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VTOL

A vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft is one that can take off and land vertically without relying on a runway. This classification can include a variety of types of aircraft including helicopters as well as thrust-vectoring fixed-wing aircraft and other hybrid aircraft with powered rotors such as cyclogyros/cyclocopters and gyrodynes.[1]

Some VTOL aircraft can operate in other modes as well, such as CTOL (conventional take-off & landing), STOL (short take-off & landing), or STOVL (short take-off & vertical landing). Others, such as some helicopters, can only operate as VTOL, due to the aircraft lacking landing gear that can handle taxiing. VTOL is a subset of V/STOL (vertical or short take-off & landing).

Some lighter-than-air aircraft also qualify as VTOL aircraft, as they can hover, takeoff and land with vertical approach/departure profiles.[2]

Electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, or eVTOLs, are being developed along with more autonomous flight control technologies and mobility-as-a-service (MaaS) to enable advanced air mobility (AAM), that could include on-demand air taxi services, regional air mobility, freight delivery, and personal air vehicles (PAVs).[3]

Besides the ubiquitous helicopters, there are currently two types of VTOL aircraft in military service: tiltrotor aircraft, such as the Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey, and thrust-vectoring airplanes, such as the Harrier family and new F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). In the civilian sector currently only helicopters are in general use (some other types of commercial VTOL aircraft have been proposed and are under development as of 2017). Generally speaking, VTOL aircraft capable of STOVL use it wherever possible, since it typically significantly increases takeoff weight, range or payload compared to pure VTOL.[4]

History edit

Props, proprotors and advanced rotorcraft edit

The idea of vertical flight has been around for thousands of years, and sketches for a VTOL (helicopter) show up in Leonardo da Vinci's sketch book. Manned VTOL aircraft, in the form of primitive helicopters, first flew in 1907 but would take until after World War Two to perfect.[5][6]

In addition to helicopter development, many approaches have been tried to develop practical aircraft with vertical take-off and landing capabilities including Henry Berliner's 1922–1925 experimental horizontal rotor fixed wing aircraft, and Nikola Tesla's 1928 patent and George Lehberger's 1930 patent for relatively impractical VTOL fixed wing airplanes with a tilting engines.[7][8][9] In the late 1930s British aircraft designer Leslie Everett Baynes was issued a patent for the Baynes Heliplane, another tilt rotor aircraft. In 1941 German designer Heinrich Focke's began work on the Focke-Achgelis Fa 269, which had two rotors that tilted downward for vertical takeoff, but wartime bombing halted development.[9]

 
Convair XFY-1 Pogo in flight

In May 1951, both Lockheed and Convair were awarded contracts in the attempt to design, construct, and test two experimental VTOL fighters. Lockheed produced the XFV, and Convair producing the Convair XFY Pogo. Both experimental programs proceeded to flight status and completed test flights 1954–1955, when the contracts were cancelled.[10] Similarly, the Ryan X-13 Vertijet flew a series of test flights between 1955 and 1957, but also suffered the same fate.[11]

The use of vertical fans driven by engines was investigated in the 1950s. The US built an aircraft where the jet exhaust drove the fans, while British projects not built included fans driven by mechanical drives from the jet engines.[citation needed]

 
Bell XV-15

NASA has flown other VTOL craft such as the Bell XV-15 research craft (1977), as have the Soviet Navy and Luftwaffe. Sikorsky tested an aircraft dubbed the X-Wing, which took off in the manner of a helicopter. The rotors would become stationary in mid-flight, and function as wings, providing lift in addition to the static wings. Boeing X-50 is a Canard Rotor/Wing prototype that utilizes a similar concept.[12]

 
Fairey Jet Gyrodyne

A different British VTOL project was the gyrodyne, where a rotor is powered during take-off and landing but which then freewheels during flight, with separate propulsion engines providing forward thrust. Starting with the Fairey Gyrodyne, this type of aircraft later evolved into the much larger twin-engined Fairey Rotodyne, that used tipjets to power the rotor on take-off and landing but which then used two Napier Eland turboprops driving conventional propellers mounted on substantial wings to provide propulsion, the wings serving to unload the rotor during horizontal flight. The Rotodyne was developed to combine the efficiency of a fixed-wing aircraft at cruise with the VTOL capability of a helicopter to provide short haul airliner service from city centres to airports.

 
U.S. Marines jump from a Bell-Boeing V-22 Osprey, the first production tiltrotor aircraft
 
Canadair CL-84 Dynavert CL-84-1 (CX8402) on display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa, Ontario

The CL-84 Dynavert was a Canadian V/STOL turbine tilt-wing monoplane designed and manufactured by Canadair between 1964 and 1972. The Canadian government ordered three updated CL-84s for military evaluation in 1968, designated the CL-84-1. From 1972 to 1974, this version was demonstrated and evaluated in the United States aboard the aircraft carriers USS Guam and USS Guadalcanal, and at various other centres.[13] These trials involved military pilots from the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada. During testing, two of the CL-84s crashed due to mechanical failures, but no loss of life occurred as a result of these accidents. No production contracts resulted.[14]

Although tiltrotors such as the Focke-Achgelis Fa 269 of the mid-1940s and the Centro Técnico Aeroespacial "Convertiplano" of the 1950s reached testing or mock-up stages, the Bell-Boeing V-22 Osprey is considered the world's first production tiltrotor aircraft. It has one three-bladed proprotor, turboprop engine, and transmission nacelle mounted on each wingtip. The Osprey is a multi-mission aircraft with both a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) and short takeoff and landing capability (STOL). It is designed to perform missions like a conventional helicopter with the long-range, high-speed cruise performance of a turboprop aircraft. The FAA classifies the Osprey as a model of powered lift aircraft.[15]

Attempts were made in the 1960s to develop a commercial passenger aircraft with VTOL capability. The Hawker Siddeley Inter-City Vertical-Lift proposal had two rows of lifting fans on either side. However, none of these aircraft made it to production after they were dismissed as too heavy and expensive to operate.[16][unreliable source?][17]

In 2018 Opener Aero demonstrated an electrically powered fixed-wing VTOL aircraft, the Blackfly, which the manufacturer claims is the world's first ultralight fixed-wing, all-electric, vertical take-off and landing aircraft.[18]

Modern drones edit

 
A Schiebel Camcopter S-100, a modern VTOL unmanned aerial vehicle

In the 21st century, unmanned drones are becoming increasingly commonplace. Many of these have VTOL capability, especially the quadcopter type. [19]

Jet lift edit

 
The Ryan X-13

Tail-sitters edit

In 1947, Ryan X-13 Vertijet, a tailsitter design, was ordered by the US Navy, who then further issued a proposal in 1948 for an aircraft capable of vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aboard platforms mounted on the afterdecks of conventional ships. Both Convair and Lockheed competed for the contract but in 1950, the requirement was revised, with a call for a research aircraft capable of eventually evolving into a VTOL ship-based convoy escort fighter.

