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Helicopter Rotor
A helicopter rotor is the rotating part of a helicopter which generates an aerodynamic force. The helicopter rotor, also called the rotor system, usually refers to the helicopter's main rotor which is mounted on a vertical mast over the top of the helicopter, although it can refer to the helicopter's tail rotor
as well. A helicopter's rotor is generally made up of two or more rotor
blades, although several earlier helicopters had a rotor with a single
main rotor blade. The main rotor provides both lift and thrust, while the tail rotor provides thrust to compensate for the main rotor's torque.
Tail rotors are generally simpler than main rotors since they require only thrust control. A simplified swash plate is used to control collective pitch. Two bladed tail rotors include a teetering hinge to compensate for asymmetry of lift.
History and development
Before the development of powered helicopters in the mid 20th century, autogyro pioneer Juan de la Cierva
researched and developed many of the fundamentals of the rotor. Cierva
is credited with successful development of multi-bladed, fully
articulated rotor systems. This type of system is widely used today in
many multi-bladed helicopters.
In the 1930s, Arthur Young improved stability of two bladed rotor systems with the introduction of a stabilizer bar. This system was used in several Bell and Hiller helicopter models. It is also used in many remote control model helicopters.
Rotor head design
The rotor head is a robust hub with attachment points for the blades
and mechanical linkages designed to control the pitch of the blades.
Parts and functions
The simple rotor of a Robinson R22.
The simple rotor of a Robinson R22 showing (from the top):
- The following are driven by the link rods from the rotating part of the swashplate.
- Pitch hinges, allowing the blades to 'twist', ie change pitch or roll.
- Teeter hinge, allowing one blade to rise while the other falls.
Usually rise and fall is due to pitch or roll. There may be harmonics,
it allows pitch and roll of the rotor to be independent of the
fuselage, it disables negative G flights.
- Scissor link and counterweight, carries the main shaft rotation down to the upper swashplate
- Rubber covers protect moving and stationary shafts
- Swashplates, transmitting cyclic and collective pitch to the blades (the top one rotates)
- Three non-rotating control rods transmit pitch information to the lower swashplate
- Main mast leading down to main gearbox
Swash plate
-
The pitch of main rotor blades is varied throughout its rotation in order to control the magnitude and direction of the thrust vector.
Collective pitch is used to increase or decrease rotor thrust
perpendicular to the axis of rotation. Collective pitch controls the
magnitude of the thrust vector. Blade pitch is varied during rotation
to effectively tilt the rotor disk and control the direction of the
thrust vector. These blade pitch variations are controlled by the swash
plate.
The swash plate is two concentric disks or plates, one plate rotates
with the blades while the other does not rotate. The rotating plate is
connected to individual blades through pitch links and pitch horns. The
non-rotating plate is connected to links which are manipulated by pilot
controls, specifically, the collective and cyclic controls. Rotors with
more than two blades have two dedicated connections, which make the
inner swash plate turn. In two bladed rotor systems the blades take
over this task.
The swash plate can shift vertically and tilt to some degree.
Through shifting and tilting, the non-rotating plate controls the
rotating plate, which in turn controls the individual blade pitch.
Fully articulated rotors
During the development of the autogyro, Juan de la Cierva
built scale models to test his designs. After promising results, he
built full size models. Just prior to takeoff, his autogyro rolled
unexpectedly and was destroyed. Believing this to have been caused by
sudden wind gusts, Cierva rebuilt it only to suffer an almost identical
accident. These setbacks caused Cierva to consider why his models flew
successfully, while the full-sized aircraft did not.
Cierva realized that the advancing blade on one side created greater
lift than on the retreating side due to increased airspeed on the
advancing side which creates a rolling force. The scale model was
constructed with flexible materials, specifically rattan, so the rolling force was absorbed as the blades flapped and compensated for dissymmetry of lift. Cierva concluded that the full size steel rotor hub was far too rigid and introduced flapping hinges at the rotor hub.
Flapping hinges solved the rolling problem, but introduced lateral
hub stresses as the blade center of mass moved as the blades flapped.
Due to conservation of angular momentum,
the blades accelerate and decelerate as their center of mass moves
inward and outward, like a twirling ice skater. Cierva added lag-lead,
or delta hinges to reduce lateral stresses.
Stabilizer bar
Arthur M. Young
found that stability could be increased significantly with the addition
of a stabilizer bar perpendicular to the two blades. The stabilizer bar
has weighted ends which cause it to stay relatively stable in the plane
of rotation. The stabilizer bar is linked with the swash plate in such
a manner as to reduce the pitch rate. The two blades can flap as a unit
and therefore do not require lag-lead hinges (the whole rotor slows
down an accelerates per turn). Two bladed systems require a single
teetering hinge and two coning hinges to permit modest coning of the
rotor disk as thrust is increased. The configuration is known under
multiple names, including Hiller panels, Hiller-system,
Bell-Hiller-system, and flybar system.
In fly by wire helicopters or RC models, a computer with gyroscopes and a venturi sensor can replace the stabilizer. This flybar-less design has the advantage of easy reconfiguration.
Blade design
The blades of a helicopter are long, narrow airfoil cross-sections with a high aspect ratio, a shape which minimises drag from tip vortices (see the wings of a glider
for comparison). They generally contain a degree of washout to reduce
the lift generated at the tips, where the airflow is fastest and vortex
generation would be a significant problem. Rotor blades are made out of
various materials, including aluminium, composite structure and steel /
Titanium erosion shields along the leading edge.
Limitations and hazards
Helicopters with semi-rigid rotors, for example the two-bladed design seen on Robinson and some other light helicopters, must not be subjected to a low-g condition. Otherwise their rotors may move beyond the normal limits in a condition known as mast bumping which can cause the rotor droop stops to shear the mast and hence detach the whole system from the aircraft.
External links
Tail Rotor
Traditional Tail rotor of an Aérospatiale Puma
The tail rotor of a helicopter is mounted on the tail of a traditional single-rotor helicopter, close to perpendicular to the main rotor. It is primarily used in order to counteract the yaw motion and the torque
that a rapidly turning disk naturally produces. The tail rotor in
simple terms is a propeller that pushes the body of the helicopter in
the opposite direction of the main rotor, preventing loss of control.
Design variations
There are two major variations to traditional tail rotor design
concerning the placement of the tail rotor and the surrounding
structure. Some companies such as Eurocopter enclose the rotor within a fantail assembly. Such design - called fenestron - protects the tail rotor from foreign object damage
better than the traditional outer mounted design but complicates the
design of the tailcone to account for the enclosed mechanisms.
New developments
In some more recent helicopter designs, the tail rotor has been
mounted tangential to the furthest back point of the top rotor. That is
to say that it looks much like an old propeller plane, only at the back
of the helicopter instead of the front of a wing. In these new designs
the rotor spins in a direction opposite to the top rotor (i.e.
counter-clockwise if the rotor spins clockwise and vise-versa). This in
effect, cancels the spin and has the added benefit of producing forward
thrust.
Most, if not all, dual-rotary helicopters do not use tail rotors,
instead, the design of the two main rotors is such that they spin in
the opposite directions of each other, thus each cancels out the torque
and yaw produced by the other. This has been researched in the past and
has been incorporated into some European designs.
Sikorsky Aircraft, a UTC
subsidiary is currently researching the merger of these two concepts
with a dual rotor helicopter with a rear rotor to provide additional
forward thrust and a respective increase in speed and operating range.
First flight of a prototype aircraft, the Sikorsky X2 Demonstrator is expected to be accomplished by the end of 2006
See also
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Helicopter Rotor"
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