Backpack helicopter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A backpack helicopter or helibackpack is a helicopter motor and rotor and controls assembly that can be strapped to a person's back, so that they can walk about on the ground wearing it, and can use it to fly. Its harness, like a parachute harness should have a strap between the legs, so that the pilot does not fall out of the harness during flight.
Related are devices like a backpack helicopter which also include a seat and leg supports and are actually very small open-topped ordinary helicopters.
Several inventors have tried to make backpack helicopters, with mixed results.
In theory, a helicopter would be more efficient than a rocket pack or jetpack, possessing a greater specific impulse, and being more suited to hovering due to the smaller velocities of the propelled gases.
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[edit] Examples
Pure backpacks:-
- http://english.pravda.ru/main/2002/06/11/30172.html describes a Russian backpack helicopter.
- The Heliofly was a make which was designed in Germany in 1941 onwards. See [1] and [2].
- Pentecost HX-1 Hoppi-Copter
- Rhyme (made in Japan)
With a seat:-
- SoloTrek XFV (Exo-skeletal Flying Vehicle).
- See http://www.vortechonline.com for various models which have seats. They formerly also made a pure backpack model with two very long rotor blades driven by a little propane-powered jet motor at the end of each blade.
- GenH4
[edit] In fiction
Backpack helicopters occur sometimes in fiction. All real backpack helicopters are flown with its pilot's body vertical, but there are some in fiction (for example, occasionally in the Dan Dare comics) which are flown with its pilot's body horizontal.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/back-packhelicopter/ a Yahoo! email group about backpack helicopters.