Conventional design edit

 
"Flying Bedstead"- Rolls-Royce Thrust Measuring Rig

Another more influential early functional contribution to VTOL was Rolls-Royce's Thrust Measuring Rig ("flying bedstead") of 1953. This led to the first VTOL engines as used in the first British VTOL aircraft, the Short SC.1 (1957), Short Brothers and Harland, Belfast which used four vertical lift engines with a horizontal one for forward thrust.

 
The Short SC.1 a VTOL delta aircraft

The Short SC.1 was the first British fixed-wing VTOL aircraft. The SC.1 was designed to study the problems with VTOL flight and the transition to and from forward flight. The SC.1 was designed to meet a Ministry of Supply (MoS) request for tender (ER.143T) for a vertical take-off research aircraft issued in September 1953. The design was accepted by the ministry and a contract was placed for two aircraft (XG900 and XG905) to meet Specification ER.143D dated 15 October 1954. The SC.1 was also equipped with the first "fly-by-wire" control system for a VTOL aircraft. This permitted three modes of control of the aerodynamic surfaces or the nozzle controls.

The Republic Aviation AP-100 was a prototype VTOL 6x General Electric J85 Turbojet engined nuclear capable strike fighter concept designed by Alexander Kartveli that had 3x ducted fans in the centre of its fuselage and tail as a possible contender for the TFX Program.[20][21][22] Another design was the A400 AVS that used variable geometry wings but was found too complicated, however it led to the development of the AFVG which in turn helped the development of the Panavia Tornado.

 
The Soviet Union's VTOL aircraft, the Yakovlev Yak-38

The Yakovlev Yak-38 was a Soviet Navy VTOL aircraft intended for use aboard their light carriers, cargoships, and capital ships. It was developed from the Yakovlev Yak-36 experimental aircraft in the 1970s. Before the Soviet Union broke up, a supersonic VTOL aircraft was developed as the Yak-38's successor, the Yak-141, which never went into production.[23]

 
A German V/STOL VJ101 on display at the Deutsches Museum, Munich, Germany
 
Do 31 E3 on display at the Deutsches Museum, Germany

In the 1960s and early 1970s, Germany planned three different VTOL aircraft. One used the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter as a basis for research for a V/STOL aircraft. Although two models (X1 and X2) were built, the project was canceled due to high costs and political problems as well as changed needs in the German Air Force and NATO. The EWR VJ 101C did perform free VTOL take-offs and landings, as well as test flights beyond mach 1 in the mid- and late 60s. One of the test-aircraft is preserved in the Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany, another outside Friedrichshafen Airport. The others were the VFW-Fokker VAK 191B light fighter and reconnaissance aircraft, and the Dornier Do 31E-3 (troop) transport.[24]

The LLRV was a spacecraft simulator for the Apollo lunar lander.[25] It was designed to mimic the flight characteristics of the lunar module (LEM), which had to rely on a reaction engine to land on the Moon.

The idea of using the same engine for vertical and horizontal flight by altering the path of the thrust was conceived by Michel Wibault.[26] It led to the Bristol Siddeley Pegasus engine which used four rotating nozzles to direct thrust over a range of angles.[27] This was developed side by side with an airframe, the Hawker P.1127, which became subsequently the Kestrel and then entered production as the Hawker Siddeley Harrier, though the supersonic Hawker Siddeley P.1154 was canceled in 1965. The French in competition with the P.1154 had developed a version of the Dassault Mirage III capable of attaining Mach 1. The Dassault Mirage IIIV achieved transition from vertical to horizontal flight in March 1966, reaching Mach 1.3 in level flight a short time later.

V/STOL edit

 
Landing of Harrier jump jet with Indian Naval Air Arm

The Harrier is usually flown in STOVL mode, which enables it to carry a higher fuel or weapon load over a given distance.[4] In V/STOL the VTOL aircraft moves horizontally along the runway before taking off using vertical thrust. This gives aerodynamic lift as well as thrust lift and permits taking off with heavier loads and is more efficient. When landing the aircraft is much lighter due to the loss of propellant weight and a controlled vertical landing is possible. An important aspect of Harrier STOL operations aboard naval carriers is the "ski jump" raised forward deck, which gives the craft additional vertical momentum at takeoff.[28]

The March 1981 cover of Popular Science showed three illustrations for its "Tilt-engine V/STOL - speeds like a plane, lands like a copter" front-page feature story.;[29] a followup story was part of the April 2006 issue that mentioned "the fuel-consumption and stability problems that plagued earlier plane/copter."[30]

Retired from the British Royal Navy in 2006,[31] the Indian Navy continued to operate Sea Harriers until 2016,[32] mainly from its aircraft carrier INS Viraat. The latest version of the Harrier, the BAE Harrier II, was retired in December 2010 after being operated by the British Royal Air Force and Royal Navy. The United States Marine Corps and the Italian and Spanish navies all continue to use the AV-8B Harrier II, an American-designed equivalent version. Replacing the Harrier II/AV-8B in the air arms of the US and UK is the STOVL variant of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II, the F-35B.[33]

Rockets edit

SpaceX developed several prototypes of Falcon 9 to validate various low-altitude, low-velocity engineering aspects of its reusable launch system development program.[34] The first prototype, Grasshopper, made eight successful test[35] flights in 2012–2013. It made its eighth, and final, test flight on October 7, 2013, flying to an altitude of 744 metres (2,441 ft) before making its eighth successful VTVL landing.[36][37] This was the last scheduled test for the Grasshopper rig; next up will be low altitude tests of the Falcon 9 Reusable (F9R) development vehicle in Texas followed by high altitude testing in New Mexico.

