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powered hang glider
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{{for|microlight trike|Ultralight trike|Ultralight aviation}}{{short description|Foot-launched powered hang glider}}(File:PseudopediaHangmotor.jpg|300px|thumb|A foot-launched powered hang glider)A foot-launched powered hang glider (FLPHG), also called powered harness, nanolight, or hangmotor, is a powered hang glider harness with a motor and propeller often in pusher configuration, although some can be found in tractor configuration. An ordinary hang glider is used for its wing and control frame, and the pilot can foot-launch from a hill or from flat ground, needing a length of about a football field to get airborne, or much less if there is an oncoming breeze and no obstacles.

History

Adding propulsion

While powered microlights (ultralights) developed from hang gliding in the late 1970s, they were also a return to the type of low-speed aircraft that were common in the earlier years of aviation, but which were superseded as both civil and military aircraft pursued more speed.In 1898 Augustus Moore Herring adapted a compressed air engine to a weight-shift biplane. Images: weblink For a second time in aviation history, during the 1970s, motorization of simple gliders, especially those portable and foot-launched, became the goal of many inventors and gradually, small wing-mounted power packs were adapted. These early experiments went largely unrecorded, even in log books, let alone the press, because the pioneers were uncomfortably aware that the addition of an engine made the craft liable to registration, airworthiness legislation, and the pilot liable to expensive licensing and probably, insurance. Inventors from Australia, France and England produced several successful microlight motor gliders in the early 1970sFrench aviation historians on FLPHG and very few were portable wings.

Don Mitchell

Surprisingly, what really launched the powered ultralight aviation movement in the United States was not the Rogallo flexible wing but a whole series of rigid-wing motorized hang gliders.British Microlight Aircraft Association, History of Microlighting {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070203230257www.bmaa.org/histdets.asp?HistoryID=4 |date=February 3, 2007 }} The Icarus V flying wing appeared with its tip rudders and swept-back style wing was used as a base for some powered experiments. Differently, a rigid biplane designed also by teenager Taras Kiceniuk Jr., the Icarus II was a foundation for a modification in Larry Mauro’s UFM Easy Riser biplaneHang glider : EASY RISER (Larry Mauro) that started to sell in large numbers; Larry Mauro would power his tail-less biplane; one version was solar powered, called the Solar Riser. Hang gliding record holder Don MitchellIn April 1946 Mitchell completed construction of his ‘Flying Wing’ (not the Mitchell Wing hang glider which was developed in 1975). The American FAA issued an Experimental Airworthiness number for it. The wing was flown as a glider by Mitchell, Bolwus and Paul Tuntland. Then Mitchell mounted a Nelson 2-cycle engine on it and flew it as a powered glider with wheels for landing gear.weblink {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161110130835home.earthlink.net/~mitchellwing/mitchell.html |date=2016-11-10 }} fitted his Mitchell Wing B-10 with a motor,In the early 1940s Don Mitchell first became involved with flying wing glider design and construction. But World War II interrupted his research and experiments. Then in 1974, with the advent of hang glider mania, the Mitchell Wing resurfaced. It was at that time Dr. Howard Long took an interest in the half-forgotten project and asked Mitchell to make him a flying wing hang glider. The result was the foot-launched Mitchell Wing, controllable by a ‘joystick’. The Mitchell Wing astounded the world of hang gliding. George Worthington, holder of eight world records in hang gliding and author of the book In Search of World Records, wrote in the book...“I predict that the Mitchell Wing will be the highest performance foot-launched hang glider we’ll see for a long time.” He was right, and it was from this preliminary design that Mitchell developed his later powered models: The Mitchell Wing B-10 and Mitchell U-2 Superwing. though the pilot still had to use their legs as undercarriage, an arrangement which persisted until he designed the B-10 Mitchell Wing.Don Mitchell - U.S. Pacific weblink {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161110130835home.earthlink.net/~mitchellwing/mitchell.html |date=2016-11-10 }}, B-10 Photos: weblink

