Real-life Ornithopter to Take Flight? 170
A reader writes "According to this article at space.com, researchers at the University of Toronto have designed and built a working ornithopter. Their design will (hopefully) lift off solely powered by the motion of its articulated wings. First envisaged by Leonardo da Vinci, many will recall ornithopers' prominent role in Frank Herbert's Dune books. The U. Toronto Ornithopter project page is is found at ornithopter.net." "Usul ? , Base of the Pillar"
I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:2)
Seriously, though, don't knock the psychological value of dropping an Ornithopter down. Your opponent will laugh so hard that he won't notice the killer combo you're setting up.
Don't Laugh (Score:1)
Hornithumpers are the best card EVAR (Score:1)
actually you beat me to the obvious magic referrence, damn you!
ornithopters have been flying for years in the magic world!
i also think it should be noted that only *piloted* ornithopters are non-existant, i'm sure everyone's seen little model ones you can buy at the store (the most famous of which being the wound rubber band plastic bird.)
...dave
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:1)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:1)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:1)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:1)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:1)
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:2)
No actually, come to think of it, I'm not embarassed, Magic is a cool game in many ways.
Ornithopter of DOOM! (Score:1)
Re:Ornithopter of DOOM! (Score:1)
Kintanon
Re:Ornithopter of DOOM! (Score:1)
Ornithopters got played in Pro Tours (Score:2)
-Ted
Re:Ornithopters got played in Pro Tours (Score:1)
Kasey
Re:I knew that Card had a use.... (Score:2)
I tap my ornithopter to kill your Scryb sprite
I tap my ornithopter to prevent 1 damage
I attack with my Unholy Strengthed ornithopter
Oh, all those creatures died? How many, five? I put five +1/+1 counters on my ornithopter....
My commiserations to all Magic players who have ever been killed by an Ornithopter.
Slashdotted - try the Google Cache (Score:2)
http://www.google.com/search?num=30&hl=en&lr=la
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:3, Interesting)
The article's first paragraph says
Kind of misleading. The Wright brothers' design was based almost exactly on the bird's wing, but in the bird's "gliding" mode (wherein the curved top surface creates faster moving air, which causes lower air pressure above, which effects lift).
The Wrights wisely avoided the complicated "flapping" mode of wings by creating the necessary forward motion using a prop.
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
This is referring to movement of the wings, not its ability to change the dynamics of the air around them.
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
Well-come, well-come.
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
I always understood that air is "cohesive"...
At the trailing edge of the wing, air wants to come back together at the same point where it was split apart by the leading edge. So the air passing over the top of the wing has to go faster to meet up with the air which goes a shorter distance, under the wing. Since the same number of air molecules are spread across a larger distance on the top of the wing, you get less pressure, hence lift.
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
I don't think it moves any faster...
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:1)
Understanding Flight by David Anderson and Scott Eberhardt
I didn't say I agreed or disagreed with their reasoning, I was only offering it as an interesting POV
Zeus_tfc
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:2, Informative)
(I am not a pilot or barnstormer, but asked a pilot about this a few months ago after an air-race. This is the gist of his answer.)
To avoid this, barnstorming planes use a different wing. Their wings are shaped symetrically, top-to-bottom. Both surfaces are the same, and give the same flight characteristics, no matter which way they are oriented. It is up to the pilot to keep the right angle so that the passing air pushes the plane up. No easy job when your upside-down, going 60 mph (??), with that long scarf flapping around your head.
Not saying the lift principle of an asymmetric wing is not valid, but it is not the only wing shape in use.
Re:hmm, strange opening paragraph (Score:2)
Some barnstormers might use symmetrical wings, but not all of them. See the recent Sukhoi high-performance single engine stunt aircraft. Wow.
Flight upside down (Score:1)
Negatively cambered wings still cause fluids to take a longer path over the top at positive angles of attack (I don't have any wind tunnel pics to show you, but a quick google search revealed this interesting 1932 NACA wind tunnel study [nasa.gov]). It's less efficient, but most small aircraft still manage to spec a few negative G's as part of their flight envelope.
