I'm a helicopter pilot and everything described in that video was correct. The graphics show offset dual servo actuators moving the swash plate which is why all three servos need to move to achieve lateral and fore-aft tilt in the rotor system (this was animated correctly). To do that requires a mixing unit between the servos and the flight controls otherwise the pilot would have no hope of controlling the helicopter. This video was very well done.
@jmackswb10 ай бұрын
I was a helicopter mechanic for 30 years. Well explained. Most people do not understand any of this.
@victoryfirst287810 ай бұрын
Years ago I when I was at a university I would stop over and help a helicopter mechanic who maintained emergency choppers for medical evacuation to the hospital. I am a master mechanic by trade. This was just a perfect place to unwind with a fellow mechanic. We worked together like frick and frack. I found out he passed away which bummed me out. But I still have memories working with him. He was trained in the military. May God have mercy on his soul. Peace vf
@xiamalcami18785 ай бұрын
The flapping is not clear where the connection to flap the propeller.
@nicki8731Ай бұрын
@@xiamalcami1878 he mentioned it's not controlled by the pilot. It just happens by itself via aerodynamic forces. (at least that's what I've gotten from this video)
@Kafir-e-Muqaddas9 күн бұрын
@jmackswb I have a doubt whether you have understood or not.
@MrZaricnak10 ай бұрын
Mate, besides having the knowledge, which is absolutely respectable already, you are doing a great job at dumbing this down and explaining stuff, congratulations and thank you!
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks! I appreciate that comment more than you know.
@sameven511810 ай бұрын
I just found this channel. This is great
@JoJo-xo7lg10 ай бұрын
@@bzig4929you have done an awesome job, sincerely grateful ❤
@jayartz856210 ай бұрын
Dumbing down is relative. I need dumber.
@Diemerstein10 ай бұрын
I am an Emergency Physician, I am not a pilot, but I do fly fairly large RC helicopters as a hobby and have a fairly good understanding how this works, but these videos really put it in perspective at just how complex this stuff really is. My father flew the Bo 105 PAH-1 in the German Army and that machine used a different rotor head system. He used to tell me, a helicopter doesn't fly, it's a 10,000 bolt contraption that beats the air into submission while at the same time trying to self destruct. Thank you for this very informative video.
@andrewnugent213710 ай бұрын
Mechanics, students, and instructors everywhere are going to use these videos. They are incredible!
@bzig49299 ай бұрын
thanks!
@thillaiambalam566110 ай бұрын
This was the most simplified version of the helicopter rotor function, and I've been searching to understand how it works. Finally, you did it, man.Thanks for making the man in the street learn.👏👍🏻😀🙌
@草民-u3y10 ай бұрын
看完视频我感觉能制造了😂
@channel-ih6uj9 ай бұрын
I'm a layperson that flies in helicopters whenever the opportunity presents itself, such as helicopter tours, that sort of thing. I have never understood the mechanics of the rotors until now. This was an amazing video. I now have much better knowledge of these fascinating machines and I am going to watch the other videos you mentioned. Thanks for a great learning experience.
@ImpendingJoker10 ай бұрын
Those who think it is animated incorrectly don't understand gyroscopic presession. Flight control inputs take about 90* of rotation before there is any change, so that is why the actuators are placed at 45* angles at the rear of the swash plate and the pitch arms are 90* to the blad itself. This allows the system to put in the correct angle of tilt at the right place for the blades to change pitch where needed. So if you want to fly forward you don't tilt the swash plate forward you tilt it forward right, this puts the high side of the swashplate aft left, and when the blade reaches dead aft 45* later(90*) it is in the position for forward thrust. Flight control rigging and main and tail rotor track and balance were two of the things that I did on multiple different helicopters in the Army and in the civilian sector.
@AlessioSangalli10 ай бұрын
Sorry I read your comment wrong😅 my mistake
@staffy7310 ай бұрын
Well said sir!! Isn’t this an amazing channel?? I love the fact that you back him up with real knowledge and experience. Right on!!
@dkjens070510 ай бұрын
The 120 degree swashplate and the angle between blades and blade actuators doesn't make it easier for people to understand. A simple 90 degree swashplate and no angle between blades and actuators would have been easier for people to understand. The 90 degree delay of gyroscopic presession could also easily have been explained. When I assembled my first RC heli I thought the manual was wrong because I didn't know about gyroscopic presession. Needless to say I had no control over the heli until I corrected my mistake ha ha.
