Da Vinci's Ornithopter Prepares For a Test Flight 213
Dirak writes "Over 500 years ago, Leonardo da Vinci conceptualized a self-powered flying machine that would achieve both lift and thrust with flapping wings alone and named it the "ornithopter". Hot on the heels of the 100th Anniversary of the Wright Brothers flight, and the recent X prize, a team of scientists from University of Toronto's Institute for Aerospace have taken on this challenge to make Leonardo's dream a reality."
Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:5, Interesting)
However, the challenge of achieving both efficient lift and thrust with flapping wings was far greater than simply using the wings for lift and providing thrust with a separate propulsor.
Isn't current technology all about brute forcing things? Efficiency takes time. It's easier to just throw power and money at a problem. Like the excellent example I saw somewhere about how Arches are more efficient, but most of our construction (except for bridges and the like) are based on stronger materials and shapes that aren't as likely to give us headaches.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:5, Interesting)
Or backaches. You can make an arched bed from a sheet of quarter inch plywood. Very efficient use of materials, but you aren't likely to want to sleep on it, and efficiency in materials is not the most important parameter of a bed.
Sometimes the shape itself is the most important factor. That's why domes never took off for personal housing. It's an efficient shape for everything but living in.
You'll note that cars, boats and airplanes all use the arch extensively (the panels on your car all have at least a slight curve to them for a reason), because in the case of these structures efficient use of materials is a critical factor.
And as it turns out seperate systems for thrust and lift in a flying machine are more efficient than using one system for both, that's why it's so hard to build an ornithopter and why aerotecnology didn't get "off the ground" until that was realized.
The reason nature has adopted the flapping wing is simply because it cannot emulate a shaft unidirctionally rotating in a bearing in a biological structure, so it had to "make do."
A wheel on an axle is notoriously more efficient than these "legs" things.
KFG
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:5, Insightful)
A wheel on an axle is notoriously more efficient than these "legs" things.
Until you try to go up stairs. DARPA is working on building dog-like robots with legs to carry a soldier's gear. [wired.com] Wheels are good only on flat surfaces. Ever try to push a wheelchair up a rocky slope? They make wheelchair ramps for a reason. Sometimes nature DOES get it right.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:4, Interesting)
I did not in any way mean to denigrate the solutions that nature finds, only to point out that the solution set is inherently limited.
An airplane only needs to fly, a duck has to perform many more functions (such as making more ducks), thus rigid wings may prove to be unworkable over all, despite the fact that the rigid wing is more efficient when one looks strictly at the issue of flying.
However, thank you for your post. It has given me pause and I may have to go back and redsign my "most fearsome killing machine in the universe."
KFG
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:3, Insightful)
The only thing that man has invented that I've not seen an equivalent of in nature is the CRT. No animal needs to project light on a screen, much less with a stream of electrons controlled by magnets. Unless you consider humans to be animals.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
You mention it and forget it? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
You are forgetting that hawks and hang gliders can gain altitude by soaring on thermals, columns of warm air rising from the earths surface. I've watched a Red tail soar for most of an afternoon with only the slightest adjustment of it's wings. An albatross can glide for weeks, storing energy gained from the rising warm air in the form of altitude.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
This just in: DARPA researches a new, improved robot that flattens and paves 'that wilderness thing' so soldiers can carry their own gear, and can't whine about it.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2, Interesting)
Indeed, the way nature aggregates parts is very different than the way a machine is aggregated out of parts. That's very much part of my point.
Thus I'm not really sure it's possible to evolve a jet engine biologically, except as a pulse system (see octopus, and I don't see any reason why pulse wheels couldn't evolve,
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
Nature HAS developed a rotating shaft in a bearing (Score:5, Informative)
Au contraire. Mother Nature is one hell of an engineer. I remember reading about the design of bacterial rotary flagellae in Scientific American a few years back, and marvelling at the elegance of the motor.