On November 23, 2015, Blue Origin's New Shepard booster rocket made the first successful vertical landing following an uncrewed suborbital test flight that reached space.[38] On December 21, 2015, SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage made a successful landing after boosting 11 commercial satellites to low Earth orbit on Falcon 9 Flight 20.[39] These demonstrations opened the way for substantial reductions in space flight costs.[40]

Rotorcraft edit

Helicopter edit

The helicopter's form of VTOL allows it to take off and land vertically, to hover, and to fly forwards, backwards, and laterally. These attributes allow helicopters to be used in congested or isolated areas where fixed-wing aircraft would usually not be able to take off or land. The capability to efficiently hover for extended periods of time is due to the helicopter's relatively long, and hence efficient rotor blades, and allows a helicopter to accomplish tasks that fixed-wing aircraft and other forms of vertical takeoff and landing aircraft could not perform at least as well until 2011.

On the other hand, the long rotor blades restrict the maximum speed to about 250 miles per hour (400 km/h) of at least conventional helicopters, as retreating blade stall causes lateral instability.

Autogyro edit

Autogyros are also known as gyroplanes or gyrocopters. The rotor is unpowered and rotates freely in the airflow as the craft travels forward, so the craft needs a conventional powerplant to provide thrust. An autogyro is not intrinsically capable of VTOL: for VTO the rotor must be spun up to speed by an auxiliary drive, and vertical landing requires precise control of rotor momentum and pitch.

Gyrodyne edit

Gyrodynes are also known as compound helicopters or compound gyroplanes. A gyrodyne has the powered rotor of a helicopter with a separate forward thrust system of an autogyro. Apart from take-off and landing the rotor may be unpowered and autorotate. Designs may also include stub wings for added lift.

Cyclogyro edit

A cyclogyro or cyclocopter has a rotary wing whose axis and surfaces remain sideways across the airflow, as with a conventional wing.

Powered lift edit

Convertiplane edit

A convertiplane takes off under rotor lift like a helicopter, then transitions to fixed-wing lift in forward flight.

Tiltrotor edit

A tiltrotor or proprotor tilts its propellers or rotors vertically for VTOL and then tilts them forwards for horizontal wing-borne flight, while the main wing remains fixed in place.

Tilting ducted fan edit

Similar to tiltrotor concept, but with ducted fans. As it can be seen in the Bell X-22.

Tiltwing edit

A tiltwing has its propellers or rotors fixed to a conventional wing and tilts the whole assembly to transition between vertical and horizontal flight.

Tail-sitter edit

A tail-sitter sits vertically on its tail for takeoff and landing, then tilts the whole aircraft forward for horizontal flight.

Vectored thrust edit

Thrust vectoring is a technique used for jet and rocket engines, where the direction of the engine exhaust is varied. In VTOL, the exhaust can be varied between vertical and horizontal thrust.

Tiltjet edit

Similar to tiltrotor concept, but with turbojet or turbofan engines instead of ones with propellers.

Lift jets edit

A lift jet is an auxiliary jet engine used to provide lift for VTOL operation, but may be shut down for normal wing-borne flight. The Yak-38 is the only production aircraft to employ lift jets.

Lift fans edit

Lift fan is an aircraft configuration in which lifting fans are located in large holes in an otherwise conventional fixed wing or fuselage. It is used for V/STOL operation.

The aircraft takes off using the fans to provide lift, then transitions to fixed-wing lift in forward flight. Several experimental craft have been flown, but only the F-35 Lightning II entered into production.

Lift via Coandă effect edit

Aircraft in which VTOL is achieved by exploiting the Coandă effect are capable of redirecting air much like thrust vectoring, but rather than routing airflow through a duct, the airflow is simply routed along an existing surface, which is usually the body of the craft allowing less material and weight.

The Avro Canada VZ-9 Avrocar, or simply the VZ-9, was a Canadian VTOL aircraft developed by Avro Aircraft Ltd. which utilizes this phenomenon by blowing air into a central area, then it is directed down over the top surface, which is parabolic and resembles a bowed flying saucer. Due to the Coandă effect, the airflow is attracted to the nearest surface and continues to move along that surface despite the change in the surface's direction away from the airflow. The craft is designed to direct the airflow downward to provide lift.

