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Gyrocopters?

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Gorilla

King of Belize
Joined
Nov 9, 2005
Posts
1,132
Anyone have any experience with a Bensen or similar gyroplane? Gyrocopter? What IS the correct term? :confused:

I've always been fascinated by these, and they look like a blast, especially the open-cockpit aspect. Thanks!
 
Gyros

Gorilla,

I too have been fascinated by these machines for years. The correct generic term is "gyroplane"...."gyrocopter" was a term coined by Bensen Aircraft to refer to their own product.

I got about 2 hours' dual with Bill Parsons in his Bensen-style tandem trainer back in '89. It was an absolute blast; better than a powered parachute (felt far more solid, less like a powered wiffle ball), extremely maneuverable. Also very noisy (90hp McCullough screaming behind you).

Although it was great, I never pursued it further for these reasons:
1). Expense of adding the rating to my PPL was at least several thousand $, and training wasn't located anywhere convenient.
2). Aircraft themselves can be pricey, especially 2-seaters (upwards of $30K), and they require lots of power for the performance relative to a fixed-wing machine (don't need a conventional hangar, though).
3). Despite the amount of knowledge I have and the design changes over the years to improve safety, even experienced gyro pilots still seem to get killed too often (even Bill Parsons himself), or at least it seems so. Check out www.rotaryforum.com/forum for some info.

Have fun.
 
Mr Farrington was a real high time instructor, and he got himself killed a few years ago. That was at Sun 'n' Fun, I think. We've also had two in the past few years die in the pattern at MYV, where there is a guy who builds them. I think having a builder there makes MYV sort of a gyro mecca.
 
Ohhh K, I wasn't aware that these things were death traps. I thought that they were stable and easy to fly, like an ultralight. I learned something new today.

I'm not quite ready to check out of this world yet. When I do, I'll take up base jumping and gyrocopters!
 
I'm not trying to spook you, Gorilla. I've done a fair amount of research, and I understand that they can be very safe, especially when equipped with a good horizontal tail surface. There are a couple of designs out there that seem very good....I particularly like the Little Wing designs (www.littlewingautogyro.com). But I don't have about $35K for the aircraft (which I must then build myself) and another $5K or so to get the Private Gyro add-on to my PPL. For all of that, I could buy something else and a have lot of cash left for gas, hangar, insurance, etc, and not have to wait 2-3 years to fly it. I still think they're cool machines; I guess maybe the accidents shouldn't concern me any more than the recent shocking loss of Scott Crossfield....it happens, I guess. But when I read of a high-time gyro pilot augering in, it's very disappointing.
 
I appreciate the info, airbrush. I don't know why, but these fascinate me, ever since I saw a few movies watching guys take off in what appeared to be about 20 feet in a modest wind. They seem really maneuverable and capable of some awesome "tricks". Plus, in a post-apocalyptic world, it'd definitely kick some butt. (The Road Warrior! ;) )

$5K for a gyro rating? That's pretty harsh. I definitely need to look into this a bit more. Maybe I'll pursue the ultralight side of the equation, get enough dual to avoid instant death, at least, then tool around in the ultralight. Or perhaps set it up with a ballistic parachute set up to launch straight back!
 
My rotary wing class at USNTPS did an eval on the Air and Space U-18 at the end of our course back in 1992. I was under whelmed by the flying qualities and the performance of the machine.

The aircraft did have the ability to clutch in the rotor on the ground, and then once it got up to launch RPM, simultaneously declutch the rotor drive, drop the rotor into flight pitch, and after it had jumped a couple of feet off the ground, ramp up the pusher prop power and essentially do a zero roll takeoff. This scared the willies out of me, as my lasting impression was that we were just along for the ride until we developed a little airspeed. I prefer a little more control out of my aircraft.

I could have lived with that, but the aircraft had an incredibly critical sideslip limit combined with lousy directional stability and poor cueing. You had to spend most of the flight pegged to the ball, or it would try to swap ends, an unrecoverable event according to the instructor pilot from the company who provided the aircraft.

As an aside, I was told by one of my classmates that a couple of years after our evaluation flight, the instructor pilot (who's name escapes me) killed himself in a U-18.

My father (also a retired Marine pilot) had an acquaintance (private pilot) that home-built a gyro and killed himself in it on his second or third flight. He bled off his rotor speed in a turn and fell out of the sky like a stone.

My final evaluation is that gyrocopters are unforgiving aircraft that should only be flown by unmarried orphans with no offspring.
 
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The Air & Space (Umbaugh) 18A had a lot of problems; Farrington Aircraft tried to resurrect the design a few years back, but it didn't work. As previously mentioned, Don Farrington himself (retired Pan Am captain) was eventually killed in one (I think). The concept isn't dead yet, though; check this site www.gbagyros.com. Of course, the Hawk is primarily for commercial applications, while the Sparrowhawk design is for the homebuilt market.

I've thought about the idea of just enough training to get into an ultralight gyro, but in the final analysis, I guess I'd like a machine in which I can safely and confidently take my kids for a ride. I still may look at one someday, although not without thorough training and serious design analysis.
 
I'd seen something on the net, can't remember where i found it, but somebody cut up a harley and built it into a gyroplane... was streetable too, i think.. gotta see if i can find the link.
 

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