@ImpendingJoker10 ай бұрын
@@dkjens0705 Even two bladed helicopters have the control horns at 45 degrees angles from dead aft or dead forward as this has to be done due to gyroscopic precession.
@Quakeboy029 ай бұрын
I think you have this stated incorrectly. Its not a matter of taking 90 degrees of rotation before there's any change. It's about gyroscopic precession; which is at 90 degrees to the force applied.
@ColinDH1234510 ай бұрын
Came across your channel today and subscribed immediately. As a helicopter pilot, I see a lot of simplistic explanations as to how helicopter flight controls work. Yours is spot on and includes a mention of gyroscopic effects. Excellent. Well done!
@petergibson23188 ай бұрын
The movements of the two joysticks in the cabin wrapped it up neatly. They show how the pilot controls the rotor mechanisms. Great video.
@robertnemala221110 ай бұрын
Love the science behind it and the simplified mechanics. Answers my curiosity.
@snakeplisskinable10 ай бұрын
Fascinating, thanks for demystifying the business end of a helicopter for me, ive tried reading about it in books but your explanation and stages in animation were so much clearer! Thanks again.
@planck3910 ай бұрын
As all always comprehensive and good visualized explained! Would welcome a vid about the different rotor systems from articulated to flex and mast bumping.
@timbeard845710 ай бұрын
Excellent! I've been searching for a video that clearly shows how the swash plate mechanism works. Finally found it.
@Gsavega280310 ай бұрын
Im not a pilot. Im an “ aviation enthusiast “. Ive watched other videos, but this one actually made it the most understandable for me. Thank you! 👍🏽
@charlieteirney42528 ай бұрын
Thankyou for creating these videos my friend. Helicopters are very sophisiticated machinery, for beginners videos like these create a very simple understanding of very complex mechanical movements.
@danp955110 ай бұрын
Delightfully sophisticated design. I can only imagine the staggering amount of work, brain-power, and dedication, not to mention countless trials it must have taken, to get such a hair-brained concept to work half-way reliably and be commercially viable.
@danp955110 ай бұрын
Don't get me wrong, the video, the animation and explanation are really good. But the notion of having large blades spin really fast, all the while controlled by high precision mechanisms, the entire assembly out in the open, susceptible to imbalance, constantly subjected to vibrations, is not particularly confidence inspiring. God forbid one of the many pins or joints or levers fails. Maintenance must be a nightmare.
@terrancestodolka48299 ай бұрын
Wow, great rendering video of the flight control systems...Truly lost me, but closed my eyes and had to imagine the forces and the transfer of power to the blades...
@Thaihandmade-wd9mh10 ай бұрын
I'm always amazed that all of this stuff can hold together when under load and not disintegrate into a million pieces.
@clarencegreen30717 ай бұрын
Note at 3:20 that a single shaft keeps the entire contraption in the air. How can that not make an impression?
@hassanalihassan120910 ай бұрын
this channel is a pure gold mine! thanks!!
@Thinking0000010 ай бұрын
Fascinating stuff, thank you for producing such high quality information. Idea for a future video: Show how inputs from the cyclic/collective are transmitted to the 3 cylinders that act on the swashplate.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Good suggestion! Also a challenge... helicopter mixing units are gloriously complex things.
@Potatocarguy10 ай бұрын
Absolutely loved this video, thanks for putting in the hours. My only experience with helicopters have been calling in a pave low in mw2 and expertly piloting helicopters in battlefield 4 and 2042. Always wondered how these things worked, thank you 🤘🏽
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I'm not sure, but I think the software I use (blender) is used to make assets for gaming.
@polychronisrempoulakis358810 ай бұрын
Watching this its mind-blowing to think how helicopter was first invented! Sikorsky was truly a genius! Thank you for your amazing animation and presentation!
@AlessioSangalli10 ай бұрын
I subscribed to this channel yesteday and I’m glad I did so that I could be notified of this video. So interesting. I finally understand why the controls are called collective and cyclic now 😅
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Welcome back!
@MrDastardly10 ай бұрын
Really interesting & clearly illustrated and explained. 👏👏👏
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@marbles0510 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work. Well done.
