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View Full Version : Can anybody shed more light on this



sir-chimp
09-25-2005, 04:10 PM
Whats the story behind this. I tried military.com were the video is originaly from but something seems to be wrong with their site right now.

http://www.thatvideosite.com/view/788.html

ReconCominAtYa
09-25-2005, 04:24 PM
it's been posted here before, something about demonstrating how a helicopter can literally shake itself to death.

1Cie GevGn
09-25-2005, 04:32 PM
Ground resonation effects p-)

sir-chimp
09-25-2005, 04:32 PM
it's been posted here before, something about demonstrating how a helicopter can literally shake itself to death.

ah thank you, I figured it might have been posted before. It looked like it was intentional.

flanker7
09-25-2005, 04:50 PM
I think it's from a test made by the US Army to check what happens when the helicopter runs out of lubricants in its gear box(is this the correct term?)

Noob Brit
09-25-2005, 05:04 PM
From Wikipedia..


Ground resonance, in fully articulated multi-bladed helicopters, is a hazardous condition during touchdown. A series of shocks to the landing gear can pass through to the rotor disk and cause an imbalance in the rotor system. Under extreme conditions, the imbalance causes violent oscillations that quickly build and result in catastrophic damage of the entire airframe. In some cases, complete destruction occurs, e.g. body panels, fuel tanks, and engines are all ripped from their mountings.

The imbalance is possible because multi-bladed helicopters include lag-lead hinges at the rotor hub to reduce stresses in flight. Under normal conditions, all blades are spaced at equal angles. Shocks to the rotor shaft and hub can cause an imbalance if they are sufficiently violent. Note that two bladed helicopters are not susceptible to ground resonance because they do not require lag-lead hinges. Two-bladed rotors remain balanced through all flight conditions.

Recovery is possible in some cases. If sufficient rotor RPM exists, immediate takeoff can restore rotor balance. If rotor RPM is low, complete shutdown might be sufficient.