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The rotor and its future

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

J. P. Jones*
Affiliation:
Westland Helicopters Ltd

Extract

When delivering a Memorial lecture it is customary to open with a tribute to the one who is remembered. But the substance of my lecture is the rotor which Cierva evolved 50 years ago and I hope to sufficiently recognise his contribution during the delivery. Therefore with your permission I will content myself now with marking my deep appreciation of the honour done me by your invitation.

An informed layman reading past papers on rotors and rotorcraft would form the impression that each achievement was only a fleeting gain. The autogyro was to give way to the helicopter, the helicopter to the compound helicopter and the compound to the convertible rotorcraft. The rotor itself, it was argued, is ideal for hovering but hopelessly inefficient in forward flight. Hence the haste to get back to wings, a tendency much increased when fixed wing designers discovered how to use small, heavily loaded, rotors. But such is the lure of the rotor that even its detractors saw the case for its use in landing and take-off.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1973 

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References

1. Cook, C. V. The structure of the rotor blade tip vortex. AGARD Conference Preprint No 111, September 1972.Google Scholar
2. Pearcey, H. H., Wilby, P. G., Riley, M. J. and Brother-Hood, P. The derivation and verification of a new rotor profile on the basis of flow phenomena; aerofoil research and flight tests. RAE Teoh Memo Aero 1440, August 1972.Google Scholar
3. Hilton, W. F. The photography of airscrew sound waves. Proc Roy Soc A, Vol 169, 22nd December 1938.Google Scholar
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5. Hafner, R. The future of rotorcraft. The Aeronautical Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Vol 72, No 696, pp. 1011, December 1968.Google Scholar