Here's [wikipedia.org] an article from Wikipedia that describes it pretty well (excerpted below).
The filament is composed of the protein flagellin and is a hollow tube 20 nanometers thick. It is helical, and has a sharp bend just outside the outer membrane called the "hook" which allows the helix to point directly away from the cell. A shaft runs between the hook and the basal body, passing through protein rings in the cell's membranes that act as bearings.
The bacterijjkklellum is driven by a rotary engine composed of protein, located at the flagellum's anchor point on the inner cell membrane. The engine is powered by proton motive force, i.e., by the flow of protons across the bacterial cell membrane due to a concentration gradient set up by the cell's metabolism (in Vibrio species the motor is a sodium ion pump, rather than a proton pump). The rotor transports protons across the membrane, and is turned in the process. The rotor by itself can operate at 6,000 to 17,000 rpm, but with a filament attached usually only reaches 200 to 1000 rpm.
Technology isn't good at recreating "finesse" (Score:2)
The problem with recreating bird flight is that it's an exercise in finesse. With flapping, lift and momentum are achieved simultaneously in ONE mechanical motion with very complex real-ti
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
Ummm no not really. Most of current technology is about efficiency. Take airliners. They are getting more and more efficient all the time. Compu
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:5, Informative)
Probably, but you never know... plus carftsmen of the past had shared secrets which got mostly lost over time (blame wars, plague, etc.) as how to build very light and yet solid structures out of wood (and eventually, stone). Think about european cathedrals. Most of them were made without any blueprint. That's truely wonderful. Re-building a working replica sometimes is the only way to go to get back that knowledge. I once saw a documentary on our Discovery channel's sibbling, about the making of a middle-age catapult. The first real life attempts broke themselves into pieces until they managed to understand archeological evidences and set all ratios back to what they once were, and then put the thing on wheels which were not used to carry the weapon around (as was unanimously beleived), but to handle the recoil. Then, they achieved pretty nice accuracy out of what was thought to be a primitive device.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:4, Insightful)
But as far as current technology goes, I've seen some people flying a commercial looking RC ornithopter at a park, and it, while not "real", was pretty cool darn cool.
Re:Yesterday's tomorrow? (Score:2)
From TFA:
About time (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:About time (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:About time (Score:2, Funny)
They tried and died.
Sorry... just trying to keep up the obvious Dune undertones.
Probably will never happen (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:About time (Score:2)
Re:About time (Score:3, Interesting)
Kepler did. In Dissertatio cum nuncio sidero, if memory serve.
I'm a true fan of J. Kepler, perhaps the most brilliant mind of all times.
Re:About time (Score:2)
According to them [ornithopter.org], if successful this would be the second successful manned flight of an ornithopter, the first having taken place in 1995 in Russia in Vladimir Toporov's ornithopter, Giordano [ornithopter.org].
Re:About time (Score:5, Funny)
Re:About time (Score:2, Interesting)
"This approach has a lot of problems. Let's do something different."
What problems would be solved by an ornithopter?
Caveat: Micro-air vehicles are an excellent application for ornithopter technology. However, people-carrying ornithopters would have few, if any, advantages over conventional flying machines.
Flapping doesn't scale well.
First encounter with an Ornithopter (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:First encounter with an Ornithopter (Score:3, Funny)
We need to fund U.S. research of a Disenchant before they can acquire a Counterspell!!!
Re:First encounter with an Ornithopter (Score:2)
Who needs a Disenchant when there's this [wizards.com]? I swear, MTG is broken. Let's all go back to Revised Edition.
Dune (Score:2)
Best artist's conception I could find on short notice:
http://www.duneinfo.com/michael/images/landing.jp
Da vinci asked his local garage to build it.. (Score:2, Funny)
Some limitations that have to be worked out (Score:5, Funny)
Buy your own right now. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Buy your own right now. (Score:2)
Name Change (Score:2, Funny)
Doesn't make for much good comedy. They should get Paul McCarthney as a test pilot and call it "Wings". Ha. Sorry.
