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..The Little Wing project is complete! Take a look at the finished product: Click on thumbnails to enlarge .... YOU WILL NOT BE DISSAPOINTED!
.. Now read about the entire project: |
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Another Exciting Project Utalising Rotec's R2800 Radial Engine. Designer & Constructor of this Tractor Autogiro powered by our R2800 : Ron Herron. Ron has his own web page so for a lot of additional information. Goto www.littlewingautogyro.com |
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The interest generated by this project is exciting with 3 other projects under construction by Ron; and at least 4 others pending. If you are contemplating an Autogiro then Ron's your man! |
Further
contact details: Ron Herron Little Wing Autogyros, Inc. 746 Hwy 89N Mayflower, AR 72106 E-mail: ron@littlewingautogyro.com Phone:(501)470-7444 |
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Project Progress: Click on the thumbnails to see the full size pic... Making
the frame ... Mounting
the engine ... Engine
Fires Up ... Ground
Testing Completed ... Ron writes
(May 31, 2003): I flew yesterday with
the new prop, cowling and rotor mast fairings. It ...up
Up UP & AWAY! .... Finishing
Touch ... Test
Run with Collector Ring ... Shots
of completed Autogyro ... Ron writes
(April 1 , 2003):
I have received my sheet metal and will be building a boot
cowl to finish out the engine installation. This should really tidy things
up. In
the Air ... Rotec wishes to congratulate Ron on wining the following award:
Just a note to let you know that the Rotec/Little Wing won Grand Champion in Mentone, Indiana at the Popular Rotorcraft International Convention. You may want to visit *rotorcraft.com* and see some of the photos posted there. I gave a forum on the engine also. You may want to forward this to your Dad for the website. The "Grand Champion" award is partially yours! The "Best New Component" award was for my redundant control system.
12th Aug 2003 Ron Writes: I flew into Oshkosh and also flew a couple of flight demos as well as running the engine every day for the crowd. If you go to the EAA airventure webpage you will see the autogyro doing a main runway fly-by on Thursday. (Here
is a copy of that shot... click to expand... I
was interviewed for a feature article in both "Sport Aviation"
and "Custom Planes". I also did a live EAA radio interview concerning
the Rotec engine. Brian did a couple of forums and gave me a batch of
spec sheets to hand out also. Shots
from Osh 2003 ...
EAA's Sept 2004 Great Review of Ron's Autogyro: Click on the thumbnails to see the full size pic...
The Following Article was written in collaboration by Bruce Charnov & Ron Herron (19 August 2002) This article is scheduled to appear in Rotorcraft magazine in the very near future, for information contact Kathy Fields: kfields@iwvisp.com or log onto www.pra.org The Rotec R 2800 Radial Engine Back
to the Future Dr. Bruce Charnov, Hofstra University Ron
Herron A
Radial for Little Wing Ron Herron
Finally, a real radial engine of a size and scale adaptable to the Little Wing Autogyro! The idea of a radial on one of my gyros has been an illusive dream....until now. . . I have had my eyes open for a practical example for almost 10 years. The Sadler radial was once a serious consideration and I even sent drawings to the company to get their feelings on its application on one of my machines. They were fully supportive of the idea but they never really got their engine into production mode and the current rumor is that the tool and die and parts inventory are for sale. My involvement with tractor autogyros started with an attempt to return to the original concepts of the Autogiro, due to safety issues. That has proven to be the correct approach now echoed in concerns of others with the movement towards requiring horizontal stabilizers and center-thrust machines. And for the revived tractor designs, a good dose of nostalgia and a return to the Glory Days of the Autogiro seems like icing on the cake! When I first heard of the Rotec I immediately made inquiry. Ive sort of hung in the shadows waiting for its debut. Well, debut it did. It started showing up at major airshows this year and I made the pilgrimage to Oshkosh to see it in person. (OK, it was also Kriss birthday and she had already flown to Oshkosh in her airplane. And besides, Bruce Charnov had already found it on the internet, made contact with the Rotec folks and was pressing me to meet him there to check it out. And as those of us who receive his almost daily e-mails dealing with the Hofstra University From Autogiro to Gyroplane Conference know, Bruce can be very persistent.) A functional example was mounted on a Kitfox airplane and it flew daily. The little engine just hummed...with