Jetoptera announced a proposed line of aircraft based on what it called fluidic propulsion that employs the Coandă effect. The company claims an Oswald efficiency number of 1.45 for its boxwing design. Other claims include increased efficiency, 30% lower weight, reduced complexity, as much as 25 dBA lower (and atonal) noise, shorter wings, and scalability.[41][42] Jetoptera says its approach yields thrust augmentation ratios exceeding 2.0 and 50% fuel savings when compared to a turbofan in static or hovering conditions. Its efflux can be used for Upper Surface Blown architectures to boost the Lift Coefficient to values exceeding 8.0.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Laskowitz, I. B. (1961). "Vertical Take-Off and Landing (Vtol) Rotorless Aircraft with Inherent Stability". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 93 (1): 3–24. Bibcode:1961NYASA..93....3L. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1961.tb30485.x. ISSN 0077-8923. S2CID 84160729.
  2. ^ BILL VIRGIN (December 2017). "Plimp, a Plane-Blimp Hybrid, Is Looking to Disrupt the Drone Market - Seattle brothers James and Joel Egan are adding a new airship to the drone market, and it could be available as soon as next year". Seattle Business Magazine. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  3. ^ Le Bris, G. et al. (2022). "ACRP Research Report 236: Preparing Your Airport for Electric Aircraft and Hydrogen Technologies". Transportation Research Board, Washington, DC: https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/26512/preparing-your-airport-for-electric-aircraft-and-hydrogen-technologies
  4. ^ a b Khurana KC (2009). Aviation Management: Global Perspectives. Global India Publications. p. 133. ISBN 9789380228396.
  5. ^ Yefim Gordon, The History of VTOL, page 28
  6. ^ John Whiteclay Chambers, The Oxford Companion to American Military History, Oxford University Press, USA, 1999, page 748
  7. ^ us 1655113 
  8. ^ Rayl, A. J. S. "Nikola Tesla's Curious Contrivance". Air & Space Magazine. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  9. ^ a b "Tiltrotor". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 2019-10-20.
  10. ^ Allen 2007, pp. 13–20.
  11. ^ "The new Vertijet's straight-up flight: X-13 takes off like a rocket, lands tailfirst". Life. Time Inc. 1957-05-20. p. 136.
  12. ^ Simonsen, Erik. "Another one for the X files: The Boeing Canard Rotor/Wing demonstrator officially becomes X-50A". www.boeing.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  13. ^ Khurana, K. C. (2009). Aviation Management: Global Perspectives. Global India Publications. p. 134. ISBN 978-93-80228-39-6.
  14. ^ Boniface 2000, p. 74.
  15. ^ Norton 2004, pp. 6–9, 95–96.
  16. ^ "BAE animates mothballed Intercity Vertical-Lift Aircraft". www.aerospace-technology.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  17. ^ "Forgotten 1960s 'Thunderbirds' projects brought to life". BAE Systems | International. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  18. ^ O'Connor, Kate (12 July 2018). "Opener Reveals Ultralight eVTOL". AVweb. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  19. ^ Woodbridge, Ewan; Connor, Dean T.; Verbelen, Yannick; Hine, Duncan; Richardson, Tom; Scott, Thomas B. (2023-06-28). "Airborne gamma-ray mapping using fixed-wing vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) uncrewed aerial vehicles". Frontiers in Robotics and AI. 10. doi:10.3389/frobt.2023.1137763. ISSN 2296-9144. PMC 10337992. PMID 37448876.
  20. ^ Project Hummingbird (Technical Report) A Technical Summary and Compilation of Characteristics and Specifications on Steep-Gradient Aircraft, Volume 88, April 1961. By United States Federal Aviation Agency. Page 143–144, Figure 175.
  21. ^ Air Progress History of Aviation Spring 1961 edition
  22. ^ Aviation Week and Space Technology, Lift-Fan Tests Show VTOL Potential. August 8, 1960
  23. ^ "Vertical take-off/landing aircraft: Yak-38". www.yak.ru. Yakovlev Design Bureau. 16 July 2008. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  24. ^ Jackson 1976, p. 143.
  25. ^ "NASA - NASA Dryden Technology Facts - Lunar Landing Research Vehicle". www.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  26. ^ Dow, Andrew (2009). Pegasus: The Heart of the Harrier. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword Aviation. pp. 29–46. ISBN 978-1-84884-042-3. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  27. ^ "Airfoil" (PDF). Basics of Aeronautics. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  28. ^ "The genius of the naval jump-jet". The Maritime Foundation. 31 October 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  29. ^ "Tilt-engine V/STOL - speeds like a plane, lands like a copter". Popular Science. March 1981. p. 3.
  30. ^ "V/STOL". Popular Science. April 2006. p. 118.
  31. ^ "Hover and out: UK Royal Navy retires the Sea Harrier". FlightGlobal. 28 March 2006. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  32. ^ Raghuvanshi, Vivek (21 March 2016). "Indian Navy Retires Sea Harriers". Defense News. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  33. ^ Roblin, Sebastien (13 October 2018). "The Royal Navy Is Back (Thanks to the F-35 and Two New Aircraft Carriers)". National Interest. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  34. ^ "Reusable rocket prototype almost ready for first liftoff". Spaceflight Now. 2012-07-09. Retrieved 2012-07-13. SpaceX has constructed a half-acre concrete launch facility in McGregor, and the Grasshopper rocket is already standing on the pad, outfitted with four insect-like silver landing legs.
  35. ^ "Grasshopper Completes Highest Leap to Date". SpaceX.com. 10 March 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  36. ^ "Grasshopper flies to its highest height to date". Social media information release. SpaceX. 12 October 2013. Retrieved 14 October 2013. WATCH: Grasshopper flies to its highest height to date – 744 m (2441 ft) into the Texas sky.
  37. ^ Grasshopper 744m Test | Single Camera (Hexacopter), retrieved 2021-04-29
  38. ^ "Blue Origin make historic rocket landing". Blue Origin. November 24, 2015. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
  39. ^ "SpaceX Twitter post". Twitter. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  40. ^ Puiu, Tibi (2013-08-20). "SpaceX reusable rocket will cut space launch prices 100 fold". ZME Science. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  41. ^ Jetoptera's Bladeless Propulsion System, Electric Avaition, February 18, 2021, archived from the original on 2021-11-17, retrieved 2021-04-29
  42. ^ Blain, Loz (2021-04-28). "Jetoptera VTOL aircraft design features "bladeless fans on steroids"". New Atlas. from the original on 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2021-04-30.

Bibliography edit

  • Allen, Francis J. "Bolt upright: Convair's and Lockheed's VTOL fighters". Air Enthusiast (Key Publishing), Volume 127, January/February 2007. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Boniface, Patrick. "Tilt-wing Testing". Aeroplane, Vol. 28, no. 3, March 2000, pp. 72–78.
  • Campbell, John P. Vertical Takeoff & Landing Aircraft. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1962.
  • Harding, Stephen. "Flying Jeeps: The US Army's Search for the Ultimate 'Vehicle'". Air Enthusiast, No. 73, January/February 1998, pp. 10–12. Stamford, Lincs, UK: Key Publishing. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Jackson, Paul A. German Military Aviation 1956–1976. Hinckley, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Counties Publications, 1976. ISBN 0-904597-03-2.
  • Khurana, K. C. Aviation Management: Global Perspectives. Singapore: Global India Publications, 2009. ISBN 978-9-3802-2839-6.
  • Markman, Steve and Bill Holder. Straight Up: A History of Vertical Flight. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing, 2000. ISBN 0-7643-1204-9.
  • Norton, Bill. Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey, Tiltrotor Tactical Transport. Earl Shilton, Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-85780-165-2.
  • Rogers, Mike. VTOL: Military Research Aircraft. New York: Orion Books, 1989. ISBN 0-517-57684-8.
  • Büchi, Roland. Fascination Quadrocopter. Norderstedt, BoD, English Version, 2011. ISBN 978-3-8423-6731-9

External links edit

  • V/STOL Wheel of Misfortune 2008-09-15 at the Wayback Machine – Timeline of V/STOL aircraft, page 5
  • "Tiltplane VTOL Aircraft". ww7.tiltplane.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.