Barry Palmer

In 1963, and during his free time, aeronautical engineer Barry Palmer built and experimented with a foot-launched powered hang glider at Bloomfield, Connecticut. It was powered by a {{Convert|7|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} West Bend engine and mounted on top of a Rogallo-type flexible wing hang glider; the propeller was {{convert|3|ft|m|0}} in diameter and was made of balsa wood, covered with fiberglass and mounted in pusher configuration. However, the engine was quite underpowered and the craft could not achieve flight.Interview with Gerard Farell on Jan. 23-24, 2007. “Foot launched powered Para-wing around 1963, {{Convert|7|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} West Bend driving a {{convert|3|ft|m|0|sing=on}} dia. glass over balsa propeller. Main structure is 6061-T6 aluminum tubing, 4 mil polyethylene. The craft was not particularly portable, the wind was always coming down the slight slope in Bloomfield, CT, and the project was terminated as I was re-engineering it with a bigger engine and as I got a job offer to move to Miami and design, build and fly the wheeled wings (trikes).” It is now estimated that a modern flexible Rogallo wing hang glider requires at least {{Convert|6|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} at the prop shaft and about 45 lbf (200 N) of thrust just to maintain level flight. During 1967, Barry Palmer built what is likely the first weight-shift powered trike aircraft.Recorded by the FAA as: Palmer Parawing D-6, serial 1A, N7144, was registered on 4/24/1967. No limitations were noted.

John Moody

(File:John Moody’s powered Icarus II.jpg|thumb|200px|right|John Moody’s powered Icarus II in Southeastern Wisconsin Aviation MuseumThe Southeastern Wisconsin Aviation Museum)On March 15, 1975, John Moody successfully added a {{Convert|12.5|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} West Bend engine with a 71 cm (28 in) propeller to an UFM Easy Riser biplane hang glider designed by Larry Mauro. Moody opened the throttle and ran until he lifted from the frozen surface of a lake west of Racine, Wisconsin, and he flew for 30 minutes. “Poor man’s Lear; Ultralight’s buzz in for second convention”, by Don Castonia, Appleton (WI) Post-Crescent, June 25, 1983, p. 1 EAA Chapter 838 Museum— Aviators Then on July 27, 1976, John Moody demonstratedArticle in PDF format: Powered hang glider, you can launch it any where weblink {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030911172223www.pioneerflyer.com/articles/ps-article.pdf |date=September 11, 2003 }} ultralight aviation at the annual EAA fly-in convention in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, with a foot launched McCulloch 101 powered Icarus II Smithsonian Air & Space Museum. Icarus hang glider development {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080218010251www.nasm.si.edu/research/aero/aircraft/icarus.htm |date=February 18, 2008 }} in front of thousands of spectators, starting the modern ultralight aviation revolution in the United States. Later, he added wheels to the aircraft and by the end of 1979, there were almost 100 competing companies selling powered ultralights (microlights) but very few were foot-launchable.(File:Soarmaster standard flphg power unit.jpg|thumb|Soarmaster standard FLPHG power unit)

Jerzy Kolecki

In 1979, a powered backpack called the Motolotnia - White Eagle, designed by Jerzy Kolecki, became available for sale.Power Up Company, United States Patent # 4546938Powered backpack Motolotnia 80 White Eagle photo of advert in Flight Line magazine, march-June 1982 weblinkJerzy Kolecki, founder of Kolecki New Aviation Engineering, Sweden It consisted of a 90 cc McCulloch chainsaw engine with a direct drive 61 cm (24“) wooden prop, producing a quoted 77 lbf (340 N) of thrust; the rate of climb was about 150 ft/min (0.76 m/s) and flight duration was limited by the small fuel tank and engine overheating after several minutes.Other powered harnesses to reach the market in the 1980s were The RangerThe Ranger, designed by Bruce Hudson, UK. Powered by the Solo 210 cc engine: weblink and the Relax 220.Relax 220, designed by Yves Rousseau.