@57Jimmy10 ай бұрын
Heli’s are always a blast to watch! I’m sure the engineering is phenomenal to say the least but to me all I see is a bunch of spindly parts, plates, hinges and turnbuckles spinning so fast! What could possibly go wrong!😵💫😂
@michaelcarr101210 ай бұрын
what prevents the lift acting on the blade from pivoting them upwards at the flapping hinge, it seems like they would just become a rotating cone of blades unless there is a stop that I'm not seeing
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Short answer is... The centrifugal force loads as the blades rotate. I'm planning a future video to show the details on that. Thanks for watching!
@ImpendingJoker10 ай бұрын
Mechanically due to the pitch links they won't keep going up to that point. Like wings they are designed to take a certain amount of bending moment, and they begin to cone as collective is applied, when the system is at flight power and no collective is applied the blades fly at an angle called the "pre-cone angle" this is the blades producing enough lift for their weight but not yet enough to lift the helicopter off the ground. As the collective is increased the cone angle changes, and if the weight of aircraft exceeds the rating of the blades they can "egg beater", but this won't happen on the ground, you'll just run out of power(collective) and the blades will fly to a certain point and the drag they create will slow the whole system down, resulting in a low rotor RPM state and over torquing the system. Eggbeatering usually only happens if flight parameters exceed the limits of the system, such as if you are in a high speed descent, and you start to pull in collective, you aren't just trying to lift the weight of the helicopter but, you're also trying to arrest the momentum of the helicopter's movement as well, this can result in the blades snapping when they reach their limit and then looking like an old fashioned "eggbeater" to the outside observer. At this point the helicopter has the aerodynamics of a grand piano, and flies about as well, and there is nothing the crew can do to save themselves. This is usually the fault of the pilot and not the helicopter they have limits for a reason.
@avman2cl10 ай бұрын
I've been a helicopter for 42 years. This information is correct
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks! Much appreciated coming from someone with your experience!
@michaelgeorge309210 ай бұрын
ive been in helos 20 yrs as a mechanic and found this to be the easiest explanation ive found. i would love to see a video on their explanation of gyroscopic procession as for as input goes. this has far reaching theory in that large heavy bikes are steered the same way. @@bzig4929
@thedevilinthecircuit141410 ай бұрын
Borrowed from the Roger Rabbit film: "I've been a cab for 40 years!"
@Joshuabwd4010 ай бұрын
These videos are such high quality great job explaining it mate love the videos 😁
@marcob463010 ай бұрын
It's complicated enough! However thanks for the explanation
@staffy7310 ай бұрын
I recently discovered your great work and really appreciate the the high quality of your animations and your clear narration in your voice. Apart from the informative material that garners real and honest interest from young people to old guys like me, the fact that you give it that personal touch and attention to detail absolutely compels me to not only subscribe but spread the word of your amazing channel. You good sir, have earned it. Thank you and keep it coming. I am 100% positive that you will inspire your viewers young and old alike, to consider careers in aviation, engineering, and other fields where we need brilliant minds to pave the way towards a technological future that we haven’t yet imagined!
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for those very nice words!
@ratratrat5910 ай бұрын
Fantastic, keep those reruns coming. Fantastic
@Gerald_Hunker6 ай бұрын
Drive scissors and stationary scissors, these were the missing links in my understanding of helicopter control. Pity that the latter was missing in the animation - but at last I got my head wrapped around that stuff, thank you!
@samuelcv656510 ай бұрын
finaly I know why it is collective and cyclic controls ..thaks great video
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
A few people have said this! I'm glad I was able to help people make that connection.
@joelhabegger777410 ай бұрын
Nice videos ! Was wondering if you could do one on the synchronization gear of a Messerschmitt Bf 109E1?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I had no idea they still used those in WWII! I found some photos online, but nothing that detailed. I'll keep looking.
@griffon-vulture10 ай бұрын
This is key element of helicopter stability. And it was invented by Igor Sikorsky in 1926 year in the USA after several years of work with different prototypes of helicopter, which were not stable enough in flight. He started his inventions in Kyiv Polytechnical Institute, Ukraine, which is titled by his name.
@pelinelden8 ай бұрын
So when we do cyclic inputs all those lead leg flapping comes with feathering right? On the 8:00 since you did feathering flapping lead leg one at a time. There is no other control that caused flapping or lead leg right ?