vtol, heli, redirects, here, helicopter, airline, based, vancouver, british, columbia, canada, helijet, rocket, vertical, takeoff, landing, vtvl, vertical, take, landing, aircraft, that, take, land, vertically, without, relying, runway, this, classification, i. Heli Jet redirects here For the helicopter airline based in Vancouver British Columbia Canada see Helijet For rocket vertical takeoff and landing see VTVL A vertical take off and landing VTOL aircraft is one that can take off and land vertically without relying on a runway This classification can include a variety of types of aircraft including helicopters as well as thrust vectoring fixed wing aircraft and other hybrid aircraft with powered rotors such as cyclogyros cyclocopters and gyrodynes 1 Some VTOL aircraft can operate in other modes as well such as CTOL conventional take off amp landing STOL short take off amp landing or STOVL short take off amp vertical landing Others such as some helicopters can only operate as VTOL due to the aircraft lacking landing gear that can handle taxiing VTOL is a subset of V STOL vertical or short take off amp landing Some lighter than air aircraft also qualify as VTOL aircraft as they can hover takeoff and land with vertical approach departure profiles 2 Electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft or eVTOLs are being developed along with more autonomous flight control technologies and mobility as a service MaaS to enable advanced air mobility AAM that could include on demand air taxi services regional air mobility freight delivery and personal air vehicles PAVs 3 Besides the ubiquitous helicopters there are currently two types of VTOL aircraft in military service tiltrotor aircraft such as the Bell Boeing V 22 Osprey and thrust vectoring airplanes such as the Harrier family and new F 35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter JSF In the civilian sector currently only helicopters are in general use some other types of commercial VTOL aircraft have been proposed and are under development as of 2017 update Generally speaking VTOL aircraft capable of STOVL use it wherever possible since it typically significantly increases takeoff weight range or payload compared to pure VTOL 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Props proprotors and advanced rotorcraft 1 1 1 Modern drones 1 2 Jet lift 1 2 1 Tail sitters 1 2 2 Conventional design 1 2 3 V STOL 1 2 4 Rockets 2 Rotorcraft 2 1 Helicopter 2 2 Autogyro 2 3 Gyrodyne 2 4 Cyclogyro 3 Powered lift 3 1 Convertiplane 3 1 1 Tiltrotor 3 1 2 Tilting ducted fan 3 1 3 Tiltwing 3 2 Tail sitter 3 3 Vectored thrust 3 3 1 Tiltjet 3 4 Lift jets 3 5 Lift fans 3 6 Lift via Coandă effect 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editProps proprotors and advanced rotorcraft edit See also Helicopter History and Tiltrotor History The idea of vertical flight has been around for thousands of years and sketches for a VTOL helicopter show up in Leonardo da Vinci s sketch book Manned VTOL aircraft in the form of primitive helicopters first flew in 1907 but would take until after World War Two to perfect 5 6 In addition to helicopter development many approaches have been tried to develop practical aircraft with vertical take off and landing capabilities including Henry Berliner s 1922 1925 experimental horizontal rotor fixed wing aircraft and Nikola Tesla s 1928 patent and George Lehberger s 1930 patent for relatively impractical VTOL fixed wing airplanes with a tilting engines 7 8 9 In the late 1930s British aircraft designer Leslie Everett Baynes was issued a patent for the Baynes Heliplane another tilt rotor aircraft In 1941 German designer Heinrich Focke s began work on the Focke Achgelis Fa 269 which had two rotors that tilted downward for vertical takeoff but wartime bombing halted development 9 nbsp Convair XFY 1 Pogo in flightIn May 1951 both Lockheed and Convair were awarded contracts in the attempt to design construct and test two experimental VTOL fighters Lockheed produced the XFV and Convair producing the Convair XFY Pogo Both experimental programs proceeded to flight status and completed test flights 1954 1955 when the contracts were cancelled 10 Similarly the Ryan X 13 Vertijet flew a series of test flights between 1955 and 1957 but also suffered the same fate 11 The use of vertical fans driven by engines was investigated in the 1950s The US built an aircraft where the jet exhaust drove the fans while British projects not built included fans driven by mechanical drives from the jet engines citation needed nbsp Bell XV 15NASA has flown other VTOL craft such as the Bell XV 15 research craft 1977 as have the Soviet Navy and Luftwaffe Sikorsky tested an aircraft dubbed the X Wing which took off in the manner of a helicopter The rotors would become stationary in mid flight and function as wings providing lift in addition to the static wings Boeing X 50 is a Canard Rotor Wing prototype that utilizes a similar concept 12 nbsp Fairey Jet GyrodyneA different British VTOL project was the gyrodyne where a rotor is powered during take off and landing but which then freewheels during flight with separate propulsion engines providing forward thrust Starting with the Fairey Gyrodyne this type of aircraft later evolved into the much larger twin engined Fairey Rotodyne that used tipjets to power the rotor on take off and landing but which then used two Napier Eland turboprops driving conventional propellers mounted on substantial wings to provide propulsion the wings serving to unload the rotor during horizontal flight The Rotodyne was developed to combine the efficiency of a fixed wing aircraft at cruise with the VTOL capability of a helicopter to provide short haul airliner service from city centres to airports nbsp U S Marines jump from a Bell Boeing V 22 Osprey the first production tiltrotor aircraft nbsp Canadair CL 84 Dynavert CL 84 1 CX8402 on display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa OntarioThe CL 84 Dynavert was a Canadian V STOL turbine tilt wing monoplane designed and manufactured by Canadair between 1964 and 1972 The Canadian government ordered three updated CL 84s for military evaluation in 1968 designated the CL 84 1 From 1972 to 1974 this version was demonstrated and evaluated in the United States aboard the aircraft carriers USS Guam and USS Guadalcanal and at various other centres 13 These trials involved military pilots from the United States the United Kingdom and Canada During testing two of the CL 84s crashed due to mechanical failures but no loss of life occurred as a result of these accidents No production contracts resulted 14 Although tiltrotors such as the Focke Achgelis Fa 269 of the mid 1940s and the Centro Tecnico Aeroespacial Convertiplano of the 1950s reached testing or mock up stages the Bell Boeing V 22 Osprey is considered the world s first