My dad and I built a Benson B-8M gyrocopter in the early '70s and learned to fly it ourselves, they have come a long way since that early machine we built from box aluminum. Watching this brought back some fond memories.
As for me, watching any pilot - let alone a neophyte - taxi away, without a checklist in hand, is a teeth-grinding moment. If it's necessary for the best pilots, it's necessary for all of us!
My new goal in life is to save and buy one. Then take a long trip to NM. I LOVE IT! WISH I KNEW SOMEONE IN THE N. CHICAGO AREA THAT WOULD BE KIND ENOUGH TO LET ME HANG OUT WITH SO I MAY LEARN. LONG SHOT BUT WORTH A TRY. Thanks for the footage!
The Helmet is the American-made Alpha Eagle. It has dual noise-attenuating earphones. For more information, see: www.alphahelicopterhelmets.com/alpha-helmets/alpha-eagle
Stuart Loria wrote: "What kind of a pilot's license do you need to fly that thing?" In the USA, either a Private Pilot -- Single Engine Land with a rotorcraft endorsement, or a Sport Pilot with rotorcraft endorsement. (Which would include a Student Pilot for either of those tickets, with a solo check-off.)
Wind speed not really an issue. Turbulence associated with strong winds is an issue for any aircraft. In general gyrocopters handle turbulence much better than fixed wing aircraft. I fly both. Today for example I felt it would be a little bumpy in the fixed wing given the wind and mechanical turbulence in our local area so took the gyro instead.
"If the rotors are spinning, you can climb..." Not so; it depends on how fast they're spinning. Think about it; how else could you land? They're always (hopefully) spinning when you're airborne, but you're not always climbing.
+MY WAY MY WORLD The rotor's are unpowered on gyroplanes. Some have prerotators to get the rotors spinning before takeoff but while actually in flight the rotors aren't powered. Gyroplanes fly pretty much like fixed wing aircraft rather than helicopters. But there are a few things you have to watch out for, like not unloading the rotor while in flight.
Yes, flew it for 5 mins or so and the rain started pelting down. Also edited the vid which was filmed by Sean's partner. Had plenty of gyro hours previously but never flown the Arrowcopter before. I think you sceptics might be overthinking it :)
hey did that 1st guy ever land safely or did he crash? in the original guy in the take off was replaced by 2 different experienced pilots landing safely which for me is a crash edit. So did you really end up marrying his wife like you said or were you just dreaming?
flyerppc wrote: "...do not have the endurance unlike the autogyro cavalon or the calidus." BS. The Arrow-Copter has 18.5 gallons usable fuel capacity standard, and its Rotax 914 burns 5.3 gal/hr @ 75% power for a range of 283 nm at 81 knots, or economy cruise of 3.4 gal/hr at 55% power for 381 nm at 70 knots. The Calidus can have either the 912 or the 914 engine, and if you compare it using the 914 for similar performance you will find similar fuel flows; but the Calidus has a smaller standard fuel tank and so has less range unless you add an auxiliary tank.
get your facts before posting, the arrow is a much heavier machine, will not knock the design, gyro`s do not like weight heavier they are they perform like shit, dont know what your conversion is but an 80L tank on the arrow has only 70L usable this equates to 174nm endurance @70kts 4500rpm 15ltr/hr burn. Secondly the 914 is an 80hp tubo charged engine turbo wastegate comes in @5000rpm then equates to 100hp to 115hp @ 5500 rpm burning 33ltr/hr. The cavalon will cruise @ 90kts 4800 rpm 18ltr burn or 70kts @ 4200 rpm 13ltr burn with 100ltr tank can go places.
