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tech / rec.aviation.piloting / World-first automatic safety system lands a helicopter without power

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o World-first automatic safety system lands a helicopter without powerLarry Dighera

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World-first automatic safety system lands a helicopter without power

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From: LDigh...@att.net (Larry Dighera)
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Subject: World-first automatic safety system lands a helicopter without power
Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 13:32:07 -0800
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 by: Larry Dighera - Wed, 15 Nov 2023 21:32 UTC

https://newatlas.com/aircraft/first-automated-autorotation-landing/

World-first automatic safety system lands a helicopter without power

By Loz Blain November 14, 2023

The Robinson R-66 begins to plummet in the world's first automated
autorotation landingSkyryse

VIEW GALLERY - 4 IMAGES:
https://newatlas.com/aircraft/first-automated-autorotation-landing/#gallery:1

Huge props to these two helicopter test pilots, who have white-knuckled it
through one of the most harrowing experiences in rotorcraft flight – an
unpowered autorotation emergency landing – allowing an autonomous system to
take the controls.

Helicopters are known for being notoriously tricky aircraft to fly,
requiring all four limbs acting in concert to manage the throttle, the
collective control, the cyclic control and the pedals controlling the pitch
of the tail rotor blades – check out our how to fly a helicopter piece from
2010 for a quick primer.
https://newatlas.com/video-how-to-fly-a-helicopter/16214/

This full-body co-ordination exercise allows helicopters to be incredibly
agile and precise in flight, provided the pilot is an absolute gun and got
plenty of sleep last night – but a number of companies are working on
fly-by-wire systems that hugely simplify the controls, or allow them to fly
autonomously without pilot input.

These include Airbus
https://newatlas.com/aircraft/airbus-helicopters-single-joystick-system/ ,
which has tested a single-joystick fly-by-wire system, and Sikorsky, which
last year flew a Black Hawk in fully autonomous rescue and cargo mission
demos without a pilot at the controls.
https://newatlas.com/military/black-hawk-helicopter-autonomous-rescue-mission-without-crew

And then there's Skyryse
https://newatlas.com/aircraft/skyryses-autonomous-flight-helicopter-luna , a
California company that's been around since 2016, working on autonomous and
fly-by-wire retrofit systems for a range of different aircraft, with the
goal of reducing, and eventually eliminating, general aviation fatalities.
The company demonstrated the first autonomous flight of its kind in 2019,
using a Robinson R-44 upgraded with its Flight Stack technology.

Here's actor John Hamm using Skyryse tech to fly a chopper with a tablet a
couple of years ago:

Jon Hamm Flies with Skyryse

Early next year, the company says it'll reveal the first production
helicopter to ship with a Skyryse simplified control system, and as part of
that system, it's rolling out some world-first safety features, including
fully automated autorotation for emergency landings.

Autorotation is a fairly terrifying concept – a last-ditch emergency
maneuver that allows skilled pilots to bring a helicopter down to Earth
softly and with a degree of control even in the case of total engine
failure. It's effectively a series of techniques that let you convert the
stored energy in your altitude, airspeed, and rotor speed – the same energy
sources conspiring to kill you – into a chance of slowing your descent and
making a controlled landing.
https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2000/june/flight-training-magazine/the-art-of-autorotation

First, you need to immediately and counterintuitively drop the collective
control to reduce drag on your top rotor, and make sure it keeps spinning.
You've got a maximum of a couple of seconds to do this once the engine
fails, or as FootFlyer points out, "once you've failed this maneuver the
machine flies about as well as a 20 case Coke machine."
https://www.footflyer.com/helicopter-humor/

The system automatically starts and finishes the process of autorotation,
and presumably assists as a pilot attempts to find and aim for a landing
spot

An automatic clutch will disengage the rotor from the engine, so there's at
least one thing you don't need to worry about as you start to fall through
the air. On the other hand, you'll need to get straight on the right pedal,
because the loss of engine torque will cause the helicopter to start
spinning to the left. If that's not addressed in short order, particularly
in a hover, you're in for a particularly unpleasant death.

Ideally after this, you need to work the cyclic control to find the airspeed
that'll keep the airframe aloft for the longest possible time – generally
around 60 knots (69 mph/111 km/h), but it's particular to every model – then
pick a spot for an unscheduled landing, and aim for it, remembering that
every control input will affect the balance between airspeed, fall speed and
rotor rpm.

If all this goes well, you attempt to glide to the landing spot, and
somewhere between 40-150 ft (12-46 m) off the ground – again, depending on
what you're flying, you pull back the cyclic to flare the aircraft into a
rearward tilt, pulling to a complete halt 5-10 feet (1.5-3 m) off the ground
if you're lucky, and then you use your remaining rotor speed to cushion your
landing by yanking up on the collective stick as you drop those final few
feet.

The Skyryse system flares before making an unpowered landing

This wild series of events is not easy to execute. As AOPA puts it,
"ironically, more helicopter accidents happen each year from practicing
autorotations than from real-life engine failures." FootFlyer is a little
more whimsical, noting that, "Even a perfectly executed autorotation only
gives you a glide ratio slightly better than that of a brick."

If there's one thing scarier than performing an autorotation landing, it'd
be sitting in the passenger seat while a student pilot does one. And if
there's one thing scarier than that, it'd be sitting in the cabin during the
world's first autonomous autorotation test.

So full credit to test pilots Jason Trask and Eliot Seguin, who sacked up
and tested Skyryse's automated autorotation system back in July, and stayed
remarkably cool as the system brought their Robinson R66 down without
incident.

Skyryse's test pilot is ready to take over control if the system fails

The system is designed to recognize engine failure and instigate the entry
into autorotation immediately, and probably quicker than a human pilot could
do it – so in theory, it should maintain a higher main rotor RPM and give
pilots more stored energy to work with. Once a glide is established, we
presume it's up to the pilot to pick a landing spot and fly toward it.

Then, at the push of a button, the system takes over to complete the flare
and the final landing. Check it out in the video below.

Skyryse Performs World’s First Fully Automated Autorotation:
https://youtu.be/ccKZ6zZxwKY

If Skyryse can take some of the guesswork and panic out of one of the most
terrifying scenarios in aviation, it'll have a popular product on its hands.
But we just can't get over the cojones of these two test pilots,
experiencing an automatic autorotation for the first time ever. Helicopter
pilots have a reputation for a steely nerve – by necessity – but these two
sound cool as cucumbers in a situation that'd have most of us praying we
remembered the brown underpants that day.

Source: SkyRyse:
https://newsroom.skyryse.com/2023-11-09-Skyryse-Introduces-Worlds-First-Fully-Automated-Autorotation-Feature-Ahead-Of-Skyryse-Equipped-Production-Helicopter-Reveal

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