aznman908 wrote:I have done helicopters in the past, but i have made a rotor on top and bottom. They were traditionally only two blades for each rotor. I was thinking of building a rotor with four blades on top and two on the bottom. I have seen first and second place team do this design. The problem is that my old partner said that using four blades is not as efficient. I was wondering if that was true or not.
Well, this is one of those questions with a yes, but... answer.
First, a wing (and a propeller(rotor, same thing) blade is just a twisted wing flying in a very small circle) works best if the air going over it is nice and uniform.
- If you have two wings following the same path, the second is in the disturbed air of the first, so not working as well.
- Theoretically, the most efficient rotor is one with a single blade as the disturbance has moved well past by the time the blade comes around again. Now this has other challenges, thus the bonus to get you to try it this year.
- For a rotor with two blades, each is in the wake of the other, and they have half the time for the air to move past so they disturb the air for each other a little more than a single blade.
- Three blades, are even close, even more interference, loss of efficiency.
- Four blades, even closer, even more interference, even more loss of efficiency.
But, the lift off a wing, is proportional to its area. Assuming all things equal, twice the area, twice the lift. Two blades have twice the lift of one, three, three times, and so on.
So, you have two competing things going on.
- Four blades will have twice the area, and should have twice the lift.
- But, they interfere with each other more so you don't actually realize twice the lift.
- Whether its worth it depends on which increases faster, area or interference.
There are messy theoretical calculations that tell you how fast each changes, but they depend on a lot of data we typically don't have for models of this size.
There is another way to increase area and that's fatter blades. That brings its own set of efficiency tradeoffs. Long skinny wings are more efficient than short fat ones.
How do you figure this out, Build all these variations and see. Remember, keep other things equal. Same weight, same pitch, same rubber, same winds, SAME WEIGHT.
So, direct answer, a four bladed rotor is less efficient than a two bladed one. BUT, it may be worth it anyway for the increase in lifting area. Try it and see.
Jeff Anderson
Livonia, MI