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Welcome to Purdue University's Chapter of the American Helicopter Society.
After a five year hiatus, we've updated our site with our current projects
and members. Have a look around and write us with questions, comments
or ideas.
Background
In the past three decades, enthusiasts all over the world have enjoyed
prolific results within human powered flight. The
Gossamer Albatross and Daedalus both made great advances for fix-wing
aircraft, and riding on their success, attention soon
turned to rotorcraft. The American Helicopter Society (AHS) introduced
the Sikorsky Prize in 1980: $20,000 to the first group that can demonstrate
controlled human powered vertical flight. In 1989, California Polytechnic
State University’s Da Vinci III demonstrated the Sikorsky Award was achievable,
albeit distantly. California Polytechnic State University, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and Nihon University in Japan all put forth amazing
contributions, though none capable of capturing the Sikorsky Prize.
Despite over twenty years of effort with no successful flight mandated
by the Sikorsky Prize,
work continues on the idea with modest progress.
A small group of students at Purdue have been steadily working on the
project since 1995, when Prof. William Crossley founded the Purdue Chapter
of the AHS. The club has remained small, and students have made modest
advances toward the ultimate Human Powered Helicopter (HPH). In 1996,
a student wrote a Matlab code to predict the performance of a full-scale
HPH rotor. A few years after that, a 1:8 scale model rotor was built
and tested. However, the results from these first tests were inconclusive.
The testing equipment was just not up to par. Then in the fall 2001,
a second test stand was built; go the Projects
page for more information, including a final
report.