production tiltrotor aircraft It has one three bladed proprotor turboprop engine and transmission nacelle mounted on each wingtip The Osprey is a multi mission aircraft with both a vertical takeoff and landing VTOL and short takeoff and landing capability STOL It is designed to perform missions like a conventional helicopter with the long range high speed cruise performance of a turboprop aircraft The FAA classifies the Osprey as a model of powered lift aircraft 15 Attempts were made in the 1960s to develop a commercial passenger aircraft with VTOL capability The Hawker Siddeley Inter City Vertical Lift proposal had two rows of lifting fans on either side However none of these aircraft made it to production after they were dismissed as too heavy and expensive to operate 16 unreliable source 17 In 2018 Opener Aero demonstrated an electrically powered fixed wing VTOL aircraft the Blackfly which the manufacturer claims is the world s first ultralight fixed wing all electric vertical take off and landing aircraft 18 Modern drones edit nbsp A Schiebel Camcopter S 100 a modern VTOL unmanned aerial vehicleIn the 21st century unmanned drones are becoming increasingly commonplace Many of these have VTOL capability especially the quadcopter type 19 Jet lift edit nbsp The Ryan X 13Tail sitters edit In 1947 Ryan X 13 Vertijet a tailsitter design was ordered by the US Navy who then further issued a proposal in 1948 for an aircraft capable of vertical takeoff and landing VTOL aboard platforms mounted on the afterdecks of conventional ships Both Convair and Lockheed competed for the contract but in 1950 the requirement was revised with a call for a research aircraft capable of eventually evolving into a VTOL ship based convoy escort fighter Conventional design edit nbsp Flying Bedstead Rolls Royce Thrust Measuring RigAnother more influential early functional contribution to VTOL was Rolls Royce s Thrust Measuring Rig flying bedstead of 1953 This led to the first VTOL engines as used in the first British VTOL aircraft the Short SC 1 1957 Short Brothers and Harland Belfast which used four vertical lift engines with a horizontal one for forward thrust nbsp The Short SC 1 a VTOL delta aircraftThe Short SC 1 was the first British fixed wing VTOL aircraft The SC 1 was designed to study the problems with VTOL flight and the transition to and from forward flight The SC 1 was designed to meet a Ministry of Supply MoS request for tender ER 143T for a vertical take off research aircraft issued in September 1953 The design was accepted by the ministry and a contract was placed for two aircraft XG900 and XG905 to meet Specification ER 143D dated 15 October 1954 The SC 1 was also equipped with the first fly by wire control system for a VTOL aircraft This permitted three modes of control of the aerodynamic surfaces or the nozzle controls The Republic Aviation AP 100 was a prototype VTOL 6x General Electric J85 Turbojet engined nuclear capable strike fighter concept designed by Alexander Kartveli that had 3x ducted fans in the centre of its fuselage and tail as a possible contender for the TFX Program 20 21 22 Another design was the A400 AVS that used variable geometry wings but was found too complicated however it led to the development of the AFVG which in turn helped the development of the Panavia Tornado nbsp The Soviet Union s VTOL aircraft the Yakovlev Yak 38The Yakovlev Yak 38 was a Soviet Navy VTOL aircraft intended for use aboard their light carriers cargoships and capital ships It was developed from the Yakovlev Yak 36 experimental aircraft in the 1970s Before the Soviet Union broke up a supersonic VTOL aircraft was developed as the Yak 38 s successor the Yak 141 which never went into production 23 nbsp A German V STOL VJ101 on display at the Deutsches Museum Munich Germany nbsp Do 31 E3 on display at the Deutsches Museum GermanyIn the 1960s and early 1970s Germany planned three different VTOL aircraft One used the Lockheed F 104 Starfighter as a basis for research for a V STOL aircraft Although two models X1 and X2 were built the project was canceled due to high costs and political problems as well as changed needs in the German Air Force and NATO The EWR VJ 101C did perform free VTOL take offs and landings as well as test flights beyond mach 1 in the mid and late 60s One of the test aircraft is preserved in the Deutsches Museum in Munich Germany another outside Friedrichshafen Airport The others were the VFW Fokker VAK 191B light fighter and reconnaissance aircraft and the Dornier Do 31E 3 troop transport 24 The LLRV was a spacecraft simulator for the Apollo lunar lander 25 It was designed to mimic the flight characteristics of the lunar module LEM which had to rely on a reaction engine to land on the Moon The idea of using the same engine for vertical and horizontal flight by altering the path of the thrust was conceived by Michel Wibault 26 It led to the Bristol Siddeley Pegasus engine which used four rotating nozzles to direct thrust over a range of angles 27 This was developed side by side with an airframe the Hawker P 1127 which became subsequently the Kestrel and then entered production as the Hawker Siddeley Harrier though the supersonic Hawker Siddeley P 1154 was canceled in 1965 The French in competition with the P 1154 had developed a version of the Dassault Mirage III capable of attaining Mach 1 The Dassault Mirage IIIV achieved transition from vertical to horizontal flight in March 1966 reaching Mach 1 3 in level flight a short time later V STOL edit nbsp Landing of Harrier jump jet with Indian Naval Air ArmThe Harrier is usually flown in STOVL mode which enables it to carry a higher fuel or weapon load over a given distance 4 In V STOL the VTOL aircraft moves horizontally along the runway before taking off using vertical thrust This gives aerodynamic lift as well as thrust lift and permits taking off with heavier loads and is more efficient When landing the aircraft is much lighter due to the loss of propellant weight and a controlled vertical landing is possible An important aspect of Harrier STOL operations aboard naval carriers is the ski jump raised forward deck which gives the craft additional vertical momentum at takeoff 28 The March 1981 cover of Popular Science showed three illustrations for its Tilt engine V STOL speeds like a plane lands like a copter front page feature story 29 a followup story was part of the April 2006 issue that mentioned the fuel consumption and stability problems that plagued earlier plane copter 30 Retired from the British Royal Navy in 2006 31 the Indian Navy continued to operate Sea Harriers until 2016 32 mainly from its aircraft carrier INS Viraat The latest version of the Harrier the BAE Harrier II was retired in December 2010 after being operated by the British Royal Air Force and Royal Navy The United States Marine Corps and