Others

(File:jetbug.jpg|thumb|right|The JetBug, UK, 2003)By 2008, there were a few harness designs similar to the Swedish Aerosport Mosquito, each sporting unique strengths, and produced by other FLPHG manufacturers.FLPHG manufacturers {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060812041807www.wind-drifter.com/manuf.htm |date=August 12, 2006 }} The latest generation of powered harnesses bear names such as Wasp,Wasp designers: Ed Cleasby and Chris Taylor - Wasp Flight Systems and Sperwill. Flylight Doodle Bug,DoodleBug designer: Ben Ashman - Flylight Airsports Ltd. Raven,Raven designer: Randy Haney - Powerplanes X1,X1 designers: Kenneth M. O’Sage II and Dave Little - Hidden Mountain Flight. Zenon,Zenon designer: Sotos Christoforou - Sky Gear. Airtime Explorer,Explorer designer: Bob Bauer - Airtime Products. Created in 1997; discontinued in 2004 and released again in 2007 as the ‘Explorer LD’, Fillo,Fillo manufacturer: Milan Vita. and Flyped.Flyped Manufacturer: Paul Kiraly

World records

La Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) is the international standard-setting and record-keeping body for aeronautics and astronautics, so it also oversees the official records by foot-launched powered hang gliders, currently under the RWF1 category.FAI microlight world records, RWF1 (Weight-shift control, foot-launched and flown solo) weblink {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060909195551records.fai.org/microlight/ |date=September 9, 2006 }}

Unofficial records

Unofficial FLPHG World Records – Confirmed but not validated by the FAI.
  • On August 5, 1978, French pioneer Bernard Danis mated a Soarmaster unit to this {{convert|168|sqft|m2}} SK 2SS wing and climbed to {{convert|1825|m|ft}} above sea level at the Southern Alps.Bernard Danis {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071124015143www.bmaa.org/histdets.asp?HistoryID=5 |date=November 24, 2007 }}
  • On May 9, 1978, David Cook became the first pilot to cross the English Channel while flying a foot-launched powered hang glider; he used a Volmer VJ-23 Swingwing glider.
(File:Foot-launched powered hang glider (1979).jpg|thumb|right|Gerry Breen - London to Paris in FLPHG (August 25, 1979))
  • On May 7, 1979, British pilot Gerry Breen set a new distance record for FLPHG of {{convert|325|km|mi}} from Wales to Norwich, a non-stop world distance record that still stands today; using a Soarmaster, the flight took about 4 hours with a tailwind of about {{convert|25|kn|mph}} and reportedly consumed {{convert|25|L|impgal}} of fuel.Interview with Gerard Farell on November 2006. Three months later, on August 25 through 28, inspired by the film “Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines” and sponsored by British Airways, Breen flew his powered hang glider from London to Paris: Wishing to use a British made aircraft, Gerry Breen and Steve Hunt set about building with their version of the powered Soarmaster, but had no clutch. The unit, including glider, was considerably heavier than the Soarmaster and Olympus glider combination but the wing was much more robust. The hang glider was a Hiway Super Scorpion with a {{Convert|10|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} McCulloch 125 cc engine mounted on the keel just forward of the hang strap.This powered hang glider, registered G-BGNL, is now held by the British Hang Gliding Museum. The journey was plagued with mechanical failures but Breen overcame them and completed the trip.Despite this achievement, Breen and Hunt recognized the deficiencies of the keel mounted engine and when Breen saw a picture of Roland Magallon’s trike in the French hang gliding magazine Vol Libre, he mentioned that the days of the Soarmaster ‘were numbered.’
  • In July 2002, Italian hang gliding champion and conservationist, Angelo d’Arrigo, guided a flock of 10 endangered western Siberian cranes, bred in captivity, with an Icaro hang glider equipped with an NRG powered harness {{convert|5300|km|mi}} from the Arctic circle in Siberia, across Kazakhstan to the shores of the Caspian Sea in Iran, avoiding Afghanistan and Pakistan where they fall victim to the abundant guns. For the most part, he relied on the sun and wind for propulsion in order to teach the young cranes to soar long distances. This $250,000 USD experiment lasted for six months and finished in winter 2002.Interview with Angelo d’Arrigo[http:www.sibeflyway.org/Reintroduction-Flight-of-Hope-Project-web.html Siberian Crane Flyway coordination]
(File:Laverty Patrick. May 24, 2009.JPG|thumb|200px|right|Patrick Laverty - altitude world record: {{convert|5348|m|ft}}, U.K., May 24, 2009)
  • On May 24, 2009, Irish pilot Patrick Laverty broke the foot-launched powered hang glider altitude world record. He used an Aeros Discus 15 hang glider coupled to a supine custom-made harness equipped with a 29 hp ROS 125 engine with the Supa-Tuna tuning lights system on a WB32 carburettor. Takeoff was at sea level and he flew to an altitude of {{convert|5348|m|ft}} ASL over Talybont, Ceredigion, Wales, UK.The altitude was recorded by a digital altimeter, a GPS and the flight was filmed as well; Video:weblink He carried oxygen and 10 litres of fuel, per U.K. regulations; his variometer indicated 30 to 50fpm climb rate at the time fuel ran out.