I don't think it will work. I think that the human power to weight ratio is too small to move enough air at sea level to lift a body. Regardless of any magical gearing or lever action..
Re:Name Change (Score:2)
Whaa? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh wait, you mean in real life. Ahhhh.... *whistling*
Re:Whaa? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Whaa? (Score:2)
Re:Whaa? (Score:2)
Re:Whaa? (Score:3, Informative)
You don't need to enchant it, as there are other ways to encrease the power such as Tawno's Weaponry.
Re:Whaa? (Score:2)
Re:Whaa? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Whaa? (Score:3, Interesting)
"Our sincere condolences to anyone who has been killed by an Ornithopter"
At that time, the hope of every black deck wielding mage was to get a dark ritual, 3 unholy strengths and an ornithopter first turn.
--trb
Efficiency? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Efficiency? (Score:2)
Is it going to work THIS time? (Score:5, Informative)
odd... (Score:2)
Come on, every aircraft invented has hat at least a propulsion test and even models tested WAY before they do a real test.
so this thing works well then? how did the first tests go? how about video fo the RC prototypes they used to test to see if the thing was workable or a clever way of spending money foolishly?
Re:odd... (Score:2)
The Project Ornithopter engine-powered piloted aircraft, which is based on the technology of the Harris/DeLaurier model, self accelerated (flapping alone) on level pavement to lift-off speed.
Leonardo, not Da Vinci (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Leonardo, not Da Vinci (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Leonardo, not Da Vinci (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Leonardo, not Da Vinci (Score:4, Informative)
For example, take Princess Diana of Wales. We all know who she is. However if you were to refer to her strictly as "of Wales" the situation becomes extremely confusing for an English speaker.
Re:Leonardo, not Da Vinci (Score:2)
Same for Leonardo Da Vinci.
Or... (Score:2)
or of Redmond.
or Crawford.
Re:Or... (Score:2)
Possible use? (Score:2, Redundant)
This group has tried before, IIRC (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, "modern" technology is more efficient, but this does a great deal to teach us about structural engineering in highly unconventional designs. I doubt Ornithopters will ever be popular (except maybe as a sideshow at larger fairs and airshows) but as a case study for engineers... It would be superb!
Engineers at schools, colleges and even some Universities tend to build "nice, safe" projects. Stuff that teaches you how to bolt things together - if you're lucky. A good project should be hard enough that engineers are going to fail at least once, because you learn far more by failing - and more again by catching problems before they turn into failure.
It is obvious now that Ornithopers are hard engineering problems. As such, even if they have no other value, they would make superb educational devices.
Inventions like this are never wasted - only opportunities can be wasted.
Re:This group has tried before, IIRC (Score:4, Interesting)
The main interest in ornithopters today is in Micro Air Vehicles- small (~6 inches) military reconnaissance robots. Incidentally, the aerodynamics of flapping flight at small sizes are very different from those of aircraft. Insects use lots of weird mechanisms, such as the ability to generate high lift with leading edge vortices.
Re:This group has tried before, IIRC (Score:5, Insightful)
Our understanding of larger animals isn't a whole lot better. Sure, we know the muscles involved in a hummingbird's amazing flying abilities, or those of kestrals. (Again, both of these can hover and fly backwards.) We can run simulations on computers to see air-flow. Well, if you happen to have a spare super-computer in the attic, that is.
But the actual mechanics of such systems? To the point where an engineer could go out and build a duplicate? Even a small robotic device, such as the spy drones you mentioned? Maybe, but I'd be impressed if they could achieve a fraction of the efficiency of nature, at this point, or a fraction of the aerodynamic flexibility.
Even if the DoD or some other TLA'ed Government agency could do it, I believe that these are perfect engineering problems for all engineers at all educational levels, precisely because of the "weird mechanisms" involved. Low-altitude hot air balloons are trivial. Straight-wing gliders are nearly trivial, once you know the shape of an aerofoil.