flyerppc First of all, you said "unlike the Cavalon OR CALIDUS" and I was comparing the Arrow-Copter with the Calidus in the previous post, so let's stick to what I was comparing with and leave the Cavalon out of it. Next, you are the one who needs to get his facts straight: 1) The Arrow-Copter has a 76 litre tank, not 80 litre , and 74 litres useable, not 70 litres. The Calidus only has a 39 litre standard tank, with only 38.2 litres useable. (You can install an auxiliary tank on the Calidus to boost it to 75 litres (73.8 litres useable), but you lose space and weight-carrying capacity in doing so.) 2) The Arrow-Copter burns 27l/h @ 5500RPM, not 33l/h. At 4800RPM for 18l/h, the Arrow-Copter will do 140km/h, compared to the Calidus' 160km/h, so the Calidus does have a speed advantage at that power setting, but you were talking about ENDURANCE. The Arrow-Copter will do 130km/h @ 4300RPM @ 13l/h for a range of 740km with standard tanks, compared to the Calidus' 382km at the same speed and fuel flow, also with standard tank. Even if you install the auxiliary tank on the Calidus, the range will only increase to 738km -- virtually identical to the Arrow-Copter with standard tanks. The FACTS posted here come directly from the respective manufacturer's Pilot Operating Handbooks.
***** u obviously go by the book which is great on paper to sell a product different to actual tests we have done in the EU in different flying conditions etc which is more accurate and unbiased, and soon to be released which will include magni orion, DTA, and cloud dancer 2. Some of the figures vary with the different conditions and vary in altitudes up to 10000ft. Hence my figures on performance and endurance are not from sitting in a lounge suite and picking the eyes of a manual.
flyerppc So your "actual tests" showed that the Arrow-Copter had an 80 litre fuel tank of which a whopping 10 litres were unusable as you claimed above? Forgive me for being blunt, but I think you're full of shit.
you got NFI temp determines how much you can get into a tank, (i realy dont care what can be squeezed into the tank even if the ignition was on to bleed air out) u dont even own a cavalon or a calidus nor an arrow,just keep dreaming bro!!
my mate nearly bought this gyro, nice machine cannot say good about the agent too much bullshit like collision with an eagle more likely crashed unit, removed previous comment facts facts. Also ever see them flying places do not have the endurance unlike the autogyro cavalon or the calidus.
ugly!! too much wings and winglets! too much curves and propellers and a cocpit similar as the space shuttle.... to fly around the village and airfield..
My dad and I built a Benson B-8M gyrocopter in the early '70s and learned to fly it ourselves, they have come a long way since that early machine we built from box aluminum. Watching this brought back some fond memories.
That's the best looking gyrocopter I've ever seen. Would love to own one! Thanks for posting this.
As for me, watching any pilot - let alone a neophyte - taxi away, without a checklist in hand, is a teeth-grinding moment. If it's necessary for the best pilots, it's necessary for all of us!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIGAR_(aviation)
Beautiful machine ! - Great video, thanks for sharing !
That has to be the top of the line in the Gyro world. Very nice.
nice plane looks like a lot to know on how to fly it and learn , easy to fly very nice thanks.
nine years on and its still so sleek looking ,,
That's a very pretty gyro 👍👍👍
The best gyrocopter...
My new goal in life is to save and buy one. Then take a long trip to NM. I LOVE IT! WISH I KNEW SOMEONE IN THE N. CHICAGO AREA THAT WOULD BE KIND ENOUGH TO LET ME HANG OUT WITH SO I MAY LEARN. LONG SHOT BUT WORTH A TRY.
Thanks for the footage!
Great lookin gyro
Very cool, thank you for sharing!
Someday I hope to be able to afford one of these!!
Beautiful!
LOL he went all the way down to the other end to take off and didnt even need 20 feet.
That aero opted is really cool, I would love to have one if I was independently wealthy
Lucky bastard! When I find out where he lives that gadget's mine!!! ;-)
David Handley I'm with you on that
Thats a nice one man!
what a beauty 👌
Wow!! This Is Awesome!!
Awesome flight! Thumbs up!
Nice bird !
Expectacular!!
HELLO SEAN. THE HELMET LOOKS NICE!
DOES IT HAVE INTEGRATED EARPHONE? WHAT IS THE BRAND NAME?
