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The Piasecki HRP Rescuer (also called Harp) is a United States tandem-rotor transport or rescue helicopter designed by Frank Piasecki and built by Piasecki Helicopter. The Piasecki PV-3 was adopted as the HRP-1 Rescuer by the United States Navy, United States Marine Corps, and United States Coast Guard. An improved PV-17 variant was later produced as the HRP-2. As one of the first transport helicopters in military service, the HRP-1 was capable of carrying two crewmen and 8-10 passengers or 2,000 lb. (907 kg) of cargo.

HRP Rescuer
A U.S. Coast Guard HRP-1G
Role Tandem-rotor transport/rescue helicopter
Manufacturer Piasecki Helicopter
Designer Frank Piasecki
First flight 1945
Introduction 1947
Primary users United States Navy
United States Coast Guard
United States Marine Corps
Number built 28

Development


Piasecki HRP-1 Flying Banana helicopter at Naval Air Station Key West minus exterior doped fabric skin
Piasecki HRP-1 "Flying Banana" helicopter at Naval Air Station Key West minus exterior doped fabric skin

The prototype helicopter (designated PV-3 by Piasecki, though commonly known to test personnel as "The Dogship") first flew at Morton, Pennsylvania in March 1945 following a development contract from the United States Navy in February 1944. The "Dogship" was a novel tandem-rotor helicopter with a fixed tricycle landing gear, powered by a 600 hp (447 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340-AN-1 engine. To ensure that the rotors did not hit each other, the rear end of the fuselage curved upwards so the rear rotor was higher than the forward rotor. This was based on a Drago Jovanovich patented design. The fuselage was constructed of ordinary mild steel tubing, filled out with wooden ribs, and covered with doped fabric.[1]

Following a series of mechanical incidents with the prototype, including stripped transmission gears, it was determined that use of common automotive parts in the helicopter transmission were inadequate to the severe loads imposed by flight; subsequent prototypes built after the war used stronger components.[1] Two prototypes designated XHRP-1 were constructed; one was used as a static test aircraft and the other was used for development flying.


Operational history


Eight HRP-1s aboard USS Palau (CVE-122), in 1951.
Eight HRP-1s aboard USS Palau (CVE-122), in 1951.

As the first U.S. military helicopter in service with a significant transport capability, the HRP-1 was immediately put to use transporting cargo and personnel. Although referred to officially as the HRP-1, or "Harp", the helicopter's distinctive shape, with no protruding nose beyond the forward rotor's axis, soon earned it the nickname "The Flying Banana". The first HRP-1 Rescuer flew on 15 August 1947, and a second batch of 10 was built later, with the final machine delivered in 1949. All were powered by the 600 hp (450 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340-AN-1 engine.

In all, 20 HRP-1s were ordered by the United States Navy, which passed most of their order to the U.S. Marine Corps and the Coast Guard. Three additional helicopters were delivered to the U.S. Coast Guard with the designation HRP-1G. An improved PV-17 version with an all-metal skin was developed with five ordered in June 1948 as the HRP-2; all HRP-2s were delivered to the U.S. Coast Guard for use as rescue craft. Nine HRP-1s formed the backbone of the first Marine helicopter transport squadron, HMX-1, and were used in various exercises designed to test the helicopter's ability to deliver troops in beach assault or forward battlefield operations.[2]

In service, the HRP-1 frequently suffered various teething and maintenance troubles such as broken engine mounts and loose fittings; it was not unusual for the fabric covering to rip loose from the helicopter in flight, often entangling the rotor blades.[3] Despite these issues, the relative success of Piasecki's tandem rotor design would lead to the Piasecki H-21 family of helicopters.[4] Two surviving aircraft are in storage at the American Helicopter Museum & Education Center in West Chester, Pennsylvania and a third is under restoration at the Classic Rotors Museum in Ramona, California.[5][6] A fourth is currently[when?] under restoration at the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon.[citation needed]


Variants


An HRP without skin in 1953.
An HRP without skin in 1953.
PV-3
Prototype tandem-rotor helicopter powered by a Wright R-975 piston engine, one built.
XHRP-1
Military designation for two further PV-3s, one for static testing and one for flight trials.
HRP-1
Production variant, 20 built including three HRP-1Gs.
HRP-1G
Three United States Navy HRP-1s for the United States Coast Guard.
HRP-2
Metal skinned variant, five built.

Operators


 United States of America

Specifications (HRP-2)


Data from The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft 1985, p. 2716.

General characteristics

Performance


See also


Related development

Related lists


References



Notes


  1. Day, Dwayne A. (2003). "Piasecki: The Dogship and the Flying Banana". U.S. Centennial of Flight. Archived from the original on 19 December 2011. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  2. Rawlins 1976, p. 20.
  3. Close, Robert A. "Helo Operations, Class of 1945". Helo Operations. U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association & Foundation. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  4. Apostolo 1984, p. 79.
  5. "Aircraft in Storage". American Helicopter Museum & Education Center. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  6. "HRP". Classic Rotors Museum. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  7. "USCG History". Helis. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  8. Watkins, Ray. "Piasecki PV-3 HRP-1 Rescuer, U.S. Marine Corps". 1,000 Aircraft Photos. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  9. Thomason, Tommy H. (29 December 2010). "And now for something completely different". U.S. Navy Aircraft History. Retrieved 26 January 2014.

Bibliography





На других языках


[de] Piasecki HRP

Die Piasecki HRP ist ein Transporthubschrauber des US-amerikanischen Herstellers Piasecki Helicopter Corporation. Der Prototyp XHRP-X war weltweit der erste einsatzfähige Hubschrauber mit Tandemrotoranordnung. Zwar flog bereits im Sommer 1933 ein von Nicolas Florine entwickelter Drehflügler, der diese Antriebskonfiguration verwendete, dieser führte damit jedoch nur Schwebeflüge durch.[1]
- [en] Piasecki HRP Rescuer

[it] Piasecki HRP Rescuer

Il Piasecki HRP Rescuer (conosciuto anche come Harp) fu un elicottero da trasporto con configurazione a doppio rotore sviluppato dall'azienda statunitense Piasecki Helicopter Corporation negli anni quaranta, il primo di una serie identificato con il soprannome popolare "Flying banana" (banana volante).

[ru] Piasecki HRP Rescuer

Piasecki HRP Rescuer — военно-транспортный вертолёт США. Разработан конструктором Фрэнком Пясецким (Frank Piasecki), производился предприятием Piasecki Aircraft c 1947 по 1949 годы. Выпускался в нескольких вариантах под разными обозначениями. Выпущено около 30 вертолётов.



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