![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've been reading up on gyro precession as it refers to gyroplanes. It
seems that is not how a rotor disc works on a gyroplane. The info I've found so far states that: a two blade rotor system doesn't tilt by precession, but that it's entirely aerodynamic and uses vane (pitch?). How does gyro precession effect rotor blades on a helicopter? (I could do some research on the www, but I would like to hear someone's opinion here first) |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... I've been reading up on gyro precession as it refers to gyroplanes. It seems that is not how a rotor disc works on a gyroplane. The info I've found so far states that: a two blade rotor system doesn't tilt by precession, but that it's entirely aerodynamic and uses vane (pitch?). How does gyro precession effect rotor blades on a helicopter? (I could do some research on the www, but I would like to hear someone's opinion here first) Where did you get that from? I'm not sure I agree with it. The experimental gyros I've looked at may not have a swash plate like a helicopter does but rather, tilts the rotor hub relative to the plane of the rotor disk. The net effect of that is to apply a cyclic pitch action to the main blades and they react 90 degrees in the direction of rotation per gyroscopic precession. What info source are you looking at? Steve R. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 19, 9:10 pm, "Steve R." wrote:
Where did you get that from? I'm not sure I agree with it. The experimental gyros I've looked at may not have a swash plate like a helicopter does but rather, tilts the rotor hub relative to the plane of the rotor disk. The net effect of that is to apply a cyclic pitch action to the main blades and they react 90 degrees in the direction of rotation per gyroscopic precession. What info source are you looking at? Steve R. Hi Steve, I got my info from an article written by: Don McCoy, via regalpony.ca and found on asra.org.au A summary, in his own words: (gyroplanes) The joystick is moved to the right causing the rotor head axis to tilt to the right and out of alignment with the rotor axis. The pivoting motion of the teeter bolt causes the pitch angle of the blades to van. during the rotation. increasing the lift at the front and reducing it at the rear. The resulting large torque due to the aerodynamic effects of the change in pitch is directed to the right and causes the rotor axis (angular momentum of the rotors) to rotate to the right following the rotor head axis. As the rotor axis comes back in line with the tilted rotor head axis, the pitch angle ceases to vary and the lift from the front and rear rotor blade equalises, the torque vanishes and the rotors are tilted to the right to initiate the turn. It's a long article. I'm happy with his explanation as per gyroplanes. i.e.: a gryoplane uses an unpowered rotor (as you know) and the whole body of the gyroplane hangs from the gimble head. But on a helicopter, the rotor is powered and operates like a fan, the helicopter body is firmly fixed to rotor head. anyway, what's your opinion of how precession works on a helicopter? |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... On Jan 19, 9:10 pm, "Steve R." wrote: Where did you get that from? I'm not sure I agree with it. The experimental gyros I've looked at may not have a swash plate like a helicopter does but rather, tilts the rotor hub relative to the plane of the rotor disk. The net effect of that is to apply a cyclic pitch action to the main blades and they react 90 degrees in the direction of rotation per gyroscopic precession. What info source are you looking at? Steve R. Hi Steve, I got my info from an article written by: Don McCoy, via regalpony.ca and found on asra.org.au A summary, in his own words: (gyroplanes) The joystick is moved to the right causing the rotor head axis to tilt to the right and out of alignment with the rotor axis. The pivoting motion of the teeter bolt causes the pitch angle of the blades to van. during the rotation. increasing the lift at the front and reducing it at the rear. The resulting large torque due to the aerodynamic effects of the change in pitch is directed to the right and causes the rotor axis (angular momentum of the rotors) to rotate to the right following the rotor head axis. As the rotor axis comes back in line with the tilted rotor head axis, the pitch angle ceases to vary and the lift from the front and rear rotor blade equalises, the torque vanishes and the rotors are tilted to the right to initiate the turn. It's a long article. I'm happy with his explanation as per gyroplanes. i.e.: a gryoplane uses an unpowered rotor (as you know) and the whole body of the gyroplane hangs from the gimble head. But on a helicopter, the rotor is powered and operates like a fan, the helicopter body is firmly fixed to rotor head. anyway, what's your opinion of how precession