Hot-Rod Helicopters
There’s just no way to add 100 mph to the speed of a helicopter. Or is there?
- By James R. Chiles
- Air & Space magazine, September 2009
Half-breed: Piasecki Aircraft has taken a Sikorsky helicopter and bolted on airplane hardware — a propeller (ducted) and a fixed wing — hoping the resulting X-49A SpeedHawk (top) will bust through the constraints that have kept helicopters slow.
Chad Slattery
(Page 3 of 4)
The demonstration ended when the aircraft touched down tail-first, rolled up to face the crowd, and shut down for inspection.
Later, I spoke with Joe Cosgrove, director of program requirements, about some of the work that had preceded the demonstration. A helicopter is a delicately balanced machine with a minimum of extra hardware, so changing one thing usually triggers a long list of modifications and adjustments. Since the SpeedHawk goes unusually fast for a helicopter, explained Cosgrove, engineers decided to add a fairing around the rotor mast to cut aerodynamic drag. Another challenge was finding a place that was strong enough for the wing to attach to, and was very near the craft’s center of gravity. One possibility was immediately under the main rotor, but engineers chose an easier modification: the stout framing of the cabin floor. The final version, though, will have its wing mounted high, Cosgrove said, “and that will avoid troops climbing on it.”
The production version of the SpeedHawk will also stretch the cabin by almost four feet, replace the mechanical controls with digital ones, and replace the auxiliary power unit with a larger gas turbine, in order to deliver more horsepower to both the main rotor and the ringtail. The extra power should boost the speed and enable the craft to take off with more fuel, which increases range.
That’s if enough military money is rounded up to push the SpeedHawk upgrade kit through approval for manufacture and installation. The length of the procurement trail is a source of annoyance to John Piasecki. The standard procedure is broken, he says: “The procurement system is set up to motivate government program managers to eliminate competitive solutions, rather than create competition. Their job is to protect their program. But the responsibility of government is to leverage the innovative abilities of industry to get the best product for the expenditure of taxpayer dollars.” The military, he says, needs to look for solutions suited to the existing fleet, like the VTDP package. If it’s funded, the company hopes to have it ready for delivery in five or six years.
By contrast, the company’s closest competitor in the high-speed helicopter category, Sikorsky Aircraft’s X2, is an all-new design; Piasecki says that it will require many more years of work and hundreds of millions of dollars. “We’ve flown [the VTDP kit] full scale on an operational aircraft, the H-60, with a maximum weight of 24,000 pounds,” he says, whereas the X2, still in prototype, weighs only a quarter of that. “There’s no question that they [Sikorsky] could build a full-scale operational configuration, if sponsored by government. But they’d still face the timeline of a new-start aircraft.”
Several new-start military helicopter projects, despite having the great confidence of contractors and government backers, never made it through the whole developmental cycle: the AH-56A Cheyenne, a high-speed, heavily armed compound helicopter the Army commissioned during the Vietnam War; the Boeing/Sikorsky RAH-66 Comanche; and the Advanced Reconnaissance Helicopter.
By day, Sikorsky’s tom lawrence draws on 31 years of experience to advise on helicopter flight control systems, but by night, he is treasurer of the Sikorsky Historical Archives and a historian of vertical flight. On a recent trip I made to Sikorsky headquarters in Stratford, Connecticut, Lawrence invited me into his brown-walled cubicle, where he gave me a brief history of attempts to break through the limits of conventional VTOL flight.
Lawrence clicked through a slideshow of some of history’s more freakish vertical-flight variants: tilting jets, tilt-wings, ducted fans, tail-sitting airplanes, aircraft with rotors you could pack up and fold away. The Ling-Temco-Vought XC-142 tilt-wing created a downblast so strong it could throw rocks, knock people down, and uproot trees. Some models earned a few minutes of commentary, but others Lawrence dispatched with a single withering sentence: Of the Dassault Mirage III-V, which needed the thrust of eight jet engines to heave itself off the ground, he said: “Stand too close to this one and you’re French-fried.”
Sikorsky’s present innovation, the X2, is a helicopter with an aft propeller and what looks like an upside-down airplane tail. The X2 is Sikorsky’s second attempt to make a speed record breaker out of a coaxial helicopter (a coaxial has two main rotors mounted on one mast and turning in opposite directions; the arrangement maintains lift as speed increases). Sikorsky’s first attempt, the XH-59A prototype, flew for about 10 years beginning in 1973, but at high speeds it suffered from excessive vibration.
