SUPPLEMENTARY LIFT GENERATION SYSTEM FOR MULTICOPTER ROTORCRAFT

20250223028 ยท 2025-07-10

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A rotorcraft consisting of a fuselage, a plurality of arms on which electric motors driving propellers are mounted, one or a plurality of pivoting rotor supports on which thrust generating rotors with one or a plurality of blades attach. The rotor supports are substantially vertical when the aircraft is flying vertically, hovering, or on the ground, and tilted with respect to the aircraft when the aircraft has a forward motion component. The rotors can be powered on the ground, in hover, or in vertical flight, and spin in autorotation in horizontal flight.

    Claims

    1. A rotorcraft comprising: a. a fuselage; b. a plurality of motor support arms attached to said fuselage; c. one or a plurality of motors attached to each of said arms; d. one or a plurality of propellers connected to each of said motors; e. one or a plurality of free-spinning rotors each with one or a plurality of rotor blades; and f. one or a plurality of rotor support assemblies attached to said rotorcraft, wherein said rotor support assemblies provide means to tilt the rotation axes of said rotors aft and forward relative to said fuselage such that forward motion of the rotorcraft urges said rotors in autorotation, and wherein said rotor assemblies provide means to pivotally restrain the rotation axes of said rotors relative to said fuselage, whereby said rotorcraft will be provided with lifting force by said autorotating rotors while in motion.

    2. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, wherein the rotor support assemblies contain means to leverage aerodynamic forces generated by said rotorcraft's forward motion to tilt the rotation axes of the rotors relative to the fuselage.

    3. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, wherein the rotor support assemblies provide means to tilt the rotation axes of the rotors relative to the fuselage through powered pivotal urging.

    4. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, further comprising means to change the pitch of the rotor blades in flight under the control of a human pilot or autopilot.

    5. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, further comprising means to adjust the pitch of the rotor blades on the ground by an agent.

    6. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, further comprising means to spin the rotors on the ground using a source of rotative urging.

    7. The rotorcraft defined in claim 1, further comprising means to spin the rotors in hover or in vertical flight using a source of rotative urging.

    8. A method for providing aerodynamic lifting force to a multicopter with a motion component in the horizontal plane, comprising: a. providing said multicopter with one or a plurality of rotors, wherein said rotors are provided with means to autorotate under the urging of relative airflow; b. providing means for said rotors to be pivotally attached to the fuselage of said rotorcraft, whereby rotation axes of said rotors can tilt from substantially vertical on the ground, in hover and in vertical flight, to a tilt angle that urges said rotors in autorotation while the aircraft is moving horizontally.

    9. The method of claim 8 further comprising means to pre-rotate the rotors using a source of rotative urging.

    10. The method of claim 8 further comprising aerodynamic means to tilt the rotor rotation axes relative to the multicopter's fuselage as the multicopter starts moving forward.

    11. The method of claim 8 further comprising motorized means to tilt the rotor rotation axes relative to the multicopter's fuselage.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

    [0021] FIG. 1 shows a quadcopter as an example of prior art.

    [0022] FIG. 2 represents a rotorcraft embodiment of the present invention with a full-back hinge bracket in vertical flight configuration.

    [0023] FIG. 3 is a detail view of a full-back hinge bracket in vertical flight configuration.

    [0024] FIG. 4 is an isometric view of a rotorcraft embodiment with full-back hinge bracket, configured for horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0025] FIG. 5 is a detail of an embodiment of full-back hinge bracket with the rotor support configured for horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0026] FIG. 6 is an isometric view of a full-back hinge bracket.

    [0027] FIG. 7 is an embodiment of a rotor support tilt control system.

    [0028] FIG. 8 is an embodiment of a rotor including hub and mast.

    [0029] FIG. 9 shows a detail view of the rotor attached to an embodiment of a rotor support.

    [0030] FIG. 10 shows an embodiment of a pivoting rotor support.

    [0031] FIG. 11 shows a rotorcraft embodiment with a backless rotor support hinge bracket in vertical flight configuration.

    [0032] FIG. 12 is a detail view of the backless hinge bracket and backstop in vertical flight configuration.