works on a helicopter? Hi Handel.barz, Thanks for the quote. Some of what he's saying makes sense to me, some of it doesn't. I don't understand where this "large torque" caused by the pilots control input is coming from. The gyros rotor system is in a perpetual state of autorotation and there is no torque involved, per say. Moving the control as the author says will indeed cause an increase in the pitch of one blade while decreasing it on the other. That will increase the aerodynamic drag of the one blade while decreasing it on the other but that's not applying a "torque" to the system one way or the other as far as I can tell. The change in pitch alone will also cause a difference in lift on opposite sides of the rotor disk and the blades will precess (sp?) and change the plane of rotation of the rotor disk as a result. In my mind, it's pretty much the same thing a helicopter does, only the cyclic pitch change is achieved via a swashplate on the helicopter as apposed to changing the attitude of the rotor hub itself relative to the rotor mast to do the same thing. The one thing you quoted that I'll definitely take exception to it the sentence that says "the helicopter body is firmly fixed to the rotor head." That may be true in some cases but definitely not in all of them. The experimental gyros I've looked at (Air Command, Dominator, Little Wing, Sport Copter, and others) all have a fixed pitch (no collective capability) under slung teetering rotor systems. That is a very common rotor design for a number of helicopters too with the exception that the helicopters have collective pitch. Some of the helicopters that come to mind that also use an under slung teetering rotor hub are the Jet Ranger, Huey's, the old Bell 47's, Robinson's, and Rotorway's Exec on the experimental side. Their rotor hubs look a bit difference but they have similar characteristics and restrictions while flying. For example, none of them handle sustained low or negative G loads for very long. FWIW! :-) Steve R. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 20, 6:12 pm, "Steve R." wrote:
wrote in message ... On Jan 19, 9:10 pm, "Steve R." wrote: Where did you get that from? I'm not sure I agree with it. The experimental gyros I've looked at may not have a swash plate like a helicopter does but rather, tilts the rotor hub relative to the plane of the rotor disk. The net effect of that is to apply a cyclic pitch action to the main blades and they react 90 degrees in the direction of rotation per gyroscopic precession. What info source are you looking at? Steve R. Hi Steve, I got my info from an article written by: Don McCoy, via regalpony.ca and found on asra.org.au A summary, in his own words: (gyroplanes) The joystick is moved to the right causing the rotor head axis to tilt to the right and out of alignment with the rotor axis. The pivoting motion of the teeter bolt causes the pitch angle of the blades to van. during the rotation. increasing the lift at the front and reducing it at the rear. The resulting large torque due to the aerodynamic effects of the change in pitch is directed to the right and causes the rotor axis (angular momentum of the rotors) to rotate to the right following the rotor head axis. As the rotor axis comes back in line with the tilted rotor head axis, the pitch angle ceases to vary and the lift from the front and rear rotor blade equalises, the torque vanishes and the rotors are tilted to the right to initiate the turn. It's a long article. I'm happy with his explanation as per gyroplanes. i.e.: a gryoplane uses an unpowered rotor (as you know) and the whole body of the gyroplane hangs from the gimble head. But on a helicopter, the rotor is powered and operates like a fan, the helicopter body is firmly fixed to rotor head. anyway, what's your opinion of how precession works on a helicopter? Hi Handel.barz, Thanks for the quote. Some of what he's saying makes sense to me, some of it doesn't. I don't understand where this "large torque" caused by the pilots control input is coming from. The gyros rotor system is in a perpetual state of autorotation and there is no torque involved, per say. Moving the control as the author says will indeed cause an increase in the pitch of one blade while decreasing it on the other. That will increase the aerodynamic drag of the one blade while decreasing it on the other but that's not applying a "torque" to the system one way or the other as far as I can tell. The change in pitch alone will also cause a difference in lift on opposite sides of the rotor disk and the blades will precess (sp?) and change the plane of rotation of the rotor disk as a result. In my mind, it's pretty much the same thing a helicopter does, only the cyclic pitch change is achieved via a swashplate on the helicopter as apposed to changing the attitude of the rotor hub itself relative to the rotor mast to do the same thing. The one thing you quoted that I'll definitely