@okellojim614210 ай бұрын
I'm an aeronautical student from Kenya and I find your videos very useful
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I'm glad you find them useful. Thank you for watching!
@michaelmappin442510 ай бұрын
Absolutely outstanding. Can you teach me about droop stops and why they are used?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I've been playing a future video on the aerodynamic reasons for flapping and lead lag. Droop stops will be part of that! Thanks for commenting.
@toutmoun31715 ай бұрын
This is the best video İ have seen on this topic.
@bzig49295 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@taha693910 ай бұрын
Thanks fot feeding me with this content
@vmfulcrum10 ай бұрын
This is really a great video. Very few explanations like this exists in the internet. Keep up the good work.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@victoryfirst287810 ай бұрын
Very nicely explained Sir. 😀😀😀😀
@jhvorlicky10 ай бұрын
Very useful, thank you. Some of us need to know how in the hell something works, so we know why we need to do what we must do. I know there are folks who can learn to do stuff by just copying and following orders, but I ain't one of those! Thanks again.
@BariumCobaltNitrog3n10 ай бұрын
I can relate to that. I've had a few employers tell me I ask too many questions about how something works. I'm an electrician, a really old one. Curiosity didn't kill the cat, it built a spaceship.
@BariumCobaltNitrog3n10 ай бұрын
I love helicopters. I've only been in one once, but it was from Oakland airport to SFO at like 50 feet above the bay, it was unreal. Later I took up RC cars, boats, planes and finally helis and the learning curve was a wall. To turn left, you think about it and it responds, moving the stick = crash. Only the rudder needs some input, and too much is wheeeee! From what I've seen, the full-size ones are similar, like pushing over a domino is enough pressure. 3D flying 450's are bonkers.
@unityxg10 ай бұрын
Man your videos are incredible. Thank you for these.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Triftji6 ай бұрын
Hello I’ve been a helicopter maintenance technician and technical instructor for a number of years and your videos are excellent. However, to explain the helicopter flight control system, I suggest in using a two-blade rotor system and a swashplate with a 90° control input regime rather than a swashplate having 120°. For students it would be easier to understand the influence of the gyroscopic precession on the flight controls. Keep up the good work!
@bzig49296 ай бұрын
Thanks for the feedback! I'm working on a 4 blade model for the exact reason you say... It's easier to see and understand things like forward flight disymetry of lift and precession
@Triftji6 ай бұрын
@@bzig4929 Sounds great! I have suggestion for another project. Students often have a problem understanding the functioning of a so called “phasing unit”. For example, such a unit is installed in the flight controls of a Super-Puma. The unit rephases the 90° cyclic input signals to the 120° regime required by the swashplate. It would be great to have an instruction video showing the concept.
@Danielcarneirodigita10 ай бұрын
Congratulations. Phenomenal explanation. Kudos and thank you.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@pklpklpkl10 ай бұрын
This is incredible and the exact thing I was looking for recently. I hope you'll do a comparison with the semi-rigid and rigid systems too!
@timrowe23410 ай бұрын
Awesome video! I’ve always wanted to know how helicopters were controlled.
@thecarradioandarongtong46313 күн бұрын
Thanks so much for your efforts brother
@ez87gn5610 ай бұрын
Wow ! Deep ! Guess I’ll just marvel at them flying !
@md.ahashanhabib6710 ай бұрын
good work mate ❤
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks ✌️
@ZeroKey9210 ай бұрын
Clear, concise and easy to understand explanation for a rather complex system, though I don't know how meaningful that statement is, since I am a trained industrial mechanic. One thing however that I either didn't understand or was missing from the animation/explanation was how flapping is "controlled". As you said it's entirely determined by aerodynamics and inertia but I would assume that the hinges that facilitate that motion have a neutral position and that there is some sort of spring element that tries to return the blades to that position. Just like the spring element for lead lag.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
My vision with this is to do a series of videos that build on each other. The reason flapping and lead-lag exist are very specific and deserve a good explanation. I'm also trying to grow my animation skills and I need to learn how to do on-screen annotations for those topics. For the short answer... Flapping exists to correct for "forward flight dysemmetry of lift" and to allow control by tilting the tip path plane. Lead-lag allows for conservation of angular momentum as the blades flap asymmetrically. I love comments like yours! They really help me make the next videos better. Thanks.