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Comments (8)
The article does not mention probably the fastest compound helicopter ever flown - the Lockheed X-51A compound flown in the late '60s to 310 MPH. Stubby wings provided higher speed lift, a wing mounted small turbojet provided additional thrust (mounted outboard on the right wing to reduce torque rotor load) and the unloaded rotor provided pitch and roll control. It flew well enough to provide the high speed component of an Army sponsored test of speed versus low altitude flight over several courses in Ventura County,CA. It flew at a constant 250 kts for the test.
Posted by Warren L. Gilmour on August 28,2009 | 10:32 PM
I'm a little confused by the comment about replacing the "auxiliary power unit with a larger gas turbine in order to deliver more horsepower to both the main rotor and the ringtail."
Typically, an APU powers accessories and is shut down after the main engines start. Is the intent to replace the APU with a third engine that serves as an APU as well as driving the main rotor and the ring tail?
AUTHOR JAMES R. CHILES REPLIES: Piasecki rep Brian Woodcock says that there will be no APU on the SpeedHawk; rather the third, added turbine will do that job along with providing extra power for flight.
Posted by Dale Robinson on September 17,2009 | 09:34 PM
Bell flew it's h-40 Huey prototype compound with two stub-wing mounted PW JT-12's at 316 mph. It's at Ft Eustis, Va in front of AV-LABS
Posted by Tom Anderson on September 17,2009 | 10:43 PM
A worthy comment posted above by Mr. Gilmour about Lockheed's amazing compound helicopter testbed; however, it was the XH-51A , not X-51A. Also, the auxiliary jet engine was mounted inboard on the left wing root, not outboard on the right. There was, however, an equipment/battery pod mounted outboard on the right wing to partially offset the added weight of the jet engine on the left.
For more info and photos on Compound Helicopters, see this article in the Summer 2006 issue of Vertiflite magazine at:
http://www.vtol.org/pdf/summer06robb.pdf
Ray Robb
Posted by Raymond L. Robb on September 19,2009 | 09:15 PM
Data on the XH-51A is hard to come by, but the souces I have indicate the XH-51A maximum speed in level flight was 263 knots (302 mph). If test data can be provided it would be a good addition to high speed helo history. But since it had auxilliary lift, it does not qualify for the helicopter speed record.
The Bell 533 reached 274 knots (315 mph) in level flight by using larger jet engines than the original version. Again, does not qualify for helo speed record.
The Cheyenne achieved 212 knots in level flight (243mph) before the program was canceled.
Any substantiating data on these aircraft would be appreciated as they are all remarkable accomplishments.
Posted by Tom Lawrence on September 21,2009 | 11:47 AM
I was quite distressed to see the very poor research done on this article.
It completely omits the Fairey Rotodyne's speed records, advances and technology developments.
Just as egregious if not more, the article also omits the Carter Copter. The Carter Copter is this first and only rotorcraft to break the (Mu) u=1 barrier.
That is the equivalent of breaking the sound barrier for rotorcraft. Many famous engineers claimed it could not be done.
EDITORS' REPLY: The article was not intended as an exhaustive historical review of every rotorcraft to attempt high-speed flight. Rather, it was focused mainly on two present-day attempts: Piasecki's and Sikorsky's.
Posted by Timothy O'Connor on September 27,2009 | 04:55 PM
The speed hawk has a problem with the new tail, The lack of offset thrust that used to come from the tilted tail rotor adds a c/g limit not found on a normal H-60.The S-2 by Sikorsky has a lot of power resurve that will be gone when scaled up.And Die by wire adds complexity .Keep it simple, Piestecki and Sikorski need to start from a new piece of paper. Nice spin ,but history needs to be remembered where this stuff was done before.
Posted by Don Hillberg on October 21,2010 | 12:40 AM
Hello,
The wing presents a problem when being shipped via cargo aircraft or ship.
An asymmetric folding wing, based on the design Leroy R. Grumman invented for the F4F Wildcat and other carrier planes of WW2, might be very useful; though powered versions were tried, the manual was preferred for reasons of cost and lower maintenance.
Thanks for your time,
Phil
Posted by Philip S. Lyon on January 15,2011 | 06:40 PM