home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!dtix!darwin.sura.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!usenet.coe.montana.edu!news.u.washington.edu!uw-beaver!fluke!intermec!howie
- From: howie@intermec.com (Howard Kaplan x1696)
- Newsgroups: rec.models.rc
- Subject: Re: Please Explain Helicopters
- Message-ID: <2026@intermec.UUCP>
- Date: 14 Dec 92 23:59:20 GMT
- References: <1992Dec9.144400.13803@mlb.semi.harris.com>
- Reply-To: howie@intermec.com (Howard Kaplan x1696)
- Organization: Intermec Corporation, Everett WA
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <1992Dec9.144400.13803@mlb.semi.harris.com> mwp@ms9.mis.semi.harris.com writes:
- >After browsing through the articles relating to helicopters, you
- >folks have stirred my curiosity regarding how the heck they fly.
- >More importantly, how do you CONTROL them?
- >
- >What do the 4 or 5 channels control?
-
- Fixed pitch helis fly on 4 channels:
-
- Throttle - which controls rotor speed to make the machine go up and down.
-
- Tail Pitch - Like rudder on a planes to control the heading of the nose or
- tail depending how you look at it.)
-
- Fore/Aft Cyclic - Controls the tilting forward and backward of the machine.
- (Like elevator in an airplane except you don't use it to climb or descend.)
- The term cyclic pitch is used because the pitch of the blades vary cyclicly
- (i.e. - periodicially in sync with the rotor.). To tilt forward the pitch
- raises as the blades passes around to the rear of the machine and is
- lowered as it passes the front of the machine. The net effect is the rotor
- plane tilts forward (or any direction you desire) and the machine starts
- to put its nose down and move forward.
-
- Roll Cyclic - Banks the machine left or right. Work Almost exactly like
- aileron on a plane.
-
-
- For a collective pitch machine the 5th channel (you can use a 4 channel radio
- and either mechanical or electrically couple the throttle and collective) is
- used to control the pitch of both main blades at the same time (collectively)
- and this is what raises and lowers the model. The throttle and collective
- servos are controlled from the same stick. As the collective pitch goes up so
- does the throttle. The increased load on the engine tends to keep the rotor
- speed constant. A machnine that is setup properly will not have much
- variance in head speed.
-
- To make a heli fly up and away like a plane you lift off a bit with
- collective and push the nose down (forward cyclic or down elevator) and
- gradually increase collective and forward cyclic and it's off a running.
- Note this is the biggest departure from a plane where you pull back on the
- elevator to take off.
-
- >As a helicopter moves faster through the air (suppose in a straight
- >line), how do you account for the needed dynamic changes in pitch
- >of the blades and rotor? Doesn't it continually want to bank and
- >turn as speed increases? Please explain in less than 10,000 words.
-
- This effect is pretty minor. It varies from machine to machine. My machines
- don't seem to roll much to the right at all when flying fast forward flight.
- I may be adding a slight bit of left cyslic to compensate, but it is not like
- the effect is uncontrollable. The more obvious effect is the need to add
- rudder control to keep the tail straight because the tail gyro is over
- compensating the torque effect because the heli tail weather vanes in the
- direction of forward flight. Some guys use two channel gyros and have a
- lower sensitivity setting for forward flight. This is were computer radios
- become really nice for doing all the mixing the helps compensate for these
- secondary effects.
-
- This has just scractched the surface.
-
- Howard Kaplan
-