@bernardanderson375810 ай бұрын
Now I’m more interested in knowing what the cyclic and the collective effect are and this was very helpful
@doctorartphd646310 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation !! Thank you.
@Rob9955210 ай бұрын
This is all fascinating. The blade pitch control (collective and cyclic) is clear, but what is the purpose of the lead/lag and the feathering? and how is feathering restrained when under load?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
that's my next video! I've started the story line and script and, once that's done, I'll start creating the video clips. Even though I'm reusing the same solid model, there is quite a bit of work to do to get them ready. In short... flapping allows the helicopter to fly fast and also allows control. But when it flaps the individual blade center's of gravity shift and this would create a problem with conservation of angular momentum... and this is what the lead-lag hinge solves. Constraining feathering under load... that's interesting... the blade pitch is close to the aerodynamic center, so loads are as low as they can be, but still significant. The answer, I believe, is robust components and lots of hydraulic pressure.
@3dfymyworld48410 ай бұрын
Good animation, tks for the video
@sky17310 ай бұрын
Awesome video. I'd love to see how the internals of the rotating swasplate actually rotates around the NON-rotating swasplate/spherical bearing, as well as the internals of how the up/down motion of the spherical bearing moves relative to the transmission adapter... ( In short, all of the bearing surfaces that make everything in that general area move smoothly (bearings, seals, etc). A deep look within that whole area ). Again, great video. Thanks for sharing.
@PrinciplesofEverything10 ай бұрын
Bro, I see your future that you will be the second Lesics🎉
@RobertNantyffyllon196510 ай бұрын
Very well made and explained. So many moving parts, never get me in Helicopter. 😅
@utweak10 ай бұрын
This is v well done. Very impressive explanation but also sharp and clear graphics. Can I ask what you use for the graphics/3d modeling?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I use Autodesk Fusion for 3d modeling, and then I import the models into Blender for materials, lighting and animation. Thanks for watching!
@MelbaOzzie10 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation and animation. Thank you.
@michaelduernecker6847 ай бұрын
Great Animation. Amazing
@swilamalswilam245410 ай бұрын
We need explanation about the pedals and the cable witch is connected to the tail rotor and the movement of pedals
@ahamrtasmi10 ай бұрын
Awesome lessons!
@GbluesmanАй бұрын
Please discuss elastomeric bearings
@petergibson23188 ай бұрын
When you see a large helicopter lifting a tank you appreciate how strong all those “delicate looking” connections must be.
@RomanKuzmyhin10 ай бұрын
I want to see further what thickness is the axle shaft on which all this is attached, the axle shaft that lifts the entire helicopter, the main load goes on it
@dishantjain17613 ай бұрын
Thanks man real help for my autocad project
@bzig49293 ай бұрын
Awesome. I did this in Autodesk Fusion. Good luck with your project.
@dishantjain17613 ай бұрын
@@bzig4929 Fusion..Nice..Actually I had to make a 2d assembly of the swashplate thing.
@alexeyl2210 ай бұрын
Awesome. Would be nice to simulate and animate flight conditions (in-flight direction/pitch) to control system input. Why would blade lead lag be needed.
@424bowz10 ай бұрын
I loved this vid thx you so much for all that hard work on it
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@kornelmielcarek59807 ай бұрын
As far as I understand, EC-135 doesn't have any of these hinges (except feathering) and it still flies, is quite controllable, stable and doesn't vibrate. How come?
@LeiffNathanAMendoza10 ай бұрын
with these different materials of steel has to be semi-rigid right? how much wind speed can it withstand during sandstormy plus freezing rain of hails everywhere weathers? or just do not fly when bad weathers are around as the end scenario... so as to avoid accidents at all...
@punchitindaface22788 ай бұрын
Could you do the C-5 Galaxy? It really help some of the new guys coming outta tech school. Especially hydro
@TheMoghrabimahmoud10 ай бұрын
You sir are a master of your craft
@mvnorsel63549 ай бұрын
I read the book ' Chicken Hawk ' once so I'm almost a pilot. Fascinating read.😅
@mattn559410 ай бұрын
fantastic video, very informed and detailed
@wwq-l6x10 ай бұрын
I wonder how high the friction is between rotating and non-rotating swashplates
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt10 ай бұрын
It is a ball bearing. And I think that the swashplate is unstable and wants to tilt. So the more cyclic you apply , the more force and friction.