a little testosterone added, (a point noticed and ) appreciated by the sizable crowd that gathered to watch (and listen) to the demonstration. The company was well represented with Paul (designer) and Brian (US sales representative) fielding all my questions. When they were down to their last engine (they brought five units) Kris and I decided it was time to take action. We could wait for the next production run (20 units) but that might be months down the road. Also, if we didnt act then, we would probably back out! The Oshkosh Special pricing didnt hurt but its still a lot of money for country folk! Luckily, Kris is aviation-minded and was fully supportive. She said wait til you show up at the airport with that thing hung on the front of a Little Wing! Immediately after arriving home from Oshkosh I removed the old VW from LW-3 and began the tedious task of building an engine mount, modifying the firewall, designing and building an oil tank.....on and on it goes, as with any project of this magnitude. The attached photos show the progress made thus far. There is still much to do but there is light at the end of the tunnel, and as Bruce points out above, (he suspects) Harold Pitcairn and Juan de la Cierva will be standing by the side of the runway with the Little Wing Rotec first lifts off. Aside from the obvious glamour of the radial, it is a very good way to build an engine, and the Australian workmanship on this engine is very good indeed. Historically,
radials have proven their reliability. This company seems dedicated to
making certain that their version of the radial is equally reliable. I
feel privileged to be among the first to use the engine, certainly the
first to use it on an autogyro. Once Ive accumulated some flight
time Ill give a full report.
(1) See Brooks, Peter W. Cierva Autogiros: The Development of Rotary-Wing Flight. Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988 p. 77; Smith, Frank Kingston. Legacy of Wings: The Story of Harold F. Pitcairn. New York: Jason Aronson, 1981 p. 147; Townson, George. Autogiro: The Story of the Windmill Plane. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers (1st ed.); Trenton, New Jersey: Townson, 1985 (2nd printing) pp. 13 15
(2) Gunston, Bill World Encyclopedia of Aero Engines(4th ed.). Sparkford. Nr. Yeovil, Somerset: Patrick Stephens Limited, 1998 p. 197
(3) Smith, Frank Kingston. Legacy of Wings: The Story of Harold F. Pitcairn. p. 383 (the only exception was a PA-*M Super Mailwing powered by a Pratt & Whitney Wasp Jr.
(4) Letter to Bruce Charnov dated 10-26-01.
(5) The 19th, as stated by the Autogiro Company of America itself in 1932 and again in 1944. See The Autogiro Philadelphia: Autogiro Company of America 1932 p. 15; Some Facts of Interest About Rotating-Wing Aircraft and the Autogiro Company of America Philadelphia: The Autogiro Company of America 1944 p. 12 (caption to top photo). But this cannot be regarded as definitive as the 1932 publication contradicts itself in stating on p. 31 It was flown for the first time over American soil by Mr. Pitcairn, at Bryn Athyn, on December 18, 1928. There is also some confusion about the pilot in the first flight. Frank Kingston Smith apparently is not the only source for the claim that Pitcairn made the first flight on December 18th. The 1932 and 1944 publications by the Autogiro Company of America cite the 19th and, being silent as to the pilot, neither attributes that flight to Pitcairn. Brooks and Townson date that flight on the 19th, and each relates that Cierva pilot Arthur Rawson first made a test flight after the C.8W had been reassembled a sensible procedure probably agreed upon by both parties and in describing the first flight(s), Smith at first relates ambiguously that . . . the first Autogiro made its first flight. Harold Pitcairn was the first American pilot to fly it which, while factually true, obscures the fact that Rawson made the first flight. The accompanying photo on the same page (149) is captioned An historic photograph: the first rotary-wing flight in America, with Harold Pitcairn flying the Cierva C-8 Autogiro at Willow Grove in December, 1928 is also historically accurate it was the first a photo of Pitcairns first American flight but clearly not the first American flight. That honor had been claimed by Rawson. And while Legacy of Wings remains an affectionate tribute to Harold F. Pitcairn with much useful information, it must always be read with caution stemming from the authors apparent dedication to depicting his subject in the most favorable light. See Brooks, Peter W. Cierva Autogiros: The Development of Rotary-Wing Flight. p. 77; Townson, George. Autogiro: The Story of the Windmill Plane p. 15; Smith, Frank Kingston. Legacy of Wings: The Story of Harold F. Pitcairn p. 149 |
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