Berliner Helicopter, Model 1924
Object Details
- Manufacturer
- Col. Henry Berliner
- Physical Description
- Triplane built on a Nieuport 23 fuselage with two laterally spaced fixed-pitch lifting rotors and a variable-pitch tailrotor for attitude control.
- Summary
- The father-and-son team of Emile and Henry Berliner became the first Americans to make any significant progress towards the
- creation of a practical helicopter. Before 1926, they pioneered a number of experimental helicopters with only moderate success.
- However, the Berliners' final versions displayed the best performance of any American helicopter project until Igor I. Sikorsky
- unveiled his VS-300 fifteen years later.
- Emile, a German immigrant living in Washington D.C., was already a prodigious inventor when he began to dabble in aviation. He
- received a number of notable patents for substantial improvements he made to the design of gramophones, phonographs, and
- telephone transmitters. In 1903, he became fascinated with powered flight and experimented with a large rocket-powered model
- airplane.
- Even after the success of the Wright brothers' first powered flight became widely known, Emile continued to pursue helicopter
- development in a quest for an aircraft that could operate from any location. In 1907, he began work on a helicopter with a tandem
- intermeshing-rotor system. This was the same year in which Frenchmen Louis Breguet and Paul Cornu demonstrated the first
- man-carrying helicopters. These largely ineffective machines could only wobble momentarily into the air at a maximum altitude of one
- meter.
- Emile Berliner realized that his design required a light engine and decided on a rotary model instead of the heavier in-line engines
- used previously in aircraft. Berliner worked with the Adams-Farwell Company to develop a 36-hp rotary engine for his helicopter.
- Remarkably, this was the first application in aviation of the rotary engine, which became quite popular during the following decade
- because of its weight advantages. A short time later, Berliner founded the Gyro Motor Company to further the development of rotary
- engines in aviation. In 1913, the company donated Emile's historic first engine to the Smithsonian Institution.
- On July 11, 1908, Berliner's first "test-rig" helicopter design demonstrated that it had the potential to lift twice its own empty weight.
- Emile then constructed a larger version with a 55-hp motor, which he dubbed the Aeromobile. Simultaneously, Berliner cooperated
- with J. Newton Williams on a coaxial design. Neither effort progressed very far as the demands of operating the Gyro Motor
- Company distracted Emile's attention. However, this did not prevent him from conceiving new approaches to the problem of vertical
- flight. In 1910, Berliner began to consider the use of a vertically mounted tail rotor to counteract torque on his single main rotor
- design. This configuration later played a pivotal role in the development of practical helicopters during the 1940s.
- For the next nine years, Emile's business concerns and deteriorating health prevented him from pursuing improved designs.
- However, his son Henry, was also a superb engineer and wanted to continue his father's work. In 1919, after a short stint in the Army
- Air Service as an aerial photographer, Henry moved to Washington D.C. to construct a helicopter under his father's guidance.
- Henry's first effort was a coaxial design mounted on a two-wheeled test stand. He soon transformed this model into a manned
- version, powered by an 80 hp Le Rhône engine. It was able to lift Henry, and make the transition from a hover to forward flight, but
- its control was so poor that assistants running alongside had to steady it. Henry decided to take a new approach and adapt his
- experience with conventional airplanes to the control problem.
- In 1922, Henry ordered a surplus Nieuport 23 fighter fuselage and mounted a Bentley 220 hp engine to the front. He attached a spar
- mid-way up the fuselage to form the bottom of a truss extending from the sides of the aircraft. The trusses each supported one of
- the two counter-rotating lifting rotors, which the engine powered through a series of geared shafts. The two rotors could tilt slightly
- in opposite directions to control yaw.
- A variable-pitch tail rotor, 76 cm (30 in) in diameter, mounted horizontally in front of the vertical stabilizer, maintained pitch control
- while hovering. To initiate forward flight, the pilot pushed forward on the stick to increase the pitch of the horizontal tail rotor, which
- dropped the nose and inclined the lifting propellers slightly to initiate forward flight. The flight controls also connected to elevators
- and an enlarged rudder on the tail of the fuselage, which helped maintain control at higher forward speeds. Two sets of five 91 cm
- (36 in) x 20 cm (8 in) louvers, located below each rotor, opened and closed differentially to provide roll control by presenting a flat
- surface, which reacted against the rotor downwash.
- In the fall of 1923, Henry decided to mount a set of triplane wings onto the aircraft to allow for a safe glide in case of an engine
- failure. With the new design, he found he could marginally control the helicopter in a hover and in forward flight at speeds up to 64
- kph (40 mph). However, Henry discovered that the helicopter did not have adequate thrust to climb out of ground effect. The
- roll-control louvers were the weak-point of the control system and lateral handling was poor. On February 23, 1924, the helicopter
- recorded its best performance when it reached a height of 4.57 m (15 ft) during a one minute, thirty-five second flight. Many
- observers felt that the airframe was simply too heavy, including an Army engineer sent to observe the tests from McCook Field.