@michaelgeorge309210 ай бұрын
i disagree Arne. the blade pitch is incredibly stable. due to Aerodynamic Twisting Moment, all the blades will want to increase pitch automatically. this is easily witnessed when dropping a piece of paper vertically. it wants to turn flat into the air in direction its moving. It when you want to change that pitch to something else is when CTM & ATM come into play, so yes, alot more force is required to get them to move. @@ArneChristianRosenfeldt
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt10 ай бұрын
@@michaelgeorge3092 I did only consider rigid bodies. Around which axis do the blades pitch? I know that some blades have a stable airfoil like a flying wing. But I ( for RC or drone ) would minimize blade weight and optimize for Lift only. A flying wing with a straight leading edge better has it made of steel. I think that helicopter blades have knife edge to cut through small branches and birds?
@SkidsUpAviation10 ай бұрын
This is an incredible video!
@piloto_loco10 ай бұрын
outstanding tutorial. was hoping you would chose the uh-60 rotorsystem for demonstration instead. but here a question: who was inventing this concept in the first place? is that known?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
One of the other commenters told me of Boris Yuryev who used swashplates in a helicopter design in 1912. I had no idea the technology had been around that long. The history of science and technology is so cool... It's amazing to think of what mankind accomplished without the modern design tools we have today.
@piloto_loco10 ай бұрын
my words! would be interesting to close the gap between leonardo da vincis time and 1912, understand what was the actual momentum of innovation. love your channel by the way. not sure why youtube has directed me to you only now.@@bzig4929
@esnevip9 ай бұрын
I'm curious why the lead/lag is accomodated for rather than an attempt to eliminate it. Are the forces involved just too much stress to restrain? I'm also curious how the non rotating swashplate is fastened to the spherical bearing. I see there are a ring of bolts surrounding it which leads me to surmise that the bottom half (if it is in-fact two pieces) is sent down the transmission adapter first, followed by the bearing, then capped with the top half clasping them all together, is this correct? Fantastic breakdown as always.
@bzig49299 ай бұрын
The lead-lag degree of freedom can be eliminated with a type of rotor called a teetering rotor. In a teetering rotor, flapping occurs very close to the center of rotation. In the rotor system I animated, the flapping hinge is offset from the center of rotation and this causes two things that make a lead lag hinge necessary. The first is to relieve out-of-plane rotor forces when the rotor disk tilts on its virtual axis. This is due to Coriolis effect. The second reason is to allow for conservation of angular momentum. When the blades flap, their CG also moves inward. Much like an ice skater spins faster when she moves her arms inward, helicopter blades must spin faster when the flap away from neutral... The lead-lag hinge allows them to spin faster for the half cycle where they flap away from neutral, followed by spinning slower as they flap back towards neutral. Blades that don't lead-lag are called "stiff in plane" and these designs are possible, but not good for structural life of the blades.
@esnevip9 ай бұрын
@@bzig4929 excellent breakdown thankyou! I hadn't considered that at all.
@gerrykeaveney165710 ай бұрын
excellent video. Tell me what software do you use to produce such stunning graphics?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I use blender for materials, lighting and animation. I create the objects in Fusion 360.
@gerrykeaveney165710 ай бұрын
youre a genius@@bzig4929
@cursedhickoryactual10 ай бұрын
❤ thank you 🙏 Very well 👏 👌 presented
@stachowi10 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. Thank you.
@alphonsesynrem288 ай бұрын
Simply awesome.
@tungaum75316 ай бұрын
I would like you to make videos about control systems of helicopter pilot control.
@aaroncuilty930610 ай бұрын
Great stuff man! I'd love to see a video similar to this but with a semi rigid rotor system. (this model seems to based off a blackhawk or similar, right?) Been working as a helicopter CFI and your videos are great to explain to students how all the concepts tie together
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Cool idea on the semirigid rotor! I'll need to figure out how to bend objects in the animation software. The main rotor, in this vid, is modeled after a ch-46, but the tail rotor and tail rotor drive is modeled after the S-92/Blackhawk. I had already done a ch-46, so I just copied that main rotor instead of creating a new one. The hawk also has the engine further forward with a nose gearbox... So the main transmission is also a little different.