    [0033] FIG. 13 shows an embodiment featuring a rotorcraft equipped with a backless rotor support hinge bracket configured for horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0034] FIG. 14 is a detail of a backless rotor support hinge and standalone rotor support backstop in horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0035] FIG. 15 is an isometric view of a backless hinge bracket.

    [0036] FIG. 16 is an Isometric view of a standalone backstop.

    [0037] FIG. 17 shows a rotorcraft embodiment equipped with a power unit which can spin the rotor when the rotor support is vertical.

    [0038] FIG. 18 shows a detail of the power unit and the rotor support in a vertical orientation.

    [0039] FIG. 19 shows a rotorcraft with the power unit and the rotor support configured for horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0040] FIG. 20 shows a detail of the rotorcraft with the power unit and the rotor support configured for horizontal or cruise flight.

    [0041] FIG. 21 shows a rotorcraft embodiment equipped with a rotor support trim fin with the rotor support in a vertical orientation.

    [0042] FIG. 22 shows a rotorcraft embodiment equipped with a rotor support trim fin in horizontal or cruise flight configuration.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0043] The present invention will be described in more detail hereinafter with references to the included drawings, which illustrate some embodiments of the present invention.

    [0044] The invention can be embodied in different forms not limited to the embodiments illustrated or described herein. In particular, the number of autorotating rotors can vary.

    [0045] Rotorcraft 1 in FIG. 1 is an example of prior art. Rotorcraft 1 is a typical unmanned multicopter, a quadcopter drone consisting of fuselage 11, arms 12, motors 13, propellers 14 and landing gear 15. Fuselage 11 typically contains a power source such as batteries or other means to store and distribute power to motors 13.

    [0046] Referring to FIGS. 2, 3 and 6, shown is an embodiment of the current invention mounted on fuselage 11 of rotorcraft 1. Rotor support 4 is pivotally connected to full-back hinge bracket 2 and pivoted in a vertical flight configuration, in contact with forward stop 21. Rotor 3 is mounted on rotor support 4.

    [0047] Referring to FIGS. 4, 5 and 6, shown is an embodiment of the current invention mounted on fuselage 11 of rotorcraft 1. Rotorcraft 1 is in a nose-low forward flight configuration. Rotor support 4 is attached to full-back hinge bracket 2 and pivoted in a horizontal flight configuration, resting on backstop 22. Rotor 3 is mounted on rotor support 4 and is operating in autorotation. In some embodiments, air resistance of the rotor 3 and rotor support 4 causes the rotor support to pivot to cruise configuration as the rotorcraft starts moving forward. In some embodiments, a servomotor will power the transition. While the design and functionality of hinge bracket 2 can vary in embodiments, its main purpose is to provide means for pivotally displacing and restraining rotor support 4.

    [0048] Referring to FIGS. 3, 6 and 10, shown are details of an embodiment of hinge bracket 2 and rotor support 4 pivoted in the vertical flight configuration. Fulcrum 43 placed in hinge 2 allows the rotor support to pivot from substantially vertical to cruise configuration and back. The pivot mechanism can vary in embodiments. In some embodiments, rotor support arm 42 is restrained from pitching forward by forward stop 21.

    [0049] Referring to FIGS. 5, 6 and 10, shown are details of an embodiment of hinge bracket 2 and rotor support 4 pivoted in the cruise configuration. In some embodiments, rotor support arm 42 is restrained from pitching back beyond the desired amount by backstop 22.

    [0050] Referring to FIGS. 8,9 and 10, shown is an embodiment of rotor 3 and the means of attaching rotor 3 to rotor support 4. Rotor mast 32 is in some embodiments inside ring 41, where rotor 3 can spin freely. Rotor blades 33 are mounted on rotor hub 31 via mechanisms that can vary in embodiments. The blade pitch can be fixed to, or set to, an angle which allows the blades to generate lift under the principles of autorotation. The number of blades, blade hinging mechanism, blade airfoil and other attributes can vary in embodiments. The rotor hub and mast design can vary in embodiments. In some embodiments, the pitch of the rotor blades can be adjusted on the ground or in flight. In some embodiments the rotor is removable for rotorcraft storage or for certain missions. In some embodiments the rotor support is removable for rotorcraft storage or for certain missions.