Yes, almost all aerobatic aircraft have symmetrical (zero-camber) wings, not to make their maneuvers possible, but to make them easier.
Other authors. (Score:1)
Superman!!!???? (Score:4, Funny)
Usul? (Score:1)
Elgon - A storm is coming. Our storm. And when it arrives it will shake the universe.
Re:Usul? (Score:1)
Okay, it's from the film but I don't have a copy of the book handy.
Elgon
The next ones?? (Score:1)
Re:The next ones?? (Score:1)
...except for the fun of it.
The (slashdotted) article (Score:4, Informative)
Advanced design is relying on nature's model more and more: from "fish scales" that speed up boats, to robotic actuators that limber up synthetic muscles and joints. But the oldest concept of how a machine would fly, based on the action of bird's wings, still hasn't taken flight.
Envisioned first by Leonardo Da Vinci in the 1500's, an "orinthopter's" major design dilemma is getting the up an down motion of the wings to be strong enough for lift off, while not destroying the body of the plane in the process. Modern piloted ornithopters, despite Kevlar and Plexiglas, are thus still on the ground.
But researchers at the University of Toronto's Institute for Aerospace Studies claim their machine will either get off the ground in the next few weeks, or prove that a bird-brained plane is an impossible design challenge.
"It's been a balancing act, challenging the aerodynamics and structural dynamics," said Derek Bilyk, an engineer who came to the project as a graduate student three years ago. " This fall, we will have taken the aircraft to the limits of its performance, but we're pretty sure it's gonna fly; ninety percent sure."
The researchers have reason to be optimistic. The ornithopter did achieve a take-off speed of 55 miles-per-hour last month, powered only by an engine and its bird wings. But the bouncing of the craft was reportedly very uncomfortable for the pilot and may have shaken the plane toward destruction and so the plane was stopped.
Bilyk revealed the landing gear has since gone through a redesign to make it more shock-absorbent, which the eight man team believes will make a viable aircraft, albeit a likely commercial flop.
"I can't think of a good commercial use for it," lamented Bilyk. "But nobody has been successful at it, and yet it the oldest dream of flight."
http://www.ornithopter.net/index.html
Re:The (slashdotted) article (Score:1)
Not always. We don't have cars with any kind of legs, they all use wheels. For the same reason, we have planes which have aerodynamics for lift and engines for thrust.
I can't think of a good commercial use for it
In the same way, I can't think of a good one for a car with four legs either. It just isn't as efficient.
Of course there's a reason why birds don't have engines and we don't have wheels...
Re:The (slashdotted) article (Score:1)
Anyway, a four-legged car, if it was sure-footed enough, would be like a super-mule! And pretty useful, in certain situations.
Kind of like the two-legged "legbarrow" (not sure what else to call it) that the Berkeley robotics group was making. It's powered by a chainsaw engine, and didn't look like it possessed good foot-placement abilities, but it might be useful as one end of a walking stretcher for moving wounded people... the back end is a normal person, guiding it around. Kind of cool.
--Tom Y
is 2 cool (Score:1)
Infinite Mana (Score:1)
MODERATORS HELP! (Score:1)
Re:MODERATORS HELP! (Score:1)
Sure, it has some fantasy images, but you can't call everything that has fantasy elemnents a 'role playing game'. Ornithopter is a (lame) MTG card, so this is at least borderline on-topic...
Re:Infinite Mana (Score:2)
Re:Infinite Mana (Score:2)
Casting Cost (Score:1)
If it's still 0 I'll buy some !!!
This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
Mind you, I'm not an engineer. But as a kid, I did build a pair of wings to strap on to my arms. I was really convinced it would work. I imagined how impressed my neighbors would be when they saw me soaring overhead. Alas, when I jumped off our doghouse with the wings strapped to my arms, the dream came to an end.
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
The only problem I see is that this really won't be efficient compared to other methods of flight. It is efficient for birds because (1) they have a lighter skeletal structure (humans don't) and (2) birds don't know how to use jet fuel properly.
Joking aside, since humans weigh so much, this will take a lot of force for a little lift compared to conventional flight methods (props, jet propulsion, etc.)
