This application is the U.S. National Phase application of PCT/IB2010/001987 filed Aug. 10, 2010 which claims priority from Italian Patent Application Serial No. TO2009A000632 filed Aug. 11, 2009.
The present invention relates to a convertiplane, i.e. a hybrid aircraft with adjustable rotors, capable of selectively assuming an “aeroplane” configuration, in which the rotors are positioned with their axes substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the aircraft, and a “helicopter” configuration, in which the rotors are positioned with their axes substantially vertical and crosswise to the longitudinal axis of the aircraft, so as to combine the advantages of a fixed-wing turboprop aircraft and a helicopter.
The ability to adjust its rotors as described enables a convertiplane to take off and land like a helicopter, i.e. with no need for a runway and along extremely steep trajectories, to minimize ground noise and, for example, even take off and land in urban areas; and to fly like an aeroplane capable of reaching and maintaining a cruising speed of roughly 500 km/h, or at any rate higher than the roughly 300 km/h cruising speed of a helicopter, and a typical cruising height of 7500 meters, which is roughly twice that of a helicopter, and enables it to fly above most cloud formations and atmospheric disturbance.
In other words, with respect to a conventional helicopter, a convertiplane has the advantages of almost twice the cruising speed; substantially twice the flying distance and time for a given payload and fuel supply, thus making it cheaper to operate; and over twice the cruising height, thus making it insensitive to weather conditions (clouds, turbulence) over most of the flight. With respect to a conventional aeroplane, on the other hand, a convertiplane has the advantages of being able to hover, and to take off and land in confined spaces, even in urban areas.
At present, substantially two convertiplane configurations are known: “Tilt Rotor”, in which the wings remain substantially fixed, and only the motor-rotor assemblies rotate with their nacelles; and “Tilt Wing”, in which the rotor attitude is adjusted by rotating the wing-propulsion system assembly as a whole.
A tilt-wing convertiplane, i.e. of the type to which the present invention refers, is known from EP-1057724, which describes an aircraft or convertiplane comprising two motor-rotor assemblies, each fitted to a respective wing portion, which is mounted to rotate about an axis crosswise to the longitudinal axis of the aircraft, to selectively set the respective motor-rotor assembly to a helicopter configuration or aeroplane configuration.
Though undoubtedly valid both structurally and functionally, the above known convertiplane has several drawbacks by being complicated in design and therefore relatively expensive to produce. This is mainly due to the presence of two separately controlled rotating wing portions; and two motor-rotor assemblies, which must be synchronized with one another and, having to rotate the rotors in opposite directions, cannot be perfectly identical.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a tilt-wing convertiplane, which is easy and relatively cheap to produce, comprises far fewer component parts, and provides for eliminating the aforementioned drawbacks.
According to the present invention, there is provided a tilt-wing convertiplane as claimed in Claim 1 and preferably in any one of the following Claims depending directly or indirectly on Claim 1.
A non-limiting embodiment of the invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Movable portion 6 comprises two half-wings 8 projecting from fuselage 2, located on opposite sides of fixed portion 5, and connected integrally by an elongated member defined by a ribbed panel 9, which defines the leading edge of the whole of wing 4, and comprises a central portion 10 to the front of fixed portion 5, and two lateral portions, each fitted integrally along its trailing edge with a respective half-wing 8.
With reference to
Each rotor 14 is fitted to the end of a respective nacelle 15 fitted to respective half-wing 8, and rotates, in the opposite direction to the other rotor 14, about a respective axis 16 parallel to the other axis 16 and perpendicular to axis 7.
Transmission casing 11 is coaxial with axis 7, and comprises a central tubular housing 17, from the opposite ends of which two tubular, truncated-cone-shaped bodies 18 extend coaxially with axis 7, communicate with the inside of housing 17 through respective outlet openings in housing 17, and are connected integrally at their wider ends to housing 17, at the outlet openings.
Transmission casing 11 is fitted to fuselage 2 by a number of articulated ties or connecting rods. More specifically, as shown in
Each tubular body 18 is also fitted underneath (
As shown clearly in
The central portion 10 of panel 9 is closed at the rear by a spar 33, from which project rearwards two annular brackets 34 located symmetrically with respect to the longitudinal plane of symmetry of fuselage 2, and connected integrally to spar 33. Each bracket 34 is fitted through with respective tubular body 18, to which bracket 34 is connected by a respective spherical bearing 35 centred about axis 7, supported by bracket 34, and fitted to tubular body 18 coaxially with axis 7. The function of spherical bearings 35 is to allow movable portion 6, however deformed in use, to be rotated about axis 7 and with respect to fixed portion 5 by an actuating device 36 comprising two jacks 37, each of which lies in the plane of relative bracket 34, has an upward- and forward-sloping axis 38, and is interposed between a respective bottom fork 39, and a respective top outer fork 40 fitted to central portion 10 of panel 9. Though shown higher than fork 31 for illustration reasons, bottom fork 39 is preferably anchored to fuselage 2 at a point long respective longitudinal rail 19.
In a variation not shown, the two jacks 37 may be replaced with a single central jack.
A transmission shaft 41, forming part of transmission 12, extends, coaxially with axis 7, through transmission casing 11, is supported for rotation by housing 17, engages tubular bodies 18 in rotary manner, extends inside each nacelle 15, and, as shown in
As shown in
Input shaft 45 is coaxial with tubular body 44, has an axis 47 perpendicular to axis 7, and is connected at one end to shaft 41 by a bevel gear pair 48 housed inside transmission casing 11, and at the other end to the free end of drive shaft 46 by an elastic joint 49.
As shown in
Tubular bodies 44 and 53 together define an articulated tubular body 54, which not only permits transmission casing 11 to support the front of motor 13, but also acts as an antirotation device for motor 13, and locks transmission casing 11 angularly to prevent it rotating about axis 7 with movable portion 6 of wing 4, when jacks 37 are operated. By virtue of the articulated joint defined by forks 50, 52 and pins 51, the bending moments generated on one side by wing 4 and on the other by the motor are not transmitted by articulated tubular body 54.
Operation of convertiplane 1 will be clear from the above structural description, with no further explanation required. As regards the structure and performance of convertiplane 1, however, it is important to note that:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2009A0632 | Aug 2009 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2010/001987 | 8/10/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/25/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/018697 | 2/17/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2814451 | Turner | Nov 1957 | A |
3106369 | Borst | Oct 1963 | A |
3666209 | Taylor | May 1972 | A |
5096140 | Dornier et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5141176 | Kress et al. | Aug 1992 | A |
6367736 | Pancotti | Apr 2002 | B1 |
8702031 | Morris | Apr 2014 | B2 |
20090266942 | Karem | Oct 2009 | A1 |
20100276549 | Karem | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20140191088 | Karem | Jul 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0416590 | Mar 1991 | EP |
1057724 | Dec 2000 | EP |
1057725 | Dec 2000 | EP |
1391203 | Mar 1965 | FR |
S38-008020 | JP | |
2001-001995 | Sep 2001 | JP |
Entry |
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JP Office Action dated Apr. 9, 2014 for corresponding JP application No. 2012-524299. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120211608 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |