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  2. Bell Boeing Quad TiltRotor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Boeing_Quad_TiltRotor

    The conceptual design featured a large tandem wing aircraft with V-22 type engines and 50-foot (15 m) rotors at each of the four wing tips. The C-130-size fuselage would have a 747-inch (19.0 m) cargo bay with a rear loading ramp that could carry 110 paratroopers or 150 standard-seating passengers.

  3. Rotorcraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotorcraft

    Rotorcraft generally include aircraft where one or more rotors provide lift throughout the entire flight, such as helicopters, autogyros, and gyrodynes. Compound rotorcraft augment the rotor with additional thrust engines, propellers, or static lifting surfaces. Some types, such as helicopters, are capable of vertical takeoff and landing.

  4. Quadcopter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadcopter

    A quadcopter, also called quadrocopter, or quadrotor [1] is a type of helicopter or multicopter that has four rotors. [ 2 ] Although quadrotor helicopters and convertiplanes have long been flown experimentally, the configuration remained a curiosity until the arrival of the modern unmanned aerial vehicle or drone.

  5. Tiltrotor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiltrotor

    Original Patent filed May 28,1929 Transcendental Model 1-G hovering Bell X-22 A Bell XV-15 prepares to land. The first work in the direction of a tilt-rotor (French "Convertible") seems to have originated ca. 1902 by the French-Swiss brothers Henri and Armand Dufaux, for which they got a patent in February 1904, and made their work public in April 1905.

  6. Bell 214ST - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_214ST

    The Bell 214ST has a larger, stretched fuselage with seating for 16-18 passengers, [10] [11] and two 1,625 shp (1,212 kW) GE CT7-2A engines. [12] The helicopter introduced some ground-breaking innovations for Bell, including a one-hour run-dry transmission, fiberglass rotor blades, elastomeric rotorhead bearings, and the option of either skid ...

  7. Disk loading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_loading

    The higher the loading, the more power needed to maintain rotor speed. [3] A low disk loading is a direct indicator of high lift thrust efficiency. [4] Increasing the weight of a helicopter increases disk loading. For a given weight, a helicopter with shorter rotors will have higher disk loading, and will require more engine power to hover.

  8. Lycoming IO-720 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycoming_IO-720

    The Lycoming IO-720 engine is a large displacement, horizontally opposed, eight-cylinder aircraft engine featuring four cylinders per side, manufactured by Lycoming Engines. [ 1 ] There is no carbureted version of the engine, which would have been designated O-720 and therefore the base model is the IO-720.

  9. Bell 407 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_407

    The Bell 407 is a four-blade, single-engine, civil utility helicopter. A derivative of the Bell 206L-4 LongRanger, the 407 uses the four-blade, soft-in-plane design rotor with composite hub developed for the United States Army's OH-58D Kiowa Warrior instead of the two-blade, semi-rigid, teetering rotor of the 206L-4.