Sikorsky beats 24 year old speed record set by Westland Lynx

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Stratofreighter
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PICS: Sikorsky X2 breaks helicopter speed barrier...

Post by Stratofreighter »

http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/20 ... rrier.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; for the pictures :wink: ,

but of course 168 knots/311 kilometres per hour is still not as fast as the speed attained by Westland Lynx 800 G-LYNX c/n 102 equipped with BERP rotorblades which set an absolute speed record for helicopters over a 15 and 25 km course on 11 August 1986 by reaching 400.87 km/h (249.09 mph), a 9% increase over the previous record.

The Lynx so far remains unbeaten after almost 24 years... :shock:
But for how long :?: See further below...

G-LYNX is currently exhibited at The Helicopter Museum at Weston-super-Mare,
http://helicoptermuseum.co.uk/images/aircraft/lynx3.jpg" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
and
http://helicoptermuseum.co.uk/westland.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; ...
DATE:20/05/10

SOURCE:Flight International

Sikorsky X2 breaks helicopter speed barrier

By John Croft

Sikorsky reports that its X2 advancing blade concept technology demonstrator has achieved 168kt (311km/h) forward speed, putting the dual counter-rotating pusher-prop compound beyond the typical maximum speed for traditional helicopters and outside the reach of the company's S-76 chase vehicle's 155kt capability.

A follow-on flight, expected the week of 24 May, is to see X2 test pilot Kevin Bredenbeck accelerate the LHTEC T800-powered fly-by-wire pusher to 180kt, completing the third of four planned envelope expansion test phases. Phase four, which could begin as soon as mid-June, includes the first attempts to slow the X2's main rotors while opening the speed envelope to 250kt or more.

The prototype is designed with no clutch between the main rotors and propulsor, which requires the pilot to increase forward speed through the variable pitch control on the six-bladed rear propeller. Once in the 180kt realm, the X2's computer will automatically slow the main rotors and increase collective pitch to prevent tip speeds from entering high-drag transonic region, with Bredenbeck correspondingly increasing propulsor pitch to increase the X2's speed as the propulsor also slows.

© Ahsish Bagai/Sikorsky

Recent progress includes flights with the main landing gear retracted and two of the three main rotor fairings attached, tests of the main rotor active vibration system and 20-30kt of sideways flight in winds as high as 17-20kt. "We have quite a bit more control power left in this rotor for side flight," says Steve Weiner, chief engineer for the X2 programme.

Jim Kagdis, Sikorsky's manager of advanced programmes, says the flight-test team will "try to go as fast as we can" before installing the centre rotor fairing to determine the effect of the device on drag.

Kagdis expects that when the centre fairing is combined with the two elliptical main rotor fairings, already installed, the X2 will see a hub drag reduction of 40-45% compared with no fairing.

Vibration effects, which were problematic on Sikorsky's previous XH-59A demonstrator in the 1970s, have been "extremely low" so far, even without the active damping system turned on.

"We're really waiting to see what we get when go faster," says Weiner, adding that tests to date indicate that the X2 will meet its vibration targets - about the level of a traditional helicopter flying at 140kt - when cruising at its top speed of 250kt with the active system engaged.

Weiner says the only aerodynamic change to the structure made during the first three phases of the programme was the addition of 0.28m² (3ft²) of area to each of the outboard vertical end plates for yaw stability.

Weiner credits configuration maturity to Sikorsky's advanced analytical tools given that the company did not perform windtunnel tests of the design before flight-testing. He says windtunnel tests would likely precede the design for a production model, the first of which could be a systems development and demonstration vehicle for the US Army's potential competition to replace the Bell OH-58D Kiowa Warrior later this decade.

Sikorsky plans to begin using a 250kt Cessna Conquest twin turboprop for chase aircraft operations on the next flight.
November 2024 update at FokkerNews.nl....
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Stratofreighter
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Sikorsky beats 24 year old speed record set by Westland Lynx

Post by Stratofreighter »

http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/20 ... ecord.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
DATE:26/07/10

SOURCE:Flight International

Sikorsky X2 sets unofficial helicopter speed record
By Stephen Trimble

Sikorsky today unofficially broke the helicopter speed record as the X2 technology demonstrator reached 225kt (417km/h) during a 1h flight test.

The compound, coaxial rotor system surpassed by 9kt the official record set by the Westland Lynx in 1986, Sikorsky X2 chief engineer Steve Weiner says.

The Lynx's 216kt record, however, stands in the Federation Aeronautique International (FAI)'s books until Sikorsky conducts the flight with an official observer present from the National Aeronautic Association, he adds.

Although the X2 is now unofficially the world's fastest helicopter, Sikorsky's goal is to raise the speed limit by at least 25kt within two months.


PHOTO : ©Sikorsky


X2 chief pilot Kevin Bredenbeck says the aircraft "still has a lot of power" at 225kt, prompting Sikorsky officials to consider the possibility of pushing the aircraft slightly beyond the 250kt-goal for the test programme.

Another positive sign is that recent changes to the flight control system and increased tail surface area has improved the aircraft's stability.

"My workload is down and now I'm just along for the ride," Bredenbeck says.

Sikorsky has quickly added two horizontal surfaces with a total area of 0.46m² (5ft²) to the X2's inverted tail to counteract instability in pitch, Weiner says.

The ideal solution for the longitudinal stability issue would involve enlarging the main horizontal tail, but that would have required a more significant redesign, says Sikorsky programme manager for advanced programmes Jim Kagdis.

The X2 is now entering the final two months of a nearly-year-long pursuit of the 250kt-speed goal. Sikorsky will add a new aerodynamic tail surface, as planned, to reduce drag.

Sikorsky launched the X2 demonstrator in hopes of delivering a dramatic increase in speed for the next generation of military and civil helicopters.

The aircraft reuses the T800 engine from the cancelled RAH-66 Comanche programme. But the programme's legacy is mostly based on the Sikorsky XH-59 advancing blade concept (ABC) programme from nearly 40 years ago.

The XH-59 also employed a compound, coaxial rotor power system to boost speed, but failed to overcome vibration and stability control problems in an era before the invention of fly-by-wire technology for helicopters.

Sikorsky timed the X2's record-setting flight to coincide with the 37th anniversary of the first flight of the XH-59, Bredenbeck says.

No members of the original XH-59 staff were on hand to witness the milestone flight, but former Sikorsky chief test pilot John Dixson was asked to observe as a consultant.
After completing the historic flight today, Bredenbeck recalled hearing few praises from Dixson while he ran Sikorsky's flight test team.

But Dixson told Sikorsky's staff today that "they should be proud for what they have accomplished" during the X2 programme, Bredenbeck says.
http://www.scramble.nl/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=63383" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
November 2024 update at FokkerNews.nl....
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