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There was a design for an inflatable car years ago it was quit good.
"Ken Sandyeggo" wrote in message om... (sanman) wrote in message . com... I was reading about inflatable wings: http://www.spacedaily.com/news/plane...-wing-01a.html http://www.ilcdover.com/EngineeredInfl/inflatwing.pdf and I wondered why these couldn't be implemented as rotor configuration, for a "flying car" type of vehicle -- ie. a car that could instantly convert to helicopter flight. If you look back at those older Hiller helicopters, they had big, thick, rigid aluminum rotors: http://avia.russian.ee/vertigo/hiller_x-2-235-r.html http://avia.russian.ee/vertigo/hiller_xh-44-r.html An inflatable equivalent might be somewhat thicker and yet not be so rigid, and would not have the high mass penalty. So you'd be riding a sort of lightweight automotive vehicle along the road, and you could switch to helicopter mode, with inflatable rotors popping out on the top of your vehicle. Your engine would then power the rotors, and you'd fly away. Once you landed again, the deflated rotors would be tucked back into whatever compartment they'd popped out from. Cmon, there are all kinds of wierd-looking lightweight concept cars out there, so why not this? What would be the main difficulties with a concept like this? Getting anyone to stop laughing long enough to think about it. Are you related to Moller? KJSDCAUSA |
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"Christopher" wrote in message ...
There was a design for an inflatable car years ago it was quit good. If it was only "moderately good," the way we buy junk, it'd be on the market. "Quite good" would make it an overwhelming success. If it's not on the market at all, it was "quite" junk. Maybe had a couple good features, but not enough that people would buy it, or we'd see them all over the place. KJSDCAUSA "Ken Sandyeggo" wrote in message om... (sanman) wrote in message . com... I was reading about inflatable wings: http://www.spacedaily.com/news/plane...-wing-01a.html http://www.ilcdover.com/EngineeredInfl/inflatwing.pdf and I wondered why these couldn't be implemented as rotor configuration, for a "flying car" type of vehicle -- ie. a car that could instantly convert to helicopter flight. If you look back at those older Hiller helicopters, they had big, thick, rigid aluminum rotors: http://avia.russian.ee/vertigo/hiller_x-2-235-r.html http://avia.russian.ee/vertigo/hiller_xh-44-r.html An inflatable equivalent might be somewhat thicker and yet not be so rigid, and would not have the high mass penalty. So you'd be riding a sort of lightweight automotive vehicle along the road, and you could switch to helicopter mode, with inflatable rotors popping out on the top of your vehicle. Your engine would then power the rotors, and you'd fly away. Once you landed again, the deflated rotors would be tucked back into whatever compartment they'd popped out from. Cmon, there are all kinds of wierd-looking lightweight concept cars out there, so why not this? What would be the main difficulties with a concept like this? Getting anyone to stop laughing long enough to think about it. Are you related to Moller? KJSDCAUSA |
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