take exception to it the sentence that says "the helicopter body is firmly fixed to the rotor head." That may be true in some cases but definitely not in all of them. The experimental gyros I've looked at (Air Command, Dominator, Little Wing, Sport Copter, and others) all have a fixed pitch (no collective capability) under slung teetering rotor systems. That is a very common rotor design for a number of helicopters too with the exception that the helicopters have collective pitch. Some of the helicopters that come to mind that also use an under slung teetering rotor hub are the Jet Ranger, Huey's, the old Bell 47's, Robinson's, and Rotorway's Exec on the experimental side. Their rotor hubs look a bit difference but they have similar characteristics and restrictions while flying. For example, none of them handle sustained low or negative G loads for very long. FWIW! :-) Steve R. Hi Steve, thanks for the reply. Yes, I know some of the workings of the rotorhead on a gyro are a mystery to many people. Me too. I've been looking around and asking a lot of questions where I can. I understand what McCoy is talking about, mostly. (he's got a phd and I don't). However, since the hub bar basically floats around in the rotor head and uses the rotor head to define where it stops teetering, by tilting the rotor head the teeter stops are moved out of alignment to the hub bar momentarily, until the next teeter which is greater than the one revolution before. That has to tip the blade up to get much more air suddenly and the extra air is enough to change the angle of the rotor plane (disc). I don't think anyone could force the rotor plane over by brute force applied in such a small area. (I think I just repeated what McCoy said only differently) But I'm satisfied with his definition. As to helicopters, I know they morphed out of autogyros thanks to the rotor head development of Cierva. But I don't understand how gyroscopic precession can enter into the control of the helicopter rotor plane when there is so much imput coming from the pilot. That would mean his controls would be set in precession so a move to right is really an input on the bottom of the rotor plane? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
... On Jan 20, 6:12 pm, "Steve R." wrote: wrote in message As to helicopters, I know they morphed out of autogyros thanks to the rotor head development of Cierva. But I don't understand how gyroscopic precession can enter into the control of the helicopter rotor plane when there is so much imput coming from the pilot. That would mean his controls would be set in precession so a move to right is really an input on the bottom of the rotor plane? If I'm reading you correctly, you're uncertain why the control inputs are applied to the rotor blades ahead of where you really want the rotor to react? Maybe I'm not following you on this but with regards to gyroscopic precession, I'll offer this. First of all, as a spinning object, the rotor system, be it on a helicopter or gyroplane, is a gyroscope. As such, it acts like one. One of the properties of a gyroscope is the property of rigidity in space. That is, it wants to maintain it's plane of rotation and resists deviating from that plane. If a force is applied to the gyroscope that is strong enough to force it out of it's plane of rotation, that force will be reacted to at a point 90 degrees in the direction of rotation from the point where the force was applied. That is the definition of gyroscopic precession. In a rotorcraft, all cyclic blade movements that are used to change the attitude of the rotor disk in pitch or roll, must be applied 90 degrees ahead of where the pilot really wants the rotor to move. If the rotor is spinning clockwise as viewed from above, or moving from the pilots left to right as seen from the cockpit, and the pilot wants to roll the aircraft to the left, the actual cyclic movement applied to the rotor blades should have each blade reach it's maximum pitch straight ahead and minimum pitch back over the tail. The rotor will react to this at a point, 90 degrees in the direction of rotation. That will have the forward blade climb to it's maximum point on the right side of the bird, and the rearward blade descend to it's minimum point on the left side of the bird and she rolls left. However the cyclic pitch movements are achieved, the result is the same. I hope that makes sense! :-) Steve R. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Precession of Mercury's longitude of perihelion - (so called "anomaly") | Michael Baldwin, Bruce | Products | 0 | May 27th 07 07:00 AM |
e-gyro | DavidH | Home Built | 2 | July 8th 06 11:36 PM |
DG precession | Marty from Sunny Florida | Owning | 8 | March 26th 05 01:22 AM |
Gyro question | news.starpower.net | Rotorcraft | 4 | December 21st 04 10:29 PM |
Precession of 10 degrees in 10 minutes too much? | Jay Moreland | Instrument Flight Rules | 11 | August 15th 03 01:05 AM |