George Exel Early Activities about Rotorcraft

hesham

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Hi,

I spoke before about this designer;

and here is his early activities about rotorcraft;


George Exel, Clifton NJ.
#1 1920 = 1pOH; 50hp Gnôme; rotors: 21'6". Empty wt: 654#. Two-blade coaxial rotors. In tests the helicopter was barely able to hover without the pilot on board, and the control system proved ineffective.

#2 1923 = 1pOH; 80hp LeRhône; rotor 24'0". Co-rotor system. "The co-rotor system refers to the idea of reacting shaft torque of an engine-driven propeller or screw by the crankcase [of the rotary engine], to which the reacting rotor is attached. In Exel's arrangement the crankcase drives the lifting screw [propeller] while the otherwise stationary shaft of the rotary drives the rotor in counter-rotation." Propeller diameter was 8'4". Tests were conducted indoors in 1923. With full throttle and the operator standing beside the machine, it barely lifted one wheel off the ground.

#3 1925 = 1pOH; 80hp LeRhône. Rebuild of #2. An intermediate rotor was introduced making it a "triaxial" machine because of its three rotating members. A new, 6' lifting screw was used, while that of the two-blade intermediate rotor was 14'. The latter included in its hub a planetary gearbox. In tests this variant was able to lift off the ground, but the control system proved to be of little use.

#4 1926 = 1pOH; 110hp LeRhône. A modified version of #3. The intermediate two-blade rotor was replaced by a 16' four-blade rotor. Thrust was improved, but not controllability. Destroyed in a windstorm in late 1926.

#5 1930 = 1pOH; 110hp LeRhône; upper rotor: 9'6" lower rotor: 34'0". A co-rotor design. For the first time a method of cyclic control was introduced, using ailerons on the main rotor blades. A swashplate accounted for both cyclic and collective control of the main rotor, which was of a more modern high-aspect ratio type. Tests showed the rotor to be responsive to the cyclic and collective system used; however, vibration was excessive, and the machine was incapable of hovering. Exel then paused in helicopter research until after WW2.
 

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Welcome aboard Elizabeth,

please send what you have,it's will be fantastic.
 
... I'm curious as to where you found this information and photos...

Ms Keene:

hesham's information (in post #1) came from the link 'American airplanes: Ea - Ew'. This came from the Aerofiles website. Click on the link below and scroll almost to the bottom of the page to find the Exel entry.
-- http://www.aerofiles.com/_e.html

hesham's images came from a huge, 63 page, 32.4 MB pdf which seems to have no name. It is a peculiar document based on someone's old card files of clippings with short catalogue descriptions (in German).
-- http://kulturserver-nds.de/home/hubtest/medien/Typenkartei3953xGUN7x9T3Z7.pdf

Stargazer2006's image came from US1561424A. Click on the link below and then on the image thumbnails.
-- https://patents.google.com/patent/US1561424

Hope that helps.
 
Hello All,

Here is the entry about George Exel, and his helicopters, in "Helicopters Before Helicopters" by E. K. Liberatore (ISBN 978-1575240534). Enjoy!

Later on in the book, Liberatore, re Exel, mentioned that "there is little contemporary reporting on his work."

Cheers,
Paul
 

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Thank you Aerohydro,

and I have this book,good Info.

For Betsey1122 , was there any Projects for him ?.
 
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