
The FAA describes a "gyrodyne"
as a "rotor wing" aircraft that powers its rotor for
takeoff and landing, but en route, flies in autorotation, like
a gyroplane, without power to the rotor. Forward thrust is provided
by engine driven propellers. Being able to fly in autorotation
gives the gyrodyne all of the advantages and simplicity of a gyroplane.
More
than forty years ago, a British aircraft manufacturer, Fairey
Aviation Company, Ltd., developed a revolutionary new aircraft
called the Rotodyne. The Fairey Rotodyne was a 44 passenger "gyrodyne"
which used rotorblade tip jets to power its rotor for vertical
takeoff and landing and gave it the ability to hover. Following
take off and acceleration to forward flight, the tip jets were
shut down and the aircraft flew in "autorotation" as
a propeller driven gyroplane for the remainder of the flight.
This 200‑mph VTOL airliner was, in its day, the fastest
way to get from downtown London to downtown Paris. If it existed
today, even without modern improvements, it would still be the
fastest, safest method of travel between those two city centers.
Groen Brothers Aviation, Inc.
(GBA) has developed a plan that can rapidly bring the gyrodyne
into the modern age. Implementing this plan would enable the design,
development, production and delivery of safe, fast, vertical takeoff
and landing, long range high payload rotorcraft. These aircraft
will have the ability to hover and will be economical, reliable
and easy to maintain. This can be accomplished using a tiny fraction
of the cost and time that would normally be necessary.
Gyrodyne components and flight
control systems can be incorporated into certain existing production
high wing airplanes with only small modification to the airframe.
The time and cost savings benefits of using an existing
production airplane are possible because neither the airframe
nor most of its systems will need to be designed, engineered,
developed, structural loads measured, analyzed, tested, redesigned
and engineered, tested again and then prepared for production.
And, since the technology is simple, engineering risks are low.
Groen Brothers Aviation has also
developed proprietary mission adaptive rotor blade technology.
This technology allows GBA's rotor systems to be optimized
for hover flight and then during transition from hover to forward
flight it can change to be optimized for high speed. Load
sharing between the rotor and the aircraft's fixed wing adds to
the high speed capability of GBA's gyrodyne aircraft designs.
Using an airplane that is already
in production also means that the production plan, materials management
system and massive supplier chain, quality assurance system, tooling,
and production line are already in place and do not need to be
designed, developed and paid for again, nor will there be a production
learning curve to overcome. The only components that will need
this development are the tip-jets (which have no moving parts),
rotorblades, rotor head, mast and flight control system. Since
the airframe is suspended from the rotor exactly from where it
is suspended from its wing, in‑flight loads to the airframe
should be virtually unchanged.
This concept was successfully tested by Groen Brothers Aviation
through modifying a Cessna Skymaster airplane. It's two piston
engines were removed. The forward engine was replaced with a Rolls-Royce
model 250 gas turbine engine, and the aft engine was replaced
with a large clam-shell cargo door. The wings were clipped and
the existing twin boom tail was inverted to give rotor clearance.
The rotor system from one of GBA's Hawk 4 Gyroplanes was directly
connected to the high wing attach points that were already carrying
the Skymaster's fuselage. This conversion, using minimal assets,
took less than one year from first conception to first flight.
This aircraft demonstrated its exceptional stability and ease
of flight, characteristic of a well designed gyroplane.
The same process would permit
the quick and economical introduction of VTOL GyroLiners in the
19, 35, 50, and 75 passenger sizes.
These
runway independent airliners could provide safe and reliable regional
point-to-point transport and alleviate the continued congestion
of air travel systems, a topic of major concern for the airline
industry as growth begins to return. Much larger gyrodynes can
also be developed at a fraction of the cost of developing similar
helicopters, vectored thrust aircraft, tiltrotor or tiltwing aircraft,
even if the gyrodyne is entirely designed new from the ground
up. This is so because of the elegant simplicity of the gyrodyne.