the Italian and Spanish navies all continue to use the AV 8B Harrier II an American designed equivalent version Replacing the Harrier II AV 8B in the air arms of the US and UK is the STOVL variant of the Lockheed Martin F 35 Lightning II the F 35B 33 Rockets edit Main article VTVL SpaceX developed several prototypes of Falcon 9 to validate various low altitude low velocity engineering aspects of its reusable launch system development program 34 The first prototype Grasshopper made eight successful test 35 flights in 2012 2013 It made its eighth and final test flight on October 7 2013 flying to an altitude of 744 metres 2 441 ft before making its eighth successful VTVL landing 36 37 This was the last scheduled test for the Grasshopper rig next up will be low altitude tests of the Falcon 9 Reusable F9R development vehicle in Texas followed by high altitude testing in New Mexico On November 23 2015 Blue Origin s New Shepard booster rocket made the first successful vertical landing following an uncrewed suborbital test flight that reached space 38 On December 21 2015 SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage made a successful landing after boosting 11 commercial satellites to low Earth orbit on Falcon 9 Flight 20 39 These demonstrations opened the way for substantial reductions in space flight costs 40 Rotorcraft editHelicopter edit Main article Helicopter The helicopter s form of VTOL allows it to take off and land vertically to hover and to fly forwards backwards and laterally These attributes allow helicopters to be used in congested or isolated areas where fixed wing aircraft would usually not be able to take off or land The capability to efficiently hover for extended periods of time is due to the helicopter s relatively long and hence efficient rotor blades and allows a helicopter to accomplish tasks that fixed wing aircraft and other forms of vertical takeoff and landing aircraft could not perform at least as well until 2011 On the other hand the long rotor blades restrict the maximum speed to about 250 miles per hour 400 km h of at least conventional helicopters as retreating blade stall causes lateral instability Autogyro edit Main article Autogyro Autogyros are also known as gyroplanes or gyrocopters The rotor is unpowered and rotates freely in the airflow as the craft travels forward so the craft needs a conventional powerplant to provide thrust An autogyro is not intrinsically capable of VTOL for VTO the rotor must be spun up to speed by an auxiliary drive and vertical landing requires precise control of rotor momentum and pitch Gyrodyne edit Main article Gyrodyne Gyrodynes are also known as compound helicopters or compound gyroplanes A gyrodyne has the powered rotor of a helicopter with a separate forward thrust system of an autogyro Apart from take off and landing the rotor may be unpowered and autorotate Designs may also include stub wings for added lift Cyclogyro edit Main article Cyclogyro A cyclogyro or cyclocopter has a rotary wing whose axis and surfaces remain sideways across the airflow as with a conventional wing Powered lift editMain article Powered lift Convertiplane edit Main article Convertiplane A convertiplane takes off under rotor lift like a helicopter then transitions to fixed wing lift in forward flight Tiltrotor edit Main article Tiltrotor A tiltrotor or proprotor tilts its propellers or rotors vertically for VTOL and then tilts them forwards for horizontal wing borne flight while the main wing remains fixed in place Tilting ducted fan edit Similar to tiltrotor concept but with ducted fans As it can be seen in the Bell X 22 Tiltwing edit Main article Tiltwing A tiltwing has its propellers or rotors fixed to a conventional wing and tilts the whole assembly to transition between vertical and horizontal flight Tail sitter edit Main article Tail sitter A tail sitter sits vertically on its tail for takeoff and landing then tilts the whole aircraft forward for horizontal flight Vectored thrust edit Main article Thrust vectoring Thrust vectoring is a technique used for jet and rocket engines where the direction of the engine exhaust is varied In VTOL the exhaust can be varied between vertical and horizontal thrust Tiltjet edit Main article Tiltjet Similar to tiltrotor concept but with turbojet or turbofan engines instead of ones with propellers Lift jets edit Main article Lift jet A lift jet is an auxiliary jet engine used to provide lift for VTOL operation but may be shut down for normal wing borne flight The Yak 38 is the only production aircraft to employ lift jets Lift fans edit Main article Lift fan Lift fan is an aircraft configuration in which lifting fans are located in large holes in an otherwise conventional fixed wing or fuselage It is used for V STOL operation The aircraft takes off using the fans to provide lift then transitions to fixed wing lift in forward flight Several experimental craft have been flown but only the F 35 Lightning II entered into production Lift via Coandă effect edit Main article Coandă effect Aircraft in which VTOL is achieved by exploiting the Coandă effect are capable of redirecting air much like thrust vectoring but rather than routing airflow through a duct the airflow is simply routed along an existing surface which is usually the body of the craft allowing less material and weight The Avro Canada VZ 9 Avrocar or simply the VZ 9 was a Canadian VTOL aircraft developed by Avro Aircraft Ltd which utilizes this phenomenon by blowing air into a central area then it is directed down over the top surface which is parabolic and resembles a bowed flying saucer Due to the Coandă effect the airflow is attracted to the nearest surface and continues to move along that surface despite the change in the surface s direction away from the airflow The craft is designed to direct the airflow downward to provide lift Jetoptera announced a proposed line of aircraft based on what it called fluidic propulsion that employs the Coandă effect The company claims an Oswald efficiency number of 1 45 for its boxwing design Other claims include increased efficiency 30 lower weight reduced complexity as much as 25 dBA lower and atonal noise shorter wings and scalability 41 42 Jetoptera says its approach yields thrust augmentation ratios exceeding 2 0 and 50 fuel savings when compared to a turbofan in static or hovering conditions Its efflux can be used for Upper Surface Blown architectures to boost the Lift Coefficient to values exceeding 8 0 Gallery edit source source source source X 35B Demonstrator flight transition to STOVL configuration vertical take off inflight re fueling vertical hover and landing source source source source X 35B Demonstrator vertical landingSee also edit nbsp Aviation portal Circular wing List of Nikola Tesla patents List of VTOL aircraft McDonnell Douglas DC X Mono tiltrotor Peter