DJ Hero Review
Nissan's LandGlider Narrow track vehicles - the convergence of the car and the motorcycle
Emue and Visa Europe have been working closely over the past 18 months to develop the Visa... Anti-fraud credit card features E-Ink display
SPDY from Google's Chromium development team has achieved 55 percent faster page loading t... Google SPDY aims to make web faster
BMW has brought back the C1 as an electric-powered concept scooter called the C1-E E is for electric: The BMW C1-E concept scooter
Yes, that's supposed to be a piece of underwear. No, me neither. C-string makes your average thong look like grannypants (NSFW)
MORE TOP STORIES »
AERO GIZMO

Falx Air unveils new Hybrid Coaxial UAV helicopter design

By David Greig

01:00 May 28, 2009 PDT

Falx Air Hybrid Coaxial UAV

Falx Air Hybrid Coaxial UAV

Image Gallery (4 images)

UK based Falx Air has just released the final design overview of its Hybrid Electric Coaxial Helicopter Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV). Sharing the same eco-friendly and fuel-savings goals as the company's previous hybrid designs - most notably its solar-hybrid tilt rotor aircraft - the new UAV platform is based on the latest fast charge battery systems developed in the USA and could be configured as a logistical transport for light cargo up to 70kg as well as for long endurance surveillance.

The airframe is produced from aerospace certified composite materials and the logistic “pod” can be easily removed and replaced with a range extending package or future sensors/weapons.

The hybrid Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) generates its own electricity by using a small rotary engine to drive a permanent magnet generator. The hybrid generating system has a combined weight of less than 24kg and has been bench tested for fuel consumption at less than 10 liters per hour (2.6galUS per hour) under load according to Falx Air. A bank of batteries act for emergency storage in case the engines stop working.

Two sets of three high torque motors are mounted along the length of the main shaft and each motor set is capable of losing two motors and still providing a safe landing. The flight control system uses “off-the-shelf” autopilot technology that has been modified to accept the unique coaxial flight control & power train system.

Falx Air believes that fully electric versions of a helicopter are still years away because current battery technology can't deliver rotor craft any practical endurance/capabilities.

David Greig

Via: Falx Air

Tags
Post a Comment

Login with your gizmag account:




Or Login with Facebook:


Connect
Gallery Images

Related Articles Email this article to a friend

Just enter your friends and your email address into the form below ...




Privacy is safe with us because we have a strict privacy policy.

Recent popular articles in Aero Gizmo
Recent Comments