Insects and some of the stranger birds... Ah, now that kind of engineering is really tough.
Correct nomenclature: Entomopters (Score:2)
That's actually an entomopter, because it is based on insects, as you mentioned, rather than on birds.
Feathers (Score:2)
Stick to the original design (Score:2, Interesting)
Errors in the sketches? (Score:2, Interesting)
Inventer? (Score:3, Interesting)
Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:3, Interesting)
Might have been another ether induced hallucination though... Ah Poppin Fresh...
Re:Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:2, Interesting)
Above the wing, the air has a longer path to go through than the air under the wing, and so is going faster, hence a lower pressure. (i.e some kind of vacuum). This somewhat pulls the plane up.
Re:Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:2)
Not sure. I've heard that the physics behind flys and bees are pretty impressive. I'd be even more impressed with something the size of a whale flying by flapping its wings.
There is a big difference between the mass of an insect, or for that matter the largest flying animal (a condor, I would guess) and the mass
Re:Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:4, Informative)
I've been to a presentation by the professor in charge of the ornithopter program. They did some amazing research to figure out how to make this concept work. It has to do with correctly coupling the elastic flapping motion of the wings with twisting motion. But unlike an insect, lift is produced by the forward motion of the aircraft, just like in a normal airplane. The thrust is produced by the flapping and twisting motion pushing the air back.
Re:Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:3, Informative)
For a smaller Reynold's number example, the cuttlefish's method of propulsion is a good one. It uses a long fin and creates a wave-like modeshape using the fin. That wave-like mode transfers momentum very well to the surrounding water because of the scale that the fin operates at. To get
Re:Insect Flight = More efficient... (Score:2)
Second, they are not gastropods, which are things like clams, mussels, snails, and slugs. They are cephalopods.
Already been built. (Score:2, Informative)
Surely an improvement (Score:2, Interesting)
Ideas borrowed from nature almost always bring about an improvement in performance. This article [greenmarketing.com] discusses how we can incorporate design ideas from nature and some ideas already borrowed , and thus portrays their superiority in general
Evil despots of the world beware (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Evil despots of the world beware (Score:3, Funny)
Man-powered ornithopter (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Man-powered ornithopter (Score:2)
Granted, it's no longer out and about, but assuming the paleontologists aren't way off base, the remains of those creatures do say something about the scalability of wing flapping.
I've seen this thing on Discovery before (Score:5, Interesting)
Also when they interviewed the professor, he was saying that a thopter could potentionally be much more manuverable then a traditional air plane, which was one of the reasons why he was building it.
-Derek
O c'mon! (Score:4, Funny)
Birdy (Score:3, Informative)
If you have not seen the movie, I highly recommend it and the soundtrack is based on one of Peter Gabriels better albums.
Regarding UofT project, I hope these guy's succeed. I'm pretty sure that materials have gotten strong and light enough to enable full size models but... very very expensive! I hope they bring a parachute
This is incorrect! (Score:4, Informative)
flightgear: flight sim for an ornithopter, too (Score:2)
Boooooring . . . . (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
Re:Ornithopter? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, I think ornithopters were mentioned one or two times in the Herbert novels too. Sad that most people relate to one of the great modern science fiction series by it's derivative works..
Re:Ornithopter? (Score:2)
Re:Ornithopter? (Score:2)
No, they aren't.
They are described in the books, but the SFX tech of 1984 weren't up to the task to include them in the movie (not with their budget and timeframe at least).
In the movie, it's a levitating craft, similar to their floating lamps.
Unless you mean that boring TV-movie, which I didn't tolerate long enough to get to the ornithopters, I only got as far as the first shot of a sandworm before calling it quits.
Re:BBC documentary (Score:3, Interesting)
Z
Re:how to pronounce ornithopter? (Score:2)
Re:No, I already saw the ornithopter in action (Score:2)