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:2)
IIRC, a bird's wings move forward & up, at an angle, round, then down almost straight, to produce a net lift.
Feathers (Score:2)
There's also the rigid leading edge that drags the feather up at an angle that cuts through the air on the upstroke, but which also supports the 'ballooning' on the down stroke. The aircraft seems to capture this aspect, but not that of the feathers, which would require a LOT of engineering!
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
I don't think it will work if they haven't came up with a way of reducing resistance on the up stroke...
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:2)
Birds fly just as airplanes do, by using a propeller to generate *forward* thrust, and thus airflow over the airfoil surface.
A bird's wing twists on the downstroke in such a manner as to drive it *forward.*
Think of it as a variable pitch prop that can only move up and down, and/or as a previous poster has pointed out, an oar consisting of the large primary feathers of the wingtip.
KFG
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:2)
themselves upward. Thinking about it a bit will show how such isn't even possible.
Sounds impossible to me too... but try telling that to this guy [duncraft.com].
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:2)
Even so the hummingbird isn't all that different. Just as the helicopter uses a rotating wing with varible pitch, pushing the wing itself forward through the air and then feathering it on the back stroke, so does the humming bird. The rotation just happens in a different plane.
KFG
Re:This would be like a dream come true (Score:1)
Wow. (Score:2)
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
Awfully bold claim (Score:2)
But researchers at the University of Toronto's Institute for Aerospace Studies claim their machine will either get off the ground in the next few weeks, or prove that a bird-brained plane is an impossible design challenge.
So if their current project doesn't work, we can all stop working on the problem. They've done everything that can be done, learned everything that can be learned, tried everything that can be tried. We have finally reached the limits of human knowledge.
Whew. Thank God that's over. All that exploration and research was starting to get exhausting.
Ah, bad reporting (Score:2)
Economic Issues (Score:1)
I'd like to know if there's any kindo of economic issue. I know that today is much more expensive, but what about in the future, is it a technology that worth?
Hey, don't forget that I'm talking about direct issues, I know that it'll surely improve aerodynamics, and mechanics and other sciences. I wanna know about the ornithopter itself.
Re:Economic Issues (Score:2)
Old News (Score:1)
Followed by (Score:1)
Re:Followed by (Score:1)
Welcome to Condom-Air!
I can just see the reaction in the Midwest Bible-Belt as giant phalluses fly overhead...
>what mess it would be if the rubber [...] broke
Of course, that's how you make NEW airplanes!
Shai Hulud (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Shai Hulud (Score:1)
Sorry, couldn't resist.
As an aside, Tim O'Reilly wrote a critical monograph about Frank Herbert and Dune in 1981 and has put it on the web here [oreilly.com].
Re:Shai Hulud (Score:1)
might have a little bit of trouble parking it, but i suppose you could just let it burrow into the sand.
the oil companies would be pissed,t hough
re: Casting Cost (Score:1)
Just because it's an old idea doesn't make it good (Score:1)
"I can't think of a good commercial use for it," lamented Bilyk. "But nobody has been successful at it, and yet it the oldest dream of flight."
I don't think I need to say much more. This is nifty, but as with most educational research, is useless.
Re:Just because it's an old idea doesn't make it g (Score:1)
My favorite is the story of the postit note -- started out as a super glue which didn't stick so well...
Re:Just because it's an old idea doesn't make it g (Score:1)
Re:Just because it's an old idea doesn't make it g (Score:1)
Spandex is extremely educational when it is properly applied on someone else.
pictures? (Score:2)
Does anyone know which one is the one they are talking about in the artical?
-Jon
Why? (Score:1)
efficiency (Score:1)
ok, so maybe fish scales are super efficient, but it seems to me that a turbine is a more robust method of thrust then a birds wing (ignoring gliding at the moment). otherwise, wouldn't nature have evolved birds that fly at 500 mph?
efficiency != speed (Score:2)
another ORNITHOPTER link (Score:1)
Still no instant take off (Score:2)
Most bird take off instantly with just flapping.
Note that the uncomfortable feeling for the pilot on their last test would have been eliminated with instant take off.
