Rotorwing-Aero 3D-RV
The Rotorwing-Aero 3D-RV is an American autogyro that was designed by Monte Hoskins and produced by Rotorwing-Aero of Salt Lake City, Utah, introduced in 1989. Now out of production, when it was available the aircraft was supplied in the form of plans for amateur construction.
Design and development
The 3D-RV was designed to comply with the US FAR 103 Ultralight Vehicles rules, including the category's maximum empty weight of. The aircraft has a standard empty weight of when equipped with a Rotax 503 or Rotax 582 engine. With heavier engines it can be registered in the US Experimental - Amateur-built category.The 3D-RV features a single main rotor, a single-seat open cockpit without a windshield, tricycle [landing gear] with hydraulic disk brakes, plus a tail caster. The acceptable power range is and the standard engines used are twin cylinder, air-cooled, two-stroke, single-ignition Rotax 503 engine and the twin cylinder, liquid-cooled, two-stroke, single-ignition Rotax 582 engine, mounted in pusher configuration.
The aircraft fuselage is made from bolted-together aluminum tubing and welded 4130 steel tubing. Its two-bladed rotor has a diameter of and may use either manufactured metal blades or homemade Gyrotor wooden blades. The prototype was originally flown with wooden blades of each, with a hub bar, for a diameter of. In this configuration the aircraft flew acceptably, but did not climb well on hot days at higher density altitudes. The minimum control speed is
The initial propeller used was a two bladed ground adjustable unit, but the plans specify a three-bladed ground adjustable design of diameter.
The prototype used a conventional low landing gear design, but this was later developed into a high landing gear to set the vertical center of gravity to the prob hub height to prevent longitudinal stability issues and bunt "push-over" accidents. The final design features a tall aluminium rudder.
The aircraft has a typical empty weight of and a gross weight of, giving a useful load of. With full fuel of the payload for the pilot and baggage is.
The standard day, sea level, no wind, take off roll with a engine is.
The manufacturer estimated the construction time from the supplied plans as 400 hours.
Operational history
By 1998 the company reported that 35 sets of plans had been sold and three aircraft were completed and flying.One builder reported an eight-month completion time.