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The pressure-jet helicopter propulsion system
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2016
Extract
The helicopter rotor probably represents one of the most difficult of all power-transmission problems in the fact that high power is required at relatively low rotational speeds. High power at low speed defines high torque, and high torque in a mechanical transmission requires large, heavy gears. In addition, since every action has an equal and opposite reaction, the shaft torques must be reacted, and this requires a tail rotor system for the shaft helicopter.
A jet-propulsion system offers certain distinct advantages in comparison with a shaft-drive system for powering a helicopter rotor. It delivers a driving torque to the rotor in the form of a tangential force at the tip of the rotor rather than by twisting a shaft at the centre of the rotor.
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- Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1972
Footnotes
Work on this paper was accomplished while the author was associated with United Technical Industries and Hughes Tool Co, Aircraft Division, prior to his present association