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Combined Hovercraft and Helicopter

An anonymous reader writes "Has British engineer Geoff Hatton brought us the best of two worlds with his UFO-looking machine? The US military thinks so and are investing in it. The design is sturdy (as opposed to a helicopter) and can fly high (as opposed to a hovercraft). It is based on the Coanda Effect."

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  1. Re:sturdy? as opposed to a helicopter? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There are two more things which you didn't mention. One is that the fan is inside a duct, which reduces tip vortices. That should make it more efficient.

    The second is that it would avoid a problem which helecopters face when trying to hover out of ground effect. When more than about a rotor's diameter above the ground, the downward moving air starts to circulate down, out, up, and back into the rotor. The air moves in a circular pattern through the rotor, around, and back through the rotor again. This creates a downdraft from the perspective of the helecopter. Adding more power doesn't always help, because it just makes the air move in a circular pattern faster. The result is that the helecopter sinks when trying to hover at altitude.

    If you observe helecopters hovering at altitude, you'll notice that they aren't actually hovering. They're moving forward very slowly. That's the only way to avoid that problem. You have to keep moving a little bit so you stay out of the circular rotation of air that you create behind your helecopter. If you stop completely, you're in the circular pattern and you sink unless you've got some enormous power source like a jet engine.

    When you're in ground effect, the ground itself disrupts the circular movement of the air and limits how fast it can move in a circular motion. It also makes it turbulent as it deflects off the ground. The result is that you don't get a well-formed column of downward moving air that your helecopter is sitting in, thus you can efficiently hover without moving at all when you are fairly close to the ground or some other air-disrupting object like a building that you're carrying materials up to.

    I would not be surprised if this device had some advantages over regular helecopters when it comes to hovering out of ground effect.

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