enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Intermeshing-rotor helicopter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermeshing-rotor_helicopter

    Intermeshing rotored helicopters have high stability and powerful lifting capability. The latest Kaman K-MAX model is a dedicated sky-crane design used for construction work, and has been modified for trials by the USMC as an optionally-unmanned cargo transporter. Unmanned aerial vehicles with intermeshing rotors have also been flown. [2]

  3. Dissymmetry of lift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissymmetry_of_lift

    Dissymmetry of lift in an American-style helicopter. Consider a single-rotor helicopter in still air. For a stationary (hovering) helicopter, whose blades of length of r metres are rotating at ω radians per second, the blade tip is moving at a speed rω meters per second. As the blades rotate, the speed of the blade-tips relative to the air ...

  4. Helicopter rotor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicopter_rotor

    The first aerobatic manned drone, as this type of electrically powered multi-rotor helicopter is known, had 12 rotors and could carry 1-2 people. [37] Manned drones or eVTOL as they are called typically multirotor designs powered by batteries gained increasing popularity and designs in the 2020s. [38]

  5. 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.

  6. Coaxial-rotor aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coaxial-rotor_aircraft

    A coaxial-rotor aircraft is an aircraft whose rotors are mounted one above the other on concentric shafts, with the same axis of rotation, but turning in opposite directions (contra-rotating). This rotor configuration is a feature of helicopters produced by the Russian Kamov helicopter design bureau.

  7. Rotor wing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotor_wing

    The main types include the helicopter with powered rotors providing both lift and thrust, and the autogyro with unpowered rotors providing lift only. There are also various hybrid types, especially the gyrodyne which has both a powered rotor and independent forward propulsion, and the stopped rotor in which the rotor stops spinning to act as a ...

  8. Category:Helicopters by rotor configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Helicopters_by...

    Single-rotor helicopters (163 P) Synchropters (9 P) T. Tandem rotor helicopters (23 P) Transverse rotor helicopters (17 P)

  9. Kamov Ka-26 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamov_Ka-26

    As there is a low rotor clearance at the aircraft front, it is approached from the rear when the rotors are turning. Due to the limitations of the Ka-26, USSR and Romania agreed under the Comecon trade to build a single-turboshaft engine version, the Kamov Ka-126 , with better aerodynamics and range.