MIT Monarch A

{{Short description|1980s United States human-powered aircraft}}

{{DISPLAYTITLE:MIT Monarch A}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2023}}

{{Use American English|date=April 2023}}

{{Infobox aircraft begin

|name =MIT Monarch A

|image =MIT Monarch A.jpg

|caption =Side profile drawing of the MIT Monarch A

}}

{{Infobox aircraft type

|type =Human-powered aircraft

|national origin =United States

|manufacturer =Massachusetts Institute of Technology

|designer =Juan R. Cruz, Mark Drela, John S. Langford

|first flight =August 14, 1983

|introduction =

|retired =September 23, 1983

|status =

|primary user =

|more users =

|produced =

|number built =1

|program cost =

|unit cost =

|developed from =MIT Chrysalis

|developed into =MIT Monarch B

|variants with their own articles =

}}

The Monarch A was a human-powered aircraft, designed and built by graduates and undergraduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with Professors Walter Hollister and Ed Crawley acting as Project Advisers. Professor Eugene Larrabee, who had been the adviser for the 1979 MIT Chrysalis HPA, also provided support.

Development

The concept and general arrangement of the craft, described as an improved successor to the Chrysalis, was first detailed in the Spring 1981 issue of the AIAA Student Journal.

Development of the design was prompted in May 1983 by the announcement of the Kremer World Speed Competition. According to the rules, the first HPA to traverse a 1,500 m (4,920 ft) triangular closed course in less than 180 seconds would be awarded a £20,000 prize. Competition rules allowed for stored energy, generated by the pilot during a ten-minute period immediately preceding a flight, to be used as an additional power source. Design of the Monarch commenced in late May, with an emphasis on it winning the prize, as well as it being economical and achievable to design and build. Much of the technology used with the Chrysalis transferred over to the new craft.

The Monarch was a wire-braced high-wing monoplane of conventional configuration, and fitted with a tractor propeller. The fuselage was of the pod-and-boom type. The wing planform had a constant chord with a tapered outer section. The wing featured slight dihedral, with the outer section being set at a greater angle. The empennage featured all-flying tail surfaces, with both the fin and tailplane having an elliptical planform. The aircraft's primary structure consisted of 6061-T6 aluminum tubing, chemically milled down. The secondary structure was made using styrofoam, plywood, carbon fibre, and graphite expoxy. The entire aircraft was covered in transparent Mylar film. The undercarriage consisted of three wheels arranged in series, with the middle wheel being sprung and castering. Additionally, the middle wheel was powered during the initial part of the take-off run. Lateral control was achieved by wing warping, with directional and pitch control being achieved by the all-flying tailfin and tailplane.

The pilot sat in a conventional cycling position. During flights, the aircraft had two separate power sources, both leading to a fixed-pitch minimum induced loss propeller. One was the pilot, who used bicycle pedals to power a steel-nylon chain drive to the propeller. The other power source was a 700 W DC motor/generator, linked to a pack of 24 Ni-Cad cells. To comply with the Kremer competition, these cells could be charged by the pilot pedalling for 10 minutes, immediately prior to a prize attempt. According to its designers, both the pilot and the motor were each expected to deliver approximately equal amounts of power to the propeller.

Construction of the aircraft involved 3,600 hours of work, over an 88-day period. It first flew on August 14, 1983, at Hanscom Field airport in Bedford, Massachusetts. The flight program continued through to September 23, when it suffered a nose-over during landing, necessitating repairs. These took place over the winter of 1983/84, during which it was also partially redesigned. The new iteration was designated the Monarch B; the name Monarch A then being retrospectively applied to the original version.

Specifications

{{Aircraft specs|ref=Jane's all the world's aircraft 1984-85

|prime units?=imp

|crew=1

|capacity=

|length m=

|length ft=26

|length in=4.75

|span m=

|span ft=61

|span in=6

|span note=

|upper span ft=

|upper span in=

|upper span note=

|mid span m=

|mid span ft=

|mid span in=

|mid span note=

|lower span m=

|lower span ft=

|lower span in=

|lower span note=

|swept m=

|swept ft=

|swept in=

|swept note=

|dia m=

|dia ft=

|dia in=

|dia note=

|width m=

|width ft=

|width in=

|width note=

|height m=

|height ft=

|height in=

|height note=

|wing area sqm=

|wing area sqft=178

|wing area note=

|swept area sqm=

|swept area sqft=

|swept area note=

|volume m3=

|volume ft3=

|volume note=

|aspect ratio=21.6

|airfoil=Lissaman 7769

|empty weight kg=

|empty weight lb=67.5

|empty weight note=

|gross weight kg=

|gross weight lb=

|gross weight note=

|max takeoff weight kg=

|max takeoff weight lb=

|max takeoff weight note=

|more general=

|eng1 number=1

|eng1 name=electric motor

|eng1 type=

|eng1 kw=.70

|eng1 note=

|eng2 number=1

|eng2 name=human power

|eng2 type=

|eng2 lbf=

|eng2 note=

|max speed kmh=

|max speed mph=24

|max speed kts=

|max speed note=

|max speed mach=

|cruise speed kmh=

|cruise speed mph=

|cruise speed kts=

|cruise speed note=

|stall speed kmh=

|stall speed mph=

|stall speed kts=

|stall speed note=

|never exceed speed kmh=

|never exceed speed mph=

|never exceed speed kts=

|never exceed speed note=

|minimum control speed kmh=

|minimum control speed mph=

|minimum control speed kts=

|minimum control speed note=

|g limits=

|roll rate=

|glide ratio=

|sink rate ms=

|sink rate ftmin=

|sink rate note=

|lift to drag=

|wing loading kg/m2=

|wing loading lb/sqft=

|wing loading note=

|prop blade number=2

|prop name=

|prop dia m=

|prop dia ft=10

|prop dia in=

|prop dia note=fixed pitch

}}

See also

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite magazine|last=Langford |first=John| date=Spring 1981| title=Not All Student Design Projects End on Paper: Chronology of the Chrysalis|magazine=AIAA Student Journal |location=New York, NY| publisher=American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics|volume=19 |number=1|pages=4–13|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_american-institute-aeronautics-astronautics-student-journal_spring-1981_19_1/page/4/mode/2up|access-date=April 10, 2023}}

{{cite book |editor-last1=Abbott |editor-first1=Allan V. |editor-last2=Wilson |editor-first2=David Gordon|date=1995 |title=Human Powered Vehicles|location=Champaign, IL, USA |publisher=Human Kinetics |page=232|isbn=0873228278}}

{{cite book |editor-last1=Taylor |editor-first1=John W. R. |date=1984 |title=Jane's all the world's aircraft 1984-85 |location=London |publisher=Jane's Yearbooks |pages=456–457|isbn=0710608012|url=https://archive.org/details/janesallworldsai8485john/page/n539/mode/2up?|access-date= April 10, 2023}}

{{cite magazine|last1=Cruz |first1=Juan R. |last2=Drela |first2=Mark |last3=Langford |first3=John S. |date=January 1985 |title=The MIT Monarch and the Kremer World Speed Competition |magazine=Technical Soaring |publisher=The Soaring Society of America |volume=IX |number=1 |pages=1–6 |url=https://journals.sfu.ca/ts/index.php/ts/article/view/882/838 |access-date=April 10, 2023}}

}

}}

Category:Human-powered aircraft

Category:High-wing aircraft

Category:1980s United States experimental aircraft

Category:Twin-engined single-prop tractor aircraft

Category:Aircraft first flown in 1983

Category:MIT aircraft

Category:Cruciform tail aircraft

Category:Aircraft with fixed landing gear