Main Rotor Systems Flashcards
1
Q
Fully articulated
A
- Requires 3 or more rotor blades
- Flap, feather, lead and lag independently (due to hinges
Advantages:
- maneuverable (no mast bumping)
- increased pay load (more blades = more lift)
- less vibrations, more comfortable
Disadvantages:
- higher costs (initial + maintenance)
- susceptible to ground resonance (HAZARD)
- poor storage (multiple blades)
2
Q
Semi-rigid
A
- 2 blades mounted rigidly to the rotor head
- Flap as a unit (one blade moves up, opposite moves down)
- Feather independently
- Typically underslung to absorb lead/lag forces
- the hub is attached to the rotor mast by an elevated trunnion hinge.
- the entire rotor assembly is able to “teeter” about this pivot point so all the blades are able to flap as a single unit.
- underslung to compensate for Coriolis effect. The center of pressure remains the same distance when coning.
ADVANTAGES:
- Less weight
- Less expensive
- Easy storage
DISADVANTAGES:
- More vibrations (rougher ride)
- less maneuverable
- Susceptible to low G mast bumping
3
Q
Rigid
A
- Moves one way: mechanically simple (not many moving parts) but structurally complex
- Only feathers: changes pitch in the blade as a unit
- Can not flap or lead/lag
- forces absorbed by flexing of the blades - Blades, rotor head (hub), and mast are rigidly mounted together
ADVANTAGES:
- very responsive and maneuverable
- not susceptible to mast bumping or ground resonance
- simple maintenance
DISADVANTAGES:
- high initial and high blade cost
- limited slope capability
- shorter blade life due to flexing
- bumpy ride
4
Q
Tandem
A
- Uses two counter rotating rotors
- Three main designs
- fore and aft (chinook)
- side by side intermesh (k-max)
- stacked common mast (k-A-226)
ADVANTAGES:
- more power available
- does not need tail rotor
DISADVANTAGES:
- more complex
- higher cost
5
Q
Anti-Torque
A
- Helicopters with a single main rotor require anti-torque
- Counteracts the torque produced by the main rotor
- Newtons 3rd law: for every action there is an Equal and opposite reaction - Must be variable pitch for directional control
- left pedal: nose moves left
- right pedal: nose moves right
6
Q
Blade movements
A
Feathering- pitch change of the rotor blades
Flapping- up and down movement of the blade
Lead/lag- fore and aft movement of the blade along the plane of rotation