I will not consider the thing a succes as long as instant take off is implemented (or at least take off will running instead of rolling).
Re:Still no instant take off (Score:2)
Most bird take off instantly with just flapping.
Ever see a swan take off?
The larger birds have to be running at a decent clip before they leave the ground.
An ornithopter is a *damned* big bird.
Re:Still no instant take off (Score:2)
Yeah, small birds can just jump and flap. They have light wing loading, and short enough wings that running the tips into the ground isn't much of a problem. Tiny hummingbirds maybe don't even have to jump. But big birds have more wing loading and getting into the air is more of a job. A man-carrying ornithopter must be at least 10 times the weight of any bird capable of flight -- it's going to need quite a takeoff roll, or else something rather special to launch it high enough for the wing flapping to cut in before it crashes.
Re:Still no instant take off (Score:1)
Re:Still no instant take off (Score:2)
I have seen birds just flap and take off, without any jumping to speak of. Certainly hummingbirds can do this (if you can hover and then fly straight up, you can do the same thing starting from a position on the ground, too)
Re:Still no instant take off (Score:1)
That's the easy part.
The hard part is generating the 1.21 Gigawatts...
Eliminating vibration. (Score:2)
To eliminate vibration in most of the craft, you can use two pairs of wings arranged dragonfly-style. Diagonally opposite wings would move in one direction, and the other diagonally opposite pair would move in the other direction 180 degrees out of phase.
The center of mass of the unit stays in one place, and the forces of the wings on the air are symmetrical, so vibration is only in the engine.
Your thrust would still "vibrate" at twice the wings' flapping frequency, but a shock absorber should take care of that. It's vibrating up and down as the wings flap that's the big problem, and using two pairs of wings solves this problem.
As for this being an insurmountable design challenge - it isn't. The mechanics of ornithopters and of bird and insect flight have been well-understood for quite a while now. It's just a materials and engineering issue, and we have enough of a handle on both to build ornithopters.
The real reason why you don't see bird-planes flapping across the sky - and won't in the future - is that using flapping wings is only a benefit for slow-moving craft, and existing slow-moving craft are already adequately efficient (actually, a helicopter might even be _more_ efficient than an ornithopter).
[For anyone wondering, the efficiency gain of an ornithopter comes from it moving a larger mass of air more slowly to generate thrust; same reason a propeller's more efficient than a jet turbine, and a helicopter's blades are more efficient than an airplane's propeller. You're just limited to a slower speed, due to several concerns.]
Ornithopter of DOOM! (Score:1)
Well... (Score:1)
Perhaps next, Bilyk can try the old "Lead into Gold" at least there would be a good comercial use for it
Whats the big deal? (Score:2)
Video of RC controlled ornithopter... (Score:1)
The same group also produced a scale model ornithopter that successfully flew a few years ago.
Feel free to slashdot the following links. 'Mr. Bill' in flight (MPEG [utoronto.ca]) and a bit of background UTIAS Flight Dynamics [utoronto.ca].
link to pictures of the thing (Score:2)
look under "Ornithopters" heading.
busted link... (Score:1)
Re:busted link... (Score:1)
Re:busted link... (Score:1)
As an aside in case they're listening, Space.com's search could use some work (didn't find the Ornithopter article searching on that word).
Bah! (Score:2)
And the hordes cry out, "But it's better than a Kobold!"
-Kasreyn
You know you're a geek when... (Score:1)
Posted link shows a CookSack, here's the real link (Score:1)
Re:Damn..... (Score:1)
HTTP 403.9 - Access Forbidden: Too many users are connected Internet Information Services
403.9, eh
S
Re:Damn..... (Score:1)
Re:Ornithopter Battlebots? (Score:1)
With a co-pilot to man the mini-turret!
Ahhhhh yeahhhh....
and for those of you who haven't seen it yet...
ROBOCODE [ibm.com] RULES!!!
No powered flight category yet (Score:1)
When will we see these on Battlebots?
Sorry, but the Battlebots rules (160 KB PDF) [battlebots.com] do not yet provide for a powered flight category. See rule 3.5.