http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/188338-nasas-electric-vertical-takeoff-airplane-takes-first-flight-aims-to-eventually-replace-the-helicopter
NASA’s electric vertical-takeoff airplane takes first flight, aims to
eventually replace the helicopter
By Sebastian Anthony  August 20, 2014

[image  
http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nasa-greased-lightning-10-foot-drone.jpg
VTOL

http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nasa-greased-lightning-prototype1.jpg
NASA's Greased Lightning, design diagram

http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nasa-greased-lightning-ground.jpg
GL-10 Greased Lightning, on the ground
]

It might look like some kind of crazy machination that adorned the cover of
Popular Aviation back in the ’60s, but the flying machine pictured above is
the real deal. Developed by NASA, the GL-10 Greased Lightning is an unmanned
hybrid-electric aircraft that can swivel its wings and engines — into the
vertical position for vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), and then
horizontal for conventional flight. The fairly recent advent of electric
propulsion — thanks in large to the growing power and energy density of
batteries — allows for some very efficient hybrid-electric aircraft designs
that could finally replace the current (massively inefficient) king of VTOL:
the helicopter.

While it’s not particularly hard to create an aircraft capable of VTOL, it
has so far proven to be very tough to create an aircraft that can also
efficiently cruise through the air after taking off vertically. Without
getting into the rather messy mechanics and physics of it all, it’s just
really hard to create a single machine that can produce downwards thrust and
then efficiently switch over to forwards thrust. The helicopter is the only
common example of a VTOL aircraft that can also cruise acceptably, but its
design is essentially a shopping list of compromises. An everyday helicopter
has a lift-to-drag (L/D) ratio of just 4.5 — compared to the Boeing 747 with
a L/D of 17, or a modern sailplane glider with a L/D of 40 or more. This
basically means that a helicopter has to try a lot harder to achieve a
decent cruise speed — which basically means it needs to have a bigger engine
(which in turn means it burns more fuel, has a lower range, has less space
for cargo, etc.)

Hybrid-electric aircraft designs could change all that, however. Electric
propulsion, as with electric cars, allows for much more efficient designs.
No longer do you have to worry about where to put the large fossil
fuel-powered engines, or how to manage the mechanical stress across the
airframe — instead, you can have a bunch of smaller, more efficient,
optimally placed electric motors. Without the mechanical complexity of big
(jet) engines, it suddenly becomes a lot easier to have wings and propellers
that can swivel between horizontal and vertical. [Read: Terrafugia TF-X: The
vertical take-off flying car.]

While pure-electric aircraft do exist (quadcopters!), hybrid-electric
designs with longer range are generally of more interest to military and
commercial groups. In the case of NASA’s Greased Lightning, there are two
small diesel engines in the body of the aircraft that turn electric
alternators that constantly recharge the lithium batteries. While a
battery-powered quadcopter might be able to stay in the air for 30 minutes,
a hybrid-electric aircraft like Greased Lightning could theoretically have
the same range and duration of a modern plane — while also having VTOL
capability.

Interestingly, NASA also says that such a hybrid-electric design is “scale
free” — meaning the same principles could be used to revolutionize
everything from helicopters, to military UAVs, to massive jetliners. There
doesn’t seem to be a specific target for NASA’s research [PDF], only that it
thinks our current crop of aircraft designs could be a lot more efficient
than they currently are. I’m sure the US military is interested in drones
and helicopters with improved VTOL and cruise capabilities, though. [Read:
DARPA is building an autonomous vertical takeoff transport for troops, cars,
and more.]

For now, Greased Lightning only has a wingspan of 10 feet (3 meters), and
its first test flight (National Aviation Day, August 19) was tethered.
Untethered flights are planned for later in the year — and hopefully we’ll
then get some awesome videos of it flying around, too.
[© Ziff Davis]




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