- Henry and his father then decided to build a new, lighter helicopter to improve the thrust-to-weight ratio. Completed in 1925, the
- new design bore a superficial resemblance to the previous model, but it utilized a more efficient biplane configuration. The lower
- wing relied on a high angle of incidence and large camber to generate some lift from the rotor downwash. The Berliners also enlarged
- the rotors and added a novel differential collective pitch control system to replace the ineffective louvers.
- However, even with the reduced weight and aerodynamic alterations, the 1925 model showed only a marginal increase in
- performance over the triplane version. Frustrated, Henry abandoned his helicopter experiments and became disillusioned with the
- potential of the helicopter. He went on to establish the Berliner Aircraft Company, and played an important role in the development
- of the innovative Erco Ercoupe (see NASM collection).
- Henry Berliner's reluctance to adopt a cyclic control system and a dependence on relatively small high-load lifting rotors incapable
- of autorotation ultimately prevented him from constructing a practical helicopter. While Emile and Henry struggled with their designs,
- the Spaniard, Raul Pateras Pescara demonstrated a helicopter with effective cyclic and collective pitch controls. However, his
- under-powered machine also could not climb out of ground effect and more than a decade passed before Louis Breguet improved
- on Pescara's approach. In 1935, with the cooperation of René Dorand, Breguet completed the Gyroplane Laboratoire, which was the
- first helicopter to meet the aviation industry's control and performance expectations for a practical design.
- After Emile and Henry completed the testing of their triplane model, the younger Berliner offered it to the Smithsonian Institution.
- This aircraft is the oldest intact helicopter in the world and is currently on loan to the College Park Aviation Museum, appropriately
- located on the site of the Berliner's original testing ground.
- Wingspan:11.58 m (38 ft)
- Rotor Diameter:4.57 m (15 ft)
- Length:5.49 m (18 ft)
- Height:2.06 m (6 ft 9 in)
- Weight:Empty, 748 kg (1,650 lb)
- Gross, 870 kg (1,918 lb)
- Engine:Bentley BR-2 Rotary, 220 hp
- References and Further Reading
- Gablehouse, Charles. Helicopters and Autogiros: A Chronicle of Rotating Wing Aircraft. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1967.
- Berliner No. 5 curatorial file, Aeronautics Division, National Air and Space Museum
- Copyright © 1998 National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution (revised 11/19/01 R. D. Connor)
- Long Description
- The father-and-son team of Emile and Henry Berliner became the first Americans to make any significant progress towards the
- creation of a practical helicopter. Before 1926, they pioneered a number of experimental helicopters with only moderate success.
- However, the Berliners' final versions displayed the best performance of any American helicopter project until Igor I. Sikorsky
- unveiled his VS-300 fifteen years later.
- Emile, a German immigrant living in Washington D.C., was already a prodigious inventor when he began to dabble in aviation. He
- received a number of notable patents for substantial improvements he made to the design of gramophones, phonographs, and
- telephone transmitters. In 1903, he became fascinated with powered flight and experimented with a large rocket-powered model
- airplane.
- Even after the success of the Wright brothers' first powered flight became widely known, Emile continued to pursue helicopter
- development in a quest for an aircraft that could operate from any location. In 1907, he began work on a helicopter with a tandem
- intermeshing-rotor system.
- Emile Berliner realized that his design required a light engine and decided on a rotary model instead of the heavier in-line engines
- used previously in aircraft. Berliner worked with the Adams-Farwell Company to develop a 36-hp rotary engine for his helicopter.
- Remarkably, this was the first application in aviation of the rotary engine, which became quite popular during the following decade
- because of its weight advantages. A short time later, Berliner founded the Gyro Motor Company to further the development of rotary
- engines in aviation. In 1913, the company donated Emile's historic first engine to the Smithsonian Institution.
- On July 11, 1908, Berliner's first "test-rig" helicopter design demonstrated that it had the potential to lift twice its own empty weight.
- Emile then constructed a larger version with a 55-hp motor, which he dubbed the Aeromobile. Simultaneously, Berliner cooperated
- with J. Newton Williams on a coaxial design. Neither effort progressed very far as the demands of operating the Gyro Motor
- Company distracted Emile's attention. However, this did not prevent him from conceiving new approaches to the problem of vertical
- flight. In 1910, Berliner began to consider the use of a vertically mounted tail rotor to counteract torque on his single main rotor
- design. This configuration later played a pivotal role in the development of practical helicopters during the 1940s.
- For the next nine years, Emile's business concerns and deteriorating health prevented him from pursuing improved designs.
- However, his son Henry, was also a superb engineer and wanted to continue his father's work. In 1919, after a short stint in the Army
- Air Service as an aerial photographer, Henry moved to Washington D.C. to construct a helicopter under his father's guidance.
- Henry's first effort was a coaxial design mounted on a two-wheeled test stand. He soon transformed this model into a manned
- version, powered by an 80 hp Le Rhône engine. It was able to lift Henry, and make the transition from a hover to forward flight, but
- its control was so poor that assistants running alongside had to steady it. Henry decided to take a new approach and adapt his
- experience with conventional airplanes to the control problem.