Systems

Currently, there are two harness configurations: prone (face down) and sitting. Both configurations allow the pilot to takeoff and land on their feet. Foot-launched powered hang glider (FLPHG) harnesses are built around a light metal frame with the engine and propeller mounted on the rear in a pusher configuration. Current powered harnesses weigh 22–32 kg (50-70 lb) not including the safety parachute and fuel, and fold neatly into a {{convert|1.5|m|ft}} long harness bag with a handle. Most powered harnesses in production are equipped with the Radne Raket 120 two stroke engine which is based on Husqvarna XP3120 chainsaw parts. It has a displacement of {{convert|118|cm3|cuin}} and produces about {{Convert|15|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} at 8900 RPM if equipped with a tuned exhaust; when coupled to a 1:3.5 belt-driven reduction drive and a 52” x 22” propeller, it produces about 100 lbf (440 N) of static thrust. For heavy pilots or pilots operating from higher than {{convert|1500|m|ft}} MSL fields, a powered harness equipped with an {{Convert|18|hp|kW|0|abbr=on}} engine is recommended.18 hp Harnesses such as the ‘X1’ or ‘Wasp Venom’ equipped with the Vittorazi EVO 100 cc for about 130 lbf (580 N) thrust at {{convert|7000|ft|m|-2|abbr=on}} MSL

Electric motors

Timeline for electric-powered foot-launched gliders

Patents

  • US Patent 4262863 Filed: January 16, 1978. Powered hang glider with reduction drive by Charles J. Slusarczyk.
  • US Patent 4417707 Filed: January 26, 1982. Human powered hang glider by Ken Leong. This type of powered hang glider is powered by the muscle exertion of the hang glider pilot. This patent references earlier teachings affecting powered hang glider design.
  • US Patent 5170965 Filed: April 30, 1991. Hang glider which can fly by human strength by Hiroaki Yasuda.

See also

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
  • {{annotated link|Glider aircraft}}
  • {{annotated link|Hang gliding}}
  • {{annotated link|Human powered aircraft}}
  • {{annotated link|Paraglider}}
  • {{annotated link|Paragliding}}
  • {{annotated link|Power kite}}
  • {{annotated link|Powered parachute}}
  • {{annotated link|Powered paragliding}}
  • {{annotated link|Ultralight aviation}}
  • {{annotated link|Ultralight trike}}
{{div col end}}

References

{{reflist}}{{Aircraft types (by method of thrust and lift)}}

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