Piasecki PA-97

PA-97 Helistat
Role Experimental heavy-lifter
Manufacturer Piasecki Aircraft
First flight 26 April 1986
Retired Destroyed in crash, Tuesday, July 1, 1986
Number built 1
Program cost $40 million
Developed from N class blimp attached with 4 Sikorsky H-34Js

The Piasecki PA-97 Helistat was an American experimental heavy-lift aircraft, built by Piasecki by fastening four H-34J helicopters to a framework beneath a helium inflated blimp envelope.[1] It crashed during a test flight, killing one of the four pilots.

Design and development

Helistat design concept

The Helistat concept was to augment the helicopters' dynamic lift with the static lift of an air buoyancy envelope. This would give greater maximum lift capability for heavy lift work. At low weights (i.e. traveling to site without a payload) it would also free up the helicopters' rotor thrust for forward thrust, requiring less dynamic lift and lower fuel burn.[1]

To maintain coincidence of the dynamic and static lifts (otherwise the envelope would pitch as helicopter power increased), it is impractical to use a single helicopter rotor and so multiple rotors are arranged around the center of buoyancy of the envelope.

Differential changes to the collective pitch (i.e. thrust) of the rotors gives powerful control forces. Propulsion and retardation are obtained from the cyclic tilt of the rotors, as for a normal helicopter. Yaw moments are produced by the differential cyclic tilting of the rotors (i.e. one side forward, the other back). In forward flight, the ruddervators at the tail of the blimp also add their pitch and yaw control moments.

PA-97 prototype

The PA-97 was built under a 1980 U.S. Navy contract for the Forest Service to demonstrate a heavy vertical air lifter for harvesting timber from inaccessible terrain. The single demonstrator used a retired Navy ZPG-2W blimp envelope and four H-34J helicopters. The combination of a large blimp with powered lift made the 343 foot (104.57 m) long helistat the largest dynamic lift aircraft in the world.[1]

The helicopters used were aged examples of a long-established design. Their tail rotors were removed, their fuselage shortened and they were attached to a crude tubular aluminum framework beneath the helium filled envelope. Four freely-castering twin-wheel bogies beneath the framework provided the undercarriage. Criticism has been expressed of the structural qualities and stress analysis of this framework.[2]

Test flights were made from the Naval Air Engineering Station Lakehurst in Lakehurst, New Jersey, making use of the long-established hangars for handling large airships. First flight was on 26 April 1986.[3]

On 1 July 1986, the PA-97 crashed immediately after liftoff on a test flight, killing one of the pilots.[2][4]

A gust of wind from the rear of the aircraft induced some movement across the tarmac. The undercarriage responded badly to this, the bogies shimmying uncontrollably.[2] Vibration in the framework then coupled with a helicopter phenomenon known as ground resonance.[2] The vibration was sufficient to cause a structural failure as the starboard rear helicopter broke off its mounting, its rotors cutting into the gasbag.[2] The unbalanced lift then made the vibrations worse and all of the other helicopters broke free.[2][5]

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

  1. 1 2 3 "PA-97 Helistat". Piasecki aircraft corporation. External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Helistat Disaster". Archived from the original (video) on May 21, 2008.
  3. Jane's Aviation Review: 1986. Jane's. 1987. p. 63. ISBN 0-7106-0446-7.
  4. "Airship Crashes At Base In Jersey". New York Times. July 2, 1986.
  5. "NTSB Synopsis NYC86FHD01". NTSB. Retrieved March 4, 2016.

External links

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