@aaroncuilty930610 ай бұрын
@@bzig4929 Ah that's awesome, thanks for the clarification on the models it was based on!
@nuttyDesignAndFab10 ай бұрын
wait, but what limits the flap in a hinged system? like why don't they droop on the ground, or flip up when lift is applied? is that just based on centrifugal forces?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Yes... CF loads. What's cool is that the CF loads increase as the blades flap away from neutral so it's a heavily damped system. Meaning that even aggressive maneuvering is unlikely to overlap the Rotors. My animation is greatly simplified and real helicopters have flap stops that are there for low rpm... Startup and shutdown. The stops are spring loaded so they are only in place at low CF (low RPM). if the blades were to contact a stop at high RPM - they can't because the CF loads overcome their spring force, and move them out of the way - but if they did, they would not protect the rotor. Loads are too high at flight RPM.
@RickJones22210 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@corneliuslewis884410 ай бұрын
I loved this video...thanks so much!
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment!
@toastrecon10 ай бұрын
So, how is flapping "controlled"? What's stopping the blades from just folding upwards with the lift? It can't just be the centrifugal force, can it? Are those hinges spring loaded and damped somehow?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
It's just CF and the damping from the CF is sufficient that flapping doesn't need any springs or dampers. This doesn't address droop (negative flapping) when the rotors stop... This is handled with a mechanical droop stops that I didn't model in this simplified CAD model. Thanks for the question. I want to do a video on this exact subject... My day job keeps getting in the way.
@adolforuiz372310 ай бұрын
Excelente video Muchas gracias
@ByaruhangaSundayMoses3 ай бұрын
I need guidance on compressor wash of an mi-24 helicopter
@saomychau701010 ай бұрын
Q: Why are most helicopters have four or five rotor blades? Can they build them to have 9 or 12 blades (multiple of 3s) because they can outperform some other fewer blades in term of lifting forces? Did any companies ever tested with such a more complexity by having a higher number of blades?
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
That concept is called "solidity". It's the ratio of the solid planform area of the rotor disk, to the empty platform area. Generally, for higher gross weight, you want higher solidity. So wider chord blades or more of them. I think the limiting factor to more-blades will be fitting the rotor controls into the narrowing space between the blades. The most blades is 7 on the ch53 and mi26. I could be wrong.
@preuomo10 ай бұрын
This is absolutely informative. I hope my comment helps the algorithm get this to more poeple!
@BariumCobaltNitrog3n10 ай бұрын
The algorithm wants you to binge watch his catalog, either "play all" or just pick and choose. That's the highest scoring item in the equation, then sharing, then engagement. Your attention is absolute gold to YT. But commenting, liking and subs are pretty low scoring because they can't show you ads during BUT if you get replies, that's a conversation (comment, reply, reply) and that's focused attention.
@MrStrosty10 ай бұрын
Thought you’d have a hundreds of thousands of subs. Great video.
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
I working to get there! Thanks for watching and commenting.
@fmphotooffice551310 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Fascinating animations. (By no means a pilot, jus' sayin'.)
@ProFreemanTheDeamon4810 ай бұрын
Hi mate, I’m curious to know how the flight controls are connected to the rotors. What I’m asking is, when pilots make an input on the cyclic or collect, what mechanism drives the input to the rotors to perform the input. Is it a combination of wires, hydraulics or something complete different. I’m struggling to find any answers online. Thanks!
@bzig492910 ай бұрын
Good question! When you see how complicated these are, you'll understand why I didn't include that in the animation. If you do an image search on "helicopter mixing unit" you'll see what I mean. The complexity comes because each control on the flight deck has to influence all three hydraulic actuators, so they all have to get mechanically mixed before they connect to the pilot valves. And larger helicopters also do some non-traditional control mixing. The canted tail used in many Sikorsky aircraft would case a pitch change with pedal input if it were not dealt with at the design... So they mix in longitudinal cyclic commands with the pedal inputs. I may tackle the mechanical controls for a future animation, but it's a daunting task.
@ArneChristianRosenfeldt10 ай бұрын
RC helicopters just use electric motors to actuate. They have a digital mixer in the remote.