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Backpack helicopter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromHelipack)
ThePentecost HX-1 Hoppi-Copter,a functional backpack helicopter

Abackpack helicopteris ahelicoptermotor androtorand controls assembly that can be strapped to a person's back, so they can walk about on the ground wearing it, and can use it to fly. It uses aharnesslike aparachuteharness and should have a strap between the legs (so the pilot does not fall out of the harness during flight). Some designs may use aducted fandesign to increase upwardthrust.Several inventors have tried to make backpack helicopters, with mixed results.

Typically, a backpack helicopter differs from a conventional helicopter in two main ways:

First, there is no tail rotor, and the main rotors arecontra-rotating.Yaw is controlled by fine adjustment of a differential gear in the rotor drive transmission. When one rotor is adjusted to spin slightly faster than the other, it induces yaw (turning motion).

Second, the rotors are fixed pitch, which assists with simplicity; this means, however, that in the event of engine failureautorotationis impossible. Usually, aballistic parachutewould be incorporated for safety.

An edition ofPopular Sciencemagazine in 1969 featured a backpack helicopter that used small jet engines in atip jetconfiguration instead ofcontra-rotatingrotors. This design could function in autorotation. Related are devices like a backpack helicopter which also include a seat and leg supports, which are small, open-topped helicopters. In theory, a helicopter would be more efficient than a rocket-poweredjetpack,possessing a greaterspecific impulse,and being more suited to hovering, due to the lower velocities of the propelled gases.

Australian electric company CopterPack had developed "an electric backpack helicopter with a self-levelling autopilot",[1]and released test videos in June 2021.[2]However, the device consists of two rotors with diameters around 3 feet (0.91 m) connected viacarbon fibertubes to a backpack with battery packs, and a pair of armrests with hand controls on them.[3]Later video analysis revealed operator and equipment were at the end of a drop cable that was edited out using post-production software.[4]

Examples

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A possible design for a helibackpack with contra-rotating twin rotors

Pure backpacks

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With a seat

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  • SoloTrek XFV(Exo-skeletal Flying Vehicle).
  • Martin Jetpack
  • Vortech designed various models which have seats.[10]They formerly also made a pure backpack model with two very long rotor blades driven by a little propane-powered jet motor at the end of each blade.
  • GEN H-4[11]
  • Hirobobit[ja][12]
  • Trek Aerospace's Springtail[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"About CopterPack".copterpack.
  2. ^"Watch a Man Soar Into the Sky With a Helicopter Backpack".Futurism.2 June 2021.
  3. ^"Aussie electric Copterpack makes sensational first manned flight".New Atlas.6 June 2021.
  4. ^"Internet sleuths find evidence of Copterpack video tampering".New Atlas.8 June 2021.
  5. ^"Heliofly".Geocities. Archived fromthe originalon 2009-10-22.Retrieved2009-07-26.
  6. ^"Pima Air Museum - Pentecost Hoppicopter".Pimaair.org. Archived fromthe originalon 2013-02-21.Retrieved2013-06-18.
  7. ^"RHYME Strap-on Helicopter".Archived fromthe originalon March 28, 2009.Retrieved2013-06-18.
  8. ^Juan Manuel Lozano Gallegos."Backpack helicopter from Tecnología Aeroespacial Mexicana".Tecaeromex. Archived fromthe originalon 2009-11-28.Retrieved2013-06-18.
  9. ^Juan Manuel Lozano Gallegos (1954-05-13)."Rocket Helicopter Tecnología Aeroespacial Mexicana".Tecaeromex. Archived fromthe originalon 2006-03-11.Retrieved2013-06-18.
  10. ^"Aircraft and Jet books and videos".Vortechonline.Archivedfrom the original on 27 June 2009.Retrieved2009-07-26.
  11. ^[1]ArchivedDecember 17, 2005, at theWayback Machine
  12. ^Waldron, Greg (2012-10-12)."Hirobo launches remote control one-man helicopter".FlightGlobal.Retrieved2024-07-06.
  13. ^MyFreeTemplates (2003-11-05)."PAV Springtail EFV".Trekaero. Archived fromthe originalon 2008-05-11.Retrieved2009-07-26.