THANKS YOU AND CONGRATS FOR YOUR GYRO..
The Helmet is the American-made Alpha Eagle. It has dual noise-attenuating earphones. For more information, see: www.alphahelicopterhelmets.com/alpha-helmets/alpha-eagle
Gyro Aerocopter is awesome.
*ArrowCopter
I agree that has nice lines...most gyros are hard to look at ..
Stuart Loria wrote: "What kind of a pilot's license do you need to fly that thing?"
In the USA, either a Private Pilot -- Single Engine Land with a rotorcraft endorsement, or a Sport Pilot with rotorcraft endorsement. (Which would include a Student Pilot for either of those tickets, with a solo check-off.)
a real beauty, I own a modell from it, and also uplaoded a small clip.
3:05 The real reason he put the guy in the cockpit without much instruction hahahahahaha
Ahh man...inspiring..
Why so much gauges? That dashboard is crazy.
So why take off in full fine if it over-revs at full throttle on takeoff? I would have wound the knob in as well.
Makes me laugh seeing these machines trundling round 747-size taxiways before taking off in 50 yards. Tyre wear must be their biggest running cost.
Wow beautiful
Good keep going
These things have got to get cheaper
Jason Thornton ae
Jason Thornton how expensive are they
Looked at their site. They had 2 used ones listed for 120000 and 168000 euro (or 150k & 200k USD)
THESE THINGS HAVE TO BE SAFE FIRST
What kind of a pilot's license do you need to fly that thing?
Excelente🌎
How much wind can this stand ???
Wind speed of
Wind speed not really an issue. Turbulence associated with strong winds is an issue for any aircraft. In general gyrocopters handle turbulence much better than fixed wing aircraft. I fly both. Today for example I felt it would be a little bumpy in the fixed wing given the wind and mechanical turbulence in our local area so took the gyro instead.
Uau i love gyroplane good fly!
Nice
Tym naprawdę się fajnie lata
cool.
the anti-collision light on the right (starboard) side should be green!
bombud1
Nav lights are green on the right. Anti-collision strobes will be red when viewed from the front, white from the back.
Excelente, Volar es es na pasión
I don't quite follow why the self-checkout in a two-seater.
Pete Zaitcev that be called a solo flight
where is this airfield ???
Nic video
If they could only get bigger!
Looks like the open cockpit approach was a bad one... lol
MY TOY", UP YARD TO FAMILY HOUSE VIEW.. UP ON! AMAZING.. ! -FEEL IT, SEE.. WOW
Wow,no experience is necessary :)
How much?
TOP
at 4:26 it's raining, at 4:27 it's NOT raining..... edited I be thinking.
If the rotors are spinning, you can climb...
Then again... Runway in front of you is about as useful as altitude above you.
"If the rotors are spinning, you can climb..." Not so; it depends on how fast they're spinning. Think about it; how else could you land? They're always (hopefully) spinning when you're airborne, but you're not always climbing.
" Runway in front of you is about as useful as altitude above you." - well I prefer plenty of runway to not enough. Did you think this through?
👍!
Bet he wished he had a full canopy on landing!
landing and take off like a plane ? isn't that supposed to take off from the zero point ?if it is called a helicopter ?
+MY WAY MY WORLD The rotor's are unpowered on gyroplanes. Some have prerotators to get the rotors spinning before takeoff but while actually in flight the rotors aren't powered. Gyroplanes fly pretty much like fixed wing aircraft rather than helicopters. But there are a few things you have to watch out for, like not unloading the rotor while in flight.
yep
Yes, flew it for 5 mins or so and the rain started pelting down. Also edited the vid which was filmed by Sean's partner. Had plenty of gyro hours previously but never flown the Arrowcopter before. I think you sceptics might be overthinking it :)
Austrian Version of "Little Nelly".
how to make flying and landing target
Extremely quiet.
epic
hey did that 1st guy ever land safely or did he crash? in the original guy in the take off was replaced by 2 different experienced pilots landing safely which for me is a crash edit. So did you really end up marrying his wife like you said or were you just dreaming?
yeh right :)
at 4:26 it's raining, at 4:27 it's NOT raining..... edited I be thinking.
