jedufa
Aerospace
- Apr 6, 2006
- 3
Following the thread thread6-3970.
Hi, I would like to know if in a hover situation, the number of blades will increase the total lift. From the last thread, i have understood that increasing the number of blades is done only to remove stress from each blades by distribuing the entire carried weight. My situation is a two-rotors (2 blades/rotor) system which is just meant to hover, removing the need for blade flapping. It is thus reduced to the "simpliest" case. But i would like to get more lift to carry heavier things, and adding blades would be a nice solution.
Another solution would be to increase the rotation speed, but I would have to stay under the speed of sound for the blade tips, right? For this last solution, is the result only a question of blade solidity? Is there any lift-related effect of going supersonic?
Any help would be appreciated.
Jean-Francois
Hi, I would like to know if in a hover situation, the number of blades will increase the total lift. From the last thread, i have understood that increasing the number of blades is done only to remove stress from each blades by distribuing the entire carried weight. My situation is a two-rotors (2 blades/rotor) system which is just meant to hover, removing the need for blade flapping. It is thus reduced to the "simpliest" case. But i would like to get more lift to carry heavier things, and adding blades would be a nice solution.
Another solution would be to increase the rotation speed, but I would have to stay under the speed of sound for the blade tips, right? For this last solution, is the result only a question of blade solidity? Is there any lift-related effect of going supersonic?
Any help would be appreciated.
Jean-Francois