WU ZHONGYUAN:THE CHINESE 20YR GUY WHO BUILT HIS OWN HELICOPTER
Wu
Zhongyuan, cobbled this working helicopter together out of a pile of
steel pipe, some Elm wood and a 150cc scooter engine using his
high-school physics knowledge and researching the rest on the Web via
his mobile phone. I don’t know whether to line this kid up for a Nobel
Prize or a Darwin Award. Helicopters are an incredibly versatile means
of transport – and also probably the most complicated type of aircraft
to fly. To understand the scope of this 20-year-old’s achievement in
building a working helicopter, let’s take a look at exactly what he’s
had to build. When you strip a heli down to its most basic control
components, here’s what you get. How to fly a helicopter: The pilot’s
left hand works the ‘Collective Control Stick’ – this has a twistgrip
throttle on the end of it that controls the speed of the rotor blades.
You can also pull the stick up and down like a car’s handbrake; this
motion controls the angle of all the blades on the main rotor. If all
the blades are level with the ground, there’s virtually no lift. If all
the blades are angled hard into the wind, then they produce a large
amount of lift, provided the rotor’s spinning at a good speed.
The
pilot’s right hand works a joystick-like “Cyclic Control Stick” to
effectively control the tilt of the aircraft in any direction. This is
achieved by changing the angle of the main rotor’s blades depending on
where they are in their rotation – so you can create an area in the main
rotor’s rotation where the blades angle up a little steeper and you get
extra lift just on that side. The pilot’s feet work a pair of pedals
that control the angle of the blades on the tail rotor. The primary job
of the tail rotor is to balance out the torque effect of the main rotor –
which would spin the cabin along with it if there was nothing to
counter it.
By
manipulating the pedals, the pilot is able to produce or reduce thrust
at the tail of the aircraft, and control its rotation. All these inputs
work in concert to produce a complex and constantly changing flight
dynamic that requires total concentration and focus from the pilot.
Because there’s not a chance in hell you’d get me airborne in the thing.
From its three supermarket trolley caster wheels (one broken – hey,
it’s a tradition among supermarket trolleys) to its welded steel tube
frame, to its precariously mounted 150cc motorcycle engine, to its
wooden rotors, which appear in one shot to be stabilized with string,
it’s clear you’re not dealing with the world’s most refined aircraft.
Furthermore, it’s unclear how, or even whether, Wu has managed to
implement a tilting mechanism on the main rotor, or that all-important
cyclic tilt control. The 20-year-old is confident that his home-made
chopper, which cost him two months of work and about US$1600 in parts,
will take him as high as 2600 feet. The Chinese government, like us,
isn’t so sure, and has grounded the machine, at least for the time
being. We really appreciate Wu’s work and consider him a real talent. So
we invite companies to search him and offer him the possibility to work
in this field. You must remember that special talents are rare.QUITE INTRESTING
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