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Bell 30

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Bell 30
Bell 30 flight testing
Role Experimentalhelicopter
National origin United States
Manufacturer Bell Aircraft
Designer Arthur M. Young
First flight 26 June 1943[1]
Introduction 1943
Retired 1944
Status Preserved
Number built 3
Developed into Bell 47

TheBell 30was the prototype for the first commercialhelicopter,and the first helicopter built by theBell Aircraft Company.[2]Designed byArthur M. Young,the type served as a demonstration testbed for the successfulBell 47.[2]

Development

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Young had experimented alone with helicopter designs using scale models, and in 1941 he approached theBell Aircraft CorporationinBuffalo, New York.The company agreed to build a number of full-scale prototypes, and Young moved to Buffalo. With the main Bell factories immersed in war production, and to ensure a research and development program that was sufficiently private and free of distractions, Young and his team moved to the Buffalo suburb ofGardenville(West Seneca). TheShip 1prototype's first serious mishap occurred near the very end of 1942 in captive testing, when a Bell corporate pilot asked to try the Ship 1, while not using aseat beltand hanging onto the controls instead to stay in the open cockpit - this captive flight attempt resulted in the rotor system "going through resonance" as designer Arthur Young had warned about, resulting in a "bucking" instability and accident which cracked the rotor blades loose and sent the pilot up into the disc of the rotor blades, luckily only breaking an arm.[3]The first free flight ofShip 1was carried out on June 26, 1943,[4]only the thirdAmericanhelicopter to fly.[5]

TheShip 1prototyperegistrationNX41860had an open cockpit, an enclosed fuselage for the Franklin piston engine, and fixed three-wheel landing gear.[2]The engine drove a two-bladed main rotor and a two-bladed anti-torque tail rotor. The prototype crashed in September 1943 and was subsequently modified with several improvements, including an enclosed cabin for the pilot and passenger, who sat side by side in the cockpit.[5]With all the lessons learned, the third prototype became the basis for the production model, theBell Model 47.[2]The Model 30 Ship 1A,Genevieve,is now on display at theSteven F. Udvar-Hazy Centerof theSmithsonian Air and Space Museum.[6]

Variants

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Data from:Bell Aircraft since 1935[7]

Ship No.1
(c/n 1) The original Bell 30, built with an open-frame tubular steel framework with an open cockpit and four widely splayed undercarriage legs with skids at the ends, made from 3 in (76 mm) Aluminium alloy tubing. First flown on 29 December 1942, test flying continued until a serious crash in September 1943.
Ship No.1A
(c/n 1A) Ship No.1, rebuilt after the crash with a strutted tricycle undercarriage with nosewheel, and semi-enclosed cockpit, rejoined the test programme by March 1944.
Ship No.2
(c/n 2) The second aircraft was built with a new three wheeled undercarriage, semi-monocoque fuselage, new tail rotor mounting and fully enclosed cockpit for pilot and passenger.
Ship No.3
(c/n 3) The third aircraft was built with a triangular-section welded tubular steel tailboom, four-wheeled undercarriage, full set of instruments, but a completely open cockpit. Performance and handling of this aircraft were found to be much better than its predecessors but the open cockpit was viewed as a major handicap. Young described flying the aircraft as being"like sitting in a chair and flying through space."However, Bell company officials who flew in it found the experience to be thoroughly frightening.[8]The solution to the open cockpit was the plexiglas bubble that was to become iconic onBell 47/H-13production aircraft.
Ship 1Aon display at the National Air and Space Museum, 2012

Surviving aircraft

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Ship No.1A is on display at theNational Air and Space Museum[citation needed]

Specifications

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Data from[2]

General characteristics

  • Crew:one
  • Capacity:two passengers
  • Powerplant:1 ×Franklin 6V4flat-six piston engine, 160 hp (120 kW)
  • Main rotor diameter:33 ft 0 in (10.06 m)
  • Main rotor area:855.3 sq ft (79.46 m2)

Performance

See also

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Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

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Notes

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  1. ^Note:Aerofiles has the date as the 29 December 1942
  2. ^abcdeThe Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985).Orbis Publishing.
  3. ^Helicopter Pioneers- first Bell Flight Testing(YouTube)(YouTube). Gardenville, NY: burgesco1. 1943. Event occurs at 4:40.Archivedfrom the original on 2021-12-20.RetrievedJuly 25,2015.
  4. ^"Bell 30".kamov.net. Archived fromthe originalon May 11, 2012.RetrievedMay 9,2012.
  5. ^ab"American airplanes:Bell".aerofiles. 20 April 2009.Archivedfrom the original on 2 January 2010.Retrieved2009-12-23.
  6. ^"Bell Model 30 Ship 1A Genevieve - Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum".Archived fromthe originalon 2010-01-23.Retrieved2012-03-25.
  7. ^Pelletier, Alain J. (1992).Bell Aircraft since 1935.Annapolis: Naval Institute Press for Putnam Aeronautical Books Limited. pp. 55–58.ISBN1-55750-056--8.
  8. ^Gobel, Greg."The Bell Model 47".airvectors.net.

Bibliography

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  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985).Orbis Publishing.
  • Pelletier, Alain J. (1992).Bell Aircraft since 1935.Annapolis: Naval Institute Press for Putnam Aeronautical Books Limited. pp. 55–58.ISBN1-55750-056--8.
  • "American airplanes:Bell".aerofiles. 20 April 2009.Archivedfrom the original on 2 January 2010.Retrieved2009-12-23.
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