- In 1922, Henry ordered a surplus Nieuport 23 fighter fuselage and mounted a Bentley 220 hp engine to the front. He attached a spar
- mid-way up the fuselage to form the bottom of a truss extending from the sides of the aircraft. The trusses each supported one of
- the two counter-rotating lifting rotors, which the engine powered through a series of geared shafts. The two rotors could tilt slightly
- in opposite directions to control yaw.
- A variable-pitch tail rotor, 76 cm (30 in) in diameter, mounted horizontally in front of the vertical stabilizer, maintained pitch control
- while hovering. To initiate forward flight, the pilot pushed forward on the stick to increase the pitch of the horizontal tail rotor, which
- dropped the nose and inclined the lifting propellers slightly to initiate forward flight. The flight controls also connected to elevators
- and an enlarged rudder on the tail of the fuselage, which helped maintain control at higher forward speeds. Two sets of five 91 cm
- (36 in) x 20 cm (8 in) louvers, located below each rotor, opened and closed differentially to provide roll control by presenting a flat
- surface, which reacted against the rotor downwash.
- In the fall of 1923, Henry decided to mount a set of triplane wings onto the aircraft to allow for a safe glide in case of an engine
- failure. With the new design, he found he could marginally control the helicopter in a hover and in forward flight at speeds up to 64
- kph (40 mph). However, Henry discovered that the helicopter did not have adequate thrust to climb out of ground effect. The
- roll-control louvers were the weak-point of the control system and lateral handling was poor. On February 23, 1924, the helicopter
- recorded its best performance when it reached a height of 4.57 m (15 ft) during a one minute, thirty-five second flight. Many
- observers felt that the airframe was simply too heavy, including an Army engineer sent to observe the tests from McCook Field.
- Henry and his father then decided to build a new, lighter helicopter to improve the thrust-to-weight ratio. Completed in 1925, the
- new design bore a superficial resemblance to the previous model, but it utilized a more efficient biplane configuration. The lower
- wing relied on a high angle of incidence and large camber to generate some lift from the rotor downwash. The Berliners also enlarged
- the rotors and added a novel differential collective pitch control system to replace the ineffective louvers.
- However, even with the reduced weight and aerodynamic alterations, the 1925 model showed only a marginal increase in
- performance over the triplane version. Frustrated, Henry abandoned his helicopter experiments and became disillusioned with the
- potential of the helicopter. He went on to establish the Berliner Aircraft Company, and played an important role in the development
- of the innovative Erco Ercoupe (see NASM collection).
- Henry Berliner's reluctance to adopt a cyclic control system and a dependence on relatively small high-load lifting rotors incapable
- of autorotation ultimately prevented him from constructing a practical helicopter. While Emile and Henry struggled with their designs,
- the Spaniard, Raul Pateras Pescara demonstrated a helicopter with effective cyclic and collective pitch controls. However, his
- under-powered machine also could not climb out of ground effect and more than a decade passed before Louis Breguet improved
- on Pescara's approach. In 1935, with the cooperation of René Dorand, Breguet completed the Gyroplane Laboratoire, which was the
- first helicopter to meet the aviation industry's control and performance expectations for a practical design.
- After Emile and Henry completed the testing of their triplane model, the younger Berliner offered it to the Smithsonian Institution.
- This aircraft is the oldest intact helicopter in the world and is currently on loan to the College Park Aviation Museum, appropriately
- located on the site of the Berliner's original testing ground.
- Wingspan:11.58 m (38 ft)
- Rotor Diameter:4.57 m (15 ft)
- Length:5.49 m (18 ft)
- Height:2.06 m (6 ft 9 in)
- Weight:Empty, 748 kg (1,650 lb)
- Gross, 870 kg (1,918 lb)
- Engine:Bentley BR-2 Rotary, 220 hp
- References and Further Reading
- Gablehouse, Charles. Helicopters and Autogiros: A Chronicle of Rotating Wing Aircraft. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1967.
- Berliner No. 5 curatorial file, Aeronautics Division, National Air and Space Museum
- Copyright © 1998 National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution (revised 11/19/01 R. D. Connor)
- Credit Line
- Gift of Henry Berliner
- 1924
- Inventory Number
- A19240006000
- Restrictions & Rights
- Usage conditions apply
- Type
- CRAFT-Rotary Wing
- Materials
- Steel Tube and Fabric
- Dimensions
- Wingspan: 11.58m (38ft); Rotor Diameter: 4.57m (15ft);
- Length: 5.49m (18ft); Height: 2.06m (6ft9in); Weight: 748kg (1,650lb)
- Country of Origin
- United States of America
- See more items in
- National Air and Space Museum Collection
- National Air and Space Museum
- Record ID
- nasm_A19240006000
- Metadata Usage (text)
- Not determined
- GUID (Link to Original Record)
- http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv99a99f340-3026-47b1-b918-377785075ee9
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