaining that there are three distinct forms of flight if you exclude lighter than air.Tommy Cooker wrote.
officially there is no such thing as an autogyro, it is a gyrocopter
W Cdr Wallis said that one should fly only aeroplanes, or only helicopters, or only gyrocopters - I know what he meant
he also found using a 'cheep and cheerful' Mculloch engine (from a target drone) that the magneto always failed after a few minutes
because of the loss of magnetism when warm in the 'cheap and cheerful' magneto installed as fit for purpose
autogyro wrote:Rolls Royce refuse to build engines for the F35 because of this,riff_raff wrote:The principles behind VTOL aircraft have been well established, and it a basic fact that a small diameter fixed pitch rotor system operating at high speed is far less efficient at producing lift for a given amount of power than a large rotor system operating at low speed. Consider that the F-35B needs over 30,000hp to produce just 20,000lbf of thrust from its small diameter, high speed lift fan.
The Forward turbine also drives the forward lift fan mechanically on the F35.
That is why it is limited to 9 vertical take offs before a complete engine strip down.
Not exactly a 'safe' operating reliability.
The concept of supersonic VTOL fixed wing was and is fundamentally flawed.
To heavy, to thirsty, low payload and easily out performed by any conventional aircraft of the same generation.
This was simply a cash cow for Lockheed not a development of our Harrier in any shape or form.
It has left Britain with two through deck carriers with no cats or angled flight decks incapable of operating any other fixed wing aircraft than the F35 Dog and helicopters, it is the biggest covered up scandal since WW2.
Argentina has just purchased 24 Saab Grippen from Sweden and after 2015 Britian will lose the Falklands mark my words.
Light helicopters have very limited range and lift capability an electric version has yet to be built with more than ten minutes flight duration and no payload capability, IC version are only slightly better and all are very difficult to get into safe autorotation. They are all without exception dangerous and I know this from my own flight experience.
There are one or two twin seat helicopters of light construction that just meet flight safety but only just.
Light autogyros by comparison can have a better performance in most aspects than any FULL sized helicopter.
Better range, speed, handling, safety. payload capability (relative to size) and much more.
Autogyros only lack VTOL which can be added with jump start, jet tip drive or a light electric partial drive.
Please look at the link I posted, this aircraft was fully developed for military and civil tasking.
We undertook ship landings on small patrol vessels of 30ft, full air to ground missile trials against tank armour and rapid deployment exercises from the back of C130s )flying on operation from deployment inside two minutes.
I still cannot post of its operational use as a two seater before the Berlin wall came down or of other covert operations it still undertakes.
Please stop posting about impractical light helicopters.
http://www.kate.aviators.net/gyro2.htm