    [0051] Referring to FIGS. 7,9 and 10, restraint 7 is an embodiment of a system comprising springs, dampeners, or other means used in some embodiments of the present invention to keep rotor support 4 vertical until the rotorcraft has achieved sufficient airspeed in the horizontal direction, and to return the rotor support to the vertical position once the airspeed has dropped back below a prescribed value. In some embodiments, the tilt of the rotor support can be controlled by the pilot or by the autopilot using servomotors, hydraulics, direct linkage, or other means. Depending on embodiments, the means of restraint are inside rotor support fulcrum 43, surrounding the fulcrum inside hinge bracket 2b, or replacing the fulcrum altogether. In some embodiments, rotor support arm 42 is a flexible rod fixed to fuselage 11. The flexible rotor support arm can bend when the rotorcraft is under horizontal motion to bring rotor 3 to a position that generates thrust through autorotation.

    [0052] Referring to FIGS. 11,12 and 15, an alternative embodiment of the present invention is shown in the vertical flight configuration. Rotor support 4 is prevented from pitching forward beyond a vertical position by forward stop 21 of backless hinge bracket 2b.

    [0053] Referring to FIGS. 13,14,15 and 16, an alternative embodiment of the present invention is shown in the horizontal or cruise flight configuration. Backless hinge 2b does not have a backstop. Rotor support 4 is prevented from pitching back beyond the desired amount by standalone backstop 2c installed on fuselage 11.

    [0054] Referring to FIGS. 17 and 18, an embodiment equipped with a rotor pre-rotator is shown in ground, hover or vertical flight configuration. Power unit 5, attached to fuselage 11, in some embodiments an electric motor, is driving extended rotor mast 32b to spin rotor 3b. Pre-rotating the rotor before the rotorcraft starts moving in the horizontal plane makes for more efficient lift generation in autorotation. In some embodiments equipped with variable pitch rotor blades, the power unit can spin the rotor to generate extra lift while the rotorcraft is moving vertically or hovering.

    [0055] Referring to FIGS. 19 and 20, an embodiment equipped with a rotor pre-rotator is shown in horizontal flight or cruise configuration. Extended rotor mast 32b is separated from power unit 5, allowing rotor 3b to spin in autorotation.

    [0056] Referring to FIGS. 6, 21 and 22, an embodiment of the present invention equipped with means to aerodynamically transition the rotor support to horizontal flight configuration is shown. Fin 6, under the influence of the relative wind from rotorcraft 1 in horizontal motion, generates a force to pivot rotor support 4 for the optimum thrust to drag ratio of rotor 3 for that flight condition. The fin can also be used to force the rotor support against the backstop 22 of hinge bracket 2 in horizontal flight. Depending on embodiments, the fin can be fixed, ground adjustable, or controllable during flight.

    [0057] Some advantages of embodiments of the present invention are as follows:

    [0058] The autorotating rotor, being equipped with longer blades than the multicopter's powered propellers, generates lift more efficiently, increasing the range and endurance of the rotorcraft.

    [0059] If powered while in vertical flight, embodiments of the rotor equipped with variable pitch blades can supplement the lift produced by the multicopter's propellers. In contrast, if a multicopter were equipped with wings for range increase, the wings would not provide lift during vertical flight, while adding useless weight to the aircraft.

    [0060] The lift provided by the autorotating rotor allows the rotorcraft to use less power for maintaining altitude while in horizontal flight. The rotorcraft can cruise efficiently in a substantially nose-down attitude in some embodiments, with the thrust vectors of the propellers more aligned with the direction of flight than in multicopters not equipped with embodiments of the present invention.

    [0061] The lift provided by the autorotating rotor allows the multicopter to use less power for maintaining altitude while in horizontal flight. In some embodiments, the propellers can spin at a lower RPM during cruise, thus running quieter than multicopters not equipped with embodiments of the present invention.

    [0062] Should one or more motors on a multicopter equipped with embodiments of the present invention stop producing power, the rotorcraft can make a gentle landing under autorotation. This is in contrast with current multicopters where multiple motor failures can cause the rotorcraft to descend uncontrollably. The ability to slow the descent down and cushion the landing if a flight emergency arises is especially desirable when the aircraft is carrying valuable cargo or passengers.