Gliding high with servos
Flocks of unmanned paragliders steer themselves through dangerous missions using innovative servoactuators.
The Onyx platform in flight, here carrying an iRobot surveillance bot payload. The Onyx retracts and extends parafoil steering lines to maneuver its parafoil via capstans mounted to custom dc motors via planetary gearheads. Servos also control parafoil angle-of-attack for long or short glides.
It may sound like a low-tech way
of flying military missions. But
guided-parachute systems developed by Atair Aerospace Inc.,
Brooklyn, N.Y., are anything but.
The basic idea: Launch a small
propeller-powered platform
attached to a high-tech parafoil.
Then give the platform enough
smarts to fly itself, follow a flight
plan, and manage fuel in such a
way that it can hang around in
the air for days on end.
The Long Endurance Autonomous Powered Paraglider,
or Leapp, UAV is designed for
special operations intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance. It can operate autonomously or be piloted by
remote control via a portable
base station. The MicroLeapp
version is light enough to go in a
backpack, flies for up to 8 hr, and
can carry a 50-lb payload. It gets
power from a gas engine not
much different from those in
model airplanes.
A bigger version of the Leapp
UAV carries a turbo and supercharged diesel engine. It is
designed to fly for up to 55 hr at
greater than 35,000 ft using the
largest elliptical paraglider wing
ever built, with a wing span
exceeding 112 ft. It can carry 2,400 lb, excluding fuel.
Another self-guiding system,
called Onyx, is unpowered but is
built to be thrown out the back of a cargo plane from as
high as 35,000 ft. An
onboard flight
computer initially determines a heading using
inputs from a GPS integrated inertial navigation system. Atair says
the system can steer
itself well enough to
deliver a 1-ton pallet to
within about 150 ft of its
target from up to
30 miles away.
Onyx payloads steer
themselves via
swarming algorithms. Multiple Onyx systems
link via RF peer-to-peer
communication and
execute moves as autonomous agents. The result looks
like a flock of starings; each one independent yet flying without
collision to the same place.
Each Onyx payload follows a
path that aims for the target but
keeps a minimum separation with
others in the "flock." This lets
paragliders head toward the same
spot without colliding in midair.
When the Onyx platform gets near
a target, it descends in a spiral
dive, then transitions from the
parafoil to a landing parachute
that brings it to terra firma.
Both Leapp and Onyx steer
themselves with servoactuators
that pull on the parafoil. The
servos use custom-wound dc motors married to planetary
gearheads and capstans with
machined-in grooves. Plastic-coated steel cable coils into the
grooves. The cables pull on the
steering lines of the parafoil or
on other parts of the chute to
change its angle of attack.
Needle-roller bearings in the
mechanism ensure that the cables
retract and extend without coming
out of their grooves, important for
handling side-to-side loads on the
capstan. The simplest systems
carry a single servomotor that
only steers the chute, pulling on
one set of steering cables while
extending those on the other side.
Most systems, though, use two to
four servos, two for steering, two
more to adjust the glide slope. The
additional servos permit
maneuvers such as flat turns,
which have low drag and thus
consume little energy. This
contrasts with ordinary high-drag
turns made by manipulating the
back edge of the chute that acts as
an aileron. Changing the angle of
attack also lets the systems boost
forward speed by a factor of
almost two for a quick dash.
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© 2010 Penton Media Inc.
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