Aerocopter
flyerppc wrote: "...do not have the endurance unlike the autogyro cavalon or the calidus."
BS. The Arrow-Copter has 18.5 gallons usable fuel capacity standard, and its Rotax 914 burns 5.3 gal/hr @ 75% power for a range of 283 nm at 81 knots, or economy cruise of 3.4 gal/hr at 55% power for 381 nm at 70 knots.
The Calidus can have either the 912 or the 914 engine, and if you compare it using the 914 for similar performance you will find similar fuel flows; but the Calidus has a smaller standard fuel tank and so has less range unless you add an auxiliary tank.
get your facts before posting, the arrow is a much heavier machine, will not knock the design, gyro`s do not like weight heavier they are they perform like shit, dont know what your conversion is but an 80L tank on the arrow has only 70L usable this equates to 174nm endurance @70kts 4500rpm 15ltr/hr burn. Secondly the 914 is an 80hp tubo charged engine turbo wastegate comes in @5000rpm then equates to 100hp to 115hp @ 5500 rpm burning 33ltr/hr. The cavalon will cruise @ 90kts 4800 rpm 18ltr burn or 70kts @ 4200 rpm 13ltr burn with 100ltr tank can go places.
flyerppc First of all, you said "unlike the Cavalon OR CALIDUS" and I was comparing the Arrow-Copter with the Calidus in the previous post, so let's stick to what I was comparing with and leave the Cavalon out of it.
Next, you are the one who needs to get his facts straight:
1) The Arrow-Copter has a 76 litre tank, not 80 litre , and 74 litres useable, not 70 litres. The Calidus only has a 39 litre standard tank, with only 38.2 litres useable. (You can install an auxiliary tank on the Calidus to boost it to 75 litres (73.8 litres useable), but you lose space and weight-carrying capacity in doing so.)
2) The Arrow-Copter burns 27l/h @ 5500RPM, not 33l/h. At 4800RPM for 18l/h, the Arrow-Copter will do 140km/h, compared to the Calidus' 160km/h, so the Calidus does have a speed advantage at that power setting, but you were talking about ENDURANCE. The Arrow-Copter will do 130km/h @ 4300RPM @ 13l/h for a range of 740km with standard tanks, compared to the Calidus' 382km at the same speed and fuel flow, also with standard tank. Even if you install the auxiliary tank on the Calidus, the range will only increase to 738km -- virtually identical to the Arrow-Copter with standard tanks.
The FACTS posted here come directly from the respective manufacturer's Pilot Operating Handbooks.
***** u obviously go by the book which is great on paper to sell a product different to actual tests we have done in the EU in different flying conditions etc which is more accurate and unbiased, and soon to be released which will include magni orion, DTA, and cloud dancer 2.
Some of the figures vary with the different conditions and vary in altitudes up to 10000ft. Hence my figures on performance and endurance are not from sitting in a lounge suite and picking the eyes of a manual.
flyerppc So your "actual tests" showed that the Arrow-Copter had an 80 litre fuel tank of which a whopping 10 litres were unusable as you claimed above? Forgive me for being blunt, but I think you're full of shit.
you got NFI temp determines how much you can get into a tank, (i realy dont care what can be squeezed into the tank even if the ignition was on to bleed air out) u dont even own a cavalon or a calidus nor an arrow,just keep dreaming bro!!
comme le 2000
my mate nearly bought this gyro, nice machine cannot say good about the agent too much bullshit like collision with an eagle more likely crashed unit, removed previous comment facts facts. Also ever see them flying places do not have the endurance unlike the autogyro cavalon or the calidus.
140000 :/
damn.!
y
ugly!! too much wings and winglets! too much curves and propellers and a cocpit similar as the space shuttle.... to fly around the village and airfield..
Jean Carton great looking girocopter would love to own one