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How does a Helicopter Hover?

Helicopters are amazing, versatile inventions. Thanks to years of hard work and investment by serious men and women in lab coats, we have the technology to make thousands of kilograms of metal, fuel, people and luggage travel forward at speeds of up to two hundred miles per hour, and then stop and hover, supported by nothing more substantial than air, before alighting gracefully into areas not much bigger than a tennis court. It’s not hard to see why those who fly them gain a certain amount of well-deserved kudos for apparently bending the laws of physics.

But how do these fantastic flying machines hover?

The Physics of Defying Gravity

Lift vs. Weight

In order for an aircraft to stay airborne at a fixed height above the ground, it must produce a lift force upwards against gravity, equal to the weight of the helicopter. This allows it to maintain height above the Earth – if the helicopter produces more lift than its weight, it will climb, and if it produces less lift than its weight, it will descend.

Helicopters produce this lifting force by using an engine to spin a set of rotor blades at high speed, directly above the helicopter. These blades are essentially rotating wings; they force air downwards past the blades, which in turn pushes the helicopter upwards in the opposite direction, against the force of gravity. This allows them to lift people, cargo, or movie stars rescuing trapped photogenic hill walkers from ravines.

Don’t Spin Me Right Round, Baby

antitorque

One Sir Isaac Newton insisted that any action produces an equal and opposite reaction (and he was usually right); as the rotor blades spin, the helicopter’s fuselage will try to rotate in the opposite direction to them. Since this tends to lead to much harder landings and dizzy pilots, helicopters use a number of design solutions to produce a counteracting force against this effect, which is known as torque.

Some designs, notably those by the crafty Russians, simply add a second set of rotor blades on top of the main set, and rotate them opposite directions, so both rotors create torque against each other and cancel each other out. However, the most common design is to add a rotor mounted on a tail boom away from and behind the fuselage. This tail rotor pushes against the torque effect – which stops the fuselage rotating.

The Act and Art of Hovering

These two sets of rotor blades are used to provide both the lift force and control of the helicopter’s movement in three dimensions, or prevent movement if the helicopter is in a hover. Control is provided to steely eyed helicopter pilots in four ways;

  • If the direction of the lift force is tilted off to one side, rather than pointing straight down against gravity, the helicopter will start to move horizontally towards the direction of the tilt. This tilt is accomplished by changing the angle the rotor blades make to the air as they spin, but also changing each blade separately and by varying amounts, so that the amount of lift varies on each side of rotor disc. The pilot controls this effect with the cyclic control (a joystick directly in front of the pilot). If the pilot pushes the cyclic in a particular direction, the rotor blade disc tilts in that direction, and moves the helicopter in the same direction as the pilot moves the cyclic.
  • If the main rotor lift force is increased or decreased, then the helicopter will climb or descend. Instead of changing the pitch angle of the blades separately, all the blades change together – or collectively – providing an overall change in lift, moving the helicopter up or down. The pilot controls the collective blade angle using a lever on the left side of the pilot’s seat, cunningly called the collective.
  • If the blade angle increases, creating more lift by accelerating greater amounts of air down, the blades require more force to spin them around, due to increased air resistance (called drag) from the larger blade angle. This in turn means the helicopter’s engine has to provide more power to keep them moving at the same speed, which allows them to generate more lift. The pilot controls the engine power with the throttle (a twistable grip on the end of the collective lever) to counter this extra drag generated by the blades.
  • If the tail rotor provides a force less or more than the torque reaction force from the main rotor blades, then the helicopter will rotate left or right. Two foot pedals mounted on the floor in front of the pilot control the tail rotor blade pitch angle; and therefore the rotation of the helicopter left or right, which pilots call yaw. As the pilot merely pushes on one pedal to yaw the helicopter in the appropriate direction, the pedals are called “yaw pedals”. Don’t call them rudder pedals unless you want to earn frosty stares from any nearby helicopter pilots (ask me how I know) – the helicopter doesn’t have a rudder, as an airplane does.

helicopter controls explainedHowever, all of the above effects interact with each other, so changing one of them in a steady, fixed hover requires that the others be altered in a co-ordinated way by the pilot to compensate and maintain the hover. This co-ordination is further complicated because most helicopters are unstable, meaning that they require that the pilot input constant corrections on the controls. In contrast, aeroplanes are stable; if a pilot is flying one and takes their hands from the controls, the aeroplane will keep flying, barring external factors, such as turbulence, mountains or enemy aircraft. If a pilot was to stop actively flying a helicopter, the helicopter will go out of control and start oscillating wildly, which makes it a lot harder for pilots to look cool, and tends to upset the passengers.

Controlling a helicopter hovering in the same place is probably the most challenging and interesting part of learning to fly one – due to the precise mental and physical co-ordination required, it has been described as “like trying to spin plates whilst reciting the alphabet backwards in Urdu!” (Presumably, plate-spinning circus performers from Pakistan make good helicopter pilots).

Trainee helicopter pilots are taught one control at a time in the hover to begin with; the instructor will then add more controls until the trainee can hover accurately and safely. Like driving a car, or riding a bicycle, hovering is a rewarding skill that becomes almost subconscious with practice, and practice leads to the ability to control one of the greatest and most versatile capabilities of the helicopter; the hover.

Ben has been committing aviation ever since he joined the Air Cadets two decades ago, and has no intentions of stopping any time soon. He currently divides his time between instructing for the Private Pilot’s License/Instrument Rating and being an aeromedical evacuation captain, at a regional airport at a secret location somewhere in the UK. In his previous lives, he has flown paradrop, charter, aerial survey and cargo aircraft. Over his years (he won’t tell us how many) he has accumulated over two thousand five hundred hours of flying time, over twenty types of aircraft flown, one first class Honours degree in Aviation Studies, and an as-of-yet unexhausted number of flying anecdotes and stories, nearly all of which are true. His ambitions include aviating around the world in his own light aircraft; some of his most memorable aircraft types flown (so far) include the Cessna Bird Dog, the Piper Chieftain, and the mighty De Havilland Tiger Moth.

  1. mikewalker.mw@gmail.com'
    Mike Walker September 22, 2015 at 10:05 pm

    Wow Ben. Such detailed knowledge and skill in describing the phenomenon.
    That,s what makes you such a good teacher and aviator.
    Have you flown helicopters in your varied past?

    • Ben September 24, 2015 at 9:07 pm

      Thanks Mike – I’ve tried my hand at the hover, yes – it was somewhat interesting, but rather satisfying to get right!

  2. Stevespringett@virginmedia.com'
    Steve springett September 23, 2015 at 4:29 pm

    You are such a talented guy mate.
    Also thank you for your very patient efforts for teaching me to fly…

    • Ben September 24, 2015 at 9:08 pm

      No worries Steve – it’s a pleasure flying with you.

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