Bielkowicz Proprotor PTOL Quad rocket Reusable Vehicle Testing project of the Japanese Space Agency JAXA Rotor wing Thrust reversal Thrust vectoring Vertical Flight Society TiltrotorReferences editNotes edit Laskowitz I B 1961 Vertical Take Off and Landing Vtol Rotorless Aircraft with Inherent Stability Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 93 1 3 24 Bibcode 1961NYASA 93 3L doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1961 tb30485 x ISSN 0077 8923 S2CID 84160729 BILL VIRGIN December 2017 Plimp a Plane Blimp Hybrid Is Looking to Disrupt the Drone Market Seattle brothers James and Joel Egan are adding a new airship to the drone market and it could be available as soon as next year Seattle Business Magazine Retrieved 16 November 2021 Le Bris G et al 2022 ACRP Research Report 236 Preparing Your Airport for Electric Aircraft and Hydrogen Technologies Transportation Research Board Washington DC https nap nationalacademies org catalog 26512 preparing your airport for electric aircraft and hydrogen technologies a b Khurana KC 2009 Aviation Management Global Perspectives Global India Publications p 133 ISBN 9789380228396 Yefim Gordon The History of VTOL page 28 John Whiteclay Chambers The Oxford Companion to American Military History Oxford University Press USA 1999 page 748 us 1655113 Rayl A J S Nikola Tesla s Curious Contrivance Air amp Space Magazine Retrieved 2021 04 29 a b Tiltrotor www globalsecurity org Retrieved 2019 10 20 Allen 2007 pp 13 20 The new Vertijet s straight up flight X 13 takes off like a rocket lands tailfirst Life Time Inc 1957 05 20 p 136 Simonsen Erik Another one for the X files The Boeing Canard Rotor Wing demonstrator officially becomes X 50A www boeing com Retrieved 2021 04 29 Khurana K C 2009 Aviation Management Global Perspectives Global India Publications p 134 ISBN 978 93 80228 39 6 Boniface 2000 p 74 Norton 2004 pp 6 9 95 96 BAE animates mothballed Intercity Vertical Lift Aircraft www aerospace technology com Retrieved 2021 04 29 Forgotten 1960s Thunderbirds projects brought to life BAE Systems International Retrieved 2021 04 29 O Connor Kate 12 July 2018 Opener Reveals Ultralight eVTOL AVweb Retrieved 13 July 2018 Woodbridge Ewan Connor Dean T Verbelen Yannick Hine Duncan Richardson Tom Scott Thomas B 2023 06 28 Airborne gamma ray mapping using fixed wing vertical take off and landing VTOL uncrewed aerial vehicles Frontiers in Robotics and AI 10 doi 10 3389 frobt 2023 1137763 ISSN 2296 9144 PMC 10337992 PMID 37448876 Project Hummingbird Technical Report A Technical Summary and Compilation of Characteristics and Specifications on Steep Gradient Aircraft Volume 88 April 1961 By United States Federal Aviation Agency Page 143 144 Figure 175 Air Progress History of Aviation Spring 1961 edition Aviation Week and Space Technology Lift Fan Tests Show VTOL Potential August 8 1960 Vertical take off landing aircraft Yak 38 www yak ru Yakovlev Design Bureau 16 July 2008 Retrieved 2021 04 29 Jackson 1976 p 143 NASA NASA Dryden Technology Facts Lunar Landing Research Vehicle www nasa gov Retrieved 2021 04 29 Dow Andrew 2009 Pegasus The Heart of the Harrier Barnsley South Yorkshire UK Pen amp Sword Aviation pp 29 46 ISBN 978 1 84884 042 3 Retrieved 13 June 2020 Airfoil PDF Basics of Aeronautics Retrieved 24 May 2015 The genius of the naval jump jet The Maritime Foundation 31 October 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Tilt engine V STOL speeds like a plane lands like a copter Popular Science March 1981 p 3 V STOL Popular Science April 2006 p 118 Hover and out UK Royal Navy retires the Sea Harrier FlightGlobal 28 March 2006 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Raghuvanshi Vivek 21 March 2016 Indian Navy Retires Sea Harriers Defense News Retrieved 20 January 2020 Roblin Sebastien 13 October 2018 The Royal Navy Is Back Thanks to the F 35 and Two New Aircraft Carriers National Interest Retrieved 20 January 2020 Reusable rocket prototype almost ready for first liftoff Spaceflight Now 2012 07 09 Retrieved 2012 07 13 SpaceX has constructed a half acre concrete launch facility in McGregor and the Grasshopper rocket is already standing on the pad outfitted with four insect like silver landing legs Grasshopper Completes Highest Leap to Date SpaceX com 10 March 2013 Retrieved 11 March 2013 Grasshopper flies to its highest height to date Social media information release SpaceX 12 October 2013 Retrieved 14 October 2013 WATCH Grasshopper flies to its highest height to date 744 m 2441 ft into the Texas sky Grasshopper 744m Test Single Camera Hexacopter retrieved 2021 04 29 Blue Origin make historic rocket landing Blue Origin November 24 2015 Retrieved November 24 2015 SpaceX Twitter post Twitter Retrieved 2021 04 29 Puiu Tibi 2013 08 20 SpaceX reusable rocket will cut space launch prices 100 fold ZME Science Retrieved 2021 04 29 Jetoptera s Bladeless Propulsion System Electric Avaition February 18 2021 archived from the original on 2021 11 17 retrieved 2021 04 29 Blain Loz 2021 04 28 Jetoptera VTOL aircraft design features bladeless fans on steroids New Atlas Archived from the original on 2021 04 30 Retrieved 2021 04 30 Bibliography edit Allen Francis J Bolt upright Convair s and Lockheed s VTOL fighters Air Enthusiast Key Publishing Volume 127 January February 2007 ISSN 0143 5450 Boniface Patrick Tilt wing Testing Aeroplane Vol 28 no 3 March 2000 pp 72 78 Campbell John P Vertical Takeoff amp Landing Aircraft New York The MacMillan Company 1962 Harding Stephen Flying Jeeps The US Army s Search for the Ultimate Vehicle Air Enthusiast No 73 January February 1998 pp 10 12 Stamford Lincs UK Key Publishing ISSN 0143 5450 Jackson Paul A German Military Aviation 1956 1976 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1976 ISBN 0 904597 03 2 Khurana K C Aviation Management Global Perspectives Singapore Global India Publications 2009 ISBN 978 9 3802 2839 6 Markman Steve and Bill Holder Straight Up A History of Vertical Flight Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing 2000 ISBN 0 7643 1204 9 Norton Bill Bell Boeing V 22 Osprey Tiltrotor Tactical Transport Earl Shilton Leicester UK Midland Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 85780 165 2 Rogers Mike VTOL Military Research Aircraft New York Orion Books 1989 ISBN 0 517 57684 8 Buchi Roland Fascination Quadrocopter Norderstedt BoD English Version 2011 ISBN 978 3 8423 6731 9External links edit nbsp Look up VTOL in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to VTOL aircraft V STOL Wheel of Misfortune Archived 2008 09 15 at the Wayback Machine Timeline of V STOL aircraft page 5 Tiltplane VTOL Aircraft ww7 tiltplane com Retrieved 2021 04 29 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title VTOL amp oldid 1191365344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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