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#extraction #heavy #james #military #point #transport #vtol #rotodyne #rotorplane #flaxman #gyrodyne #jflaxman #art #aircraft #armed
Published: 2014-09-03 23:52:46 +0000 UTC; Views: 31451; Favourites: 639; Downloads: 364
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Description

As the smoke from a burning settlement casts a dark pall over the desert, an Alliance rotodyne descends to extract the surviving members of a badly mauled militia squad. These transports were built to fill the niche between aeroplanes and helicopters. Though tiltrotors can fly higher and faster, rotodynes’ greater lifting potential and lower operating costs arguably make them superior strategic assets.

Design Features:

- The rotor mast, engines and landing gear are housed in external pods to increase cargo space. Streamlining reduces drag and extra armour can be fitted in high-risk environments.

- The twin turboshafts are linked by cams so both propellers will keep spinning if either engine fails. Power can be transferred to the main rotor for VTOL and hovering; no tail rotor is needed as prop pitch provides yaw control.

- Full power is applied to the props while the main rotor autorotates during high speed level flight. The stub wings and tailplanes provide extra lift while the twin rudders behind the props allow tighter turns than usual for an aircraft of this size.

- Rotodynes are generally much stronger and safer than tiltrotors. The engines do not have to tilt, so construction is simpler; there is no danger of tilting nacelles being jammed in one position; and losing a camshaft along with an engine is less likely to be fatal. Rotodynes’ large main rotors allow more efficient hovering and are harder to stall during fast descents. Their less concentrated rotor wash makes parachute drops easier and their exhaust is less likely to cause damage during takeoff and landing as it is not projected downwards.

- While many older rotodynes carry manually aimed guns some have been refitted with semi-automated weapons controlled by hull or cabin crew. Chainguns in nose and tail barbettes can lay down suppressive fire while radar jammers, chaff and flares give these aircraft a chance against missiles.

- Though Alliance forces lack the means the rotodyne concept could be improved. Veyon engineers ignore it in favour of tiltrotors, but the Coalition has made tests. Hypothetical advances include lighter, more efficient airframes, shrouded fan or jet propulsion, and rotors that slow down or stop for fast flight.

This concept was inspired by the X3 Eurocopter ( www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7fWDO…) though the aesthetic owes more to the Fairey Rotodyne – which used a jet-tipped main rotor – and several more conventional transports.

Related content
Comments: 28

gummy-gundam [2023-01-24 23:43:30 +0000 UTC]

👍: 1 ⏩: 1

jflaxman In reply to gummy-gundam [2023-01-24 23:49:10 +0000 UTC]

👍: 1 ⏩: 1

gummy-gundam In reply to jflaxman [2023-01-25 00:24:46 +0000 UTC]

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

Jimbodeek [2020-12-17 03:25:27 +0000 UTC]

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

thormemeson [2020-09-04 23:54:22 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

SVRailblazer [2020-04-13 04:07:22 +0000 UTC]

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

PaxAeternum [2019-04-18 02:02:13 +0000 UTC]

One of the few people on this site who knows what a Rotodyne is!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

k58mXP4 [2018-11-10 00:04:22 +0000 UTC]

Terrific

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Menarch [2017-08-11 00:53:19 +0000 UTC]

Looks like Groen Bros. Design but with esteroids

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

MrSpanyard [2015-01-19 17:15:01 +0000 UTC]

Just a teeny tiny detail: There is no back rotor to counter the main rotor movement. I know you explained that, but if both wing engines are used to movement, the force of each will nulify each other, making it spin due to the main rotor. If they spin in different senses to counter the main rotor reaction, that would make them useless, as a normal tail rotor will be more efficient.
I don't quite get how can it. Also, helicopters of any kind are slow, can't lift too much cargo, inefficient in fuel consume and very noisy.

But I like the post-apocaliptic scenario. Like mad max raiders meet the Enclave army.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Mavericksawyer In reply to MrSpanyard [2016-02-29 17:59:20 +0000 UTC]

The Fairey Rotodyne, which the artist has acknowledged was an inspiration, used tipjets (ramjets at the tips of the rotors) to spin up the rotor, removing the torque issue. A few compressed air jets, driven by compressor bleed air from the turboprops, would be able to provide attitude control at low airspeeds, below the speeds where the aerodynamic control surfaces lose effectiveness.

👍: 1 ⏩: 0

Solid0snake [2014-10-18 15:01:50 +0000 UTC]

run get to the chopper

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

G2ORC [2014-09-19 12:40:04 +0000 UTC]

Very cool concept!!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

nex564 [2014-09-08 06:17:32 +0000 UTC]

This guy thought of everything, that is a perfect chopper

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Quesocito [2014-09-07 14:00:31 +0000 UTC]

cool man

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Viergacht [2014-09-06 15:32:56 +0000 UTC]

I don't know much about aircraft, but that's quite convincing.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

jflaxman In reply to Viergacht [2014-09-09 01:32:56 +0000 UTC]

Thanks! Aircraft design interests me for the same reasons biology does - you see different aproaches to the same challenges, environmental adaptation, and convergent evolution (though the process is much faster due to human guidance!) It's hard science all the way - any failings on my part are due to poor research or bad drawing.

The alternate world setting lets me depict more obscure technologies, just as it might give others the chance to include creatures extinct in our own. The rotodyne concept had lots of potential, so I'm thrilled to see it revisited in modern designs like the Sikorsky X2 and Eurocopter X3.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Chigiri16 [2014-09-05 01:52:37 +0000 UTC]

I like

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hunterN05 [2014-09-04 11:36:38 +0000 UTC]

Vehicles~ I love it so hard.
Nice work on this man! this one looks awesome! ^^

I bet that group is happy to see that chopper, they look like they went through hell and back ;o;
But overall, loving the scene and the design of the vehicle.

I can see this was inspired by the X3, down below in the description.
While its based off of that it looks like a bulky Osprey to me hehe.

Keep it up man!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ONI-Defense [2014-09-04 03:36:35 +0000 UTC]

I recognized the Fairey Rotodyne's design in this aircraft immediately. It's great to see the Rotodyne resurrected like this. 

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

jflaxman In reply to ONI-Defense [2014-09-09 01:06:12 +0000 UTC]

It's great to hear from someone who got the reference! The concept had a lot of potential and to me it's great to see new approaches from Sikorsky and Airbus.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

pexyn [2014-09-04 02:42:31 +0000 UTC]

Now if no body told you how awesome this is, then they SUCK!

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jflaxman In reply to pexyn [2014-09-09 01:07:11 +0000 UTC]

Aw thanks! Haven't met any who suck as yet.

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Venom-V13 [2014-09-04 00:35:39 +0000 UTC]

Cool!

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line-melte [2014-09-04 00:09:57 +0000 UTC]

Awesome design, am I seeing something of the Avro Lincoln in the engine nacelles?

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jflaxman In reply to line-melte [2014-09-09 01:08:54 +0000 UTC]

You are - well spotted! A lot of British Cold War engineering gets overlooked in favour of US and Soviet designs (including the real-world rotodynes that were the main inspiration for this piece). Great to meet another fan!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

line-melte In reply to jflaxman [2014-09-24 09:31:42 +0000 UTC]

Indeed it does; the early Cold War period was filled with all sorts of wacky aviation experiments but the British ones do seem to be overlooked. Shame nothing much came of the Princess or Brabazon.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

James-Dark-Blue-Wolf [2014-09-03 23:57:46 +0000 UTC]

Whoa awesome!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0