Ion-Propelled Aircraft - August 1964
Major de Seversky's
Ion-propelled Aircraft - 07/07/01
Originally posted on KeelyNet BBS on 12/13/94 courtesy of James Hartman
An ion - generated wind will lift and propel this incredible magic
carpet of the future - By Hans Fantel
IT WAS DOWNRIGHT SPOOKY. Without a sound, the peculiar, spiky
contraption rose straight up, hovered awhile, climbed higher. Then it did a
few graceful turns, stopped again, and just sat there silently in midair.
It seemed like levitation - some trick to overcome gravity. I could not
shake off the feeling that I was attending a kind of spiritual seance, or
maybe a Buck Rogers show, instead of an engineering demonstration. The eerie
scene took place in the big barn like laboratory of Electron-Atom Inc.,
research firm in Long Island City, New York, devoted to the development of a
new kind of flying machine. I had been invited to watch a scale model being
put through its paces by remote control. What we saw was by far the oddest
aircraft since the Wright Brothers' motorized kite.
It had no prop. No jet. No wings. In fact, it had no moving parts at
all looking somewhat like an old-fashioned bedspring, the rectangular rig is
the nearest thing to a magic carpet. It needs no runway, takes off vertically
and is expected to climb as high as 60 miles. It can crawl through the air
like a snail, or go faster than a jet. Nobody yet knows the speed limit.
After a while, I closed my mouth. But David Yorysh, one of the project
engineers, noticed my puzzlement.
"Any questions?" he grinned.
"Yes. What holds it
up?"
"Ions," said Yorysh, as he launched into an explanation of a wholly
new flight concept.
The magic carpet, called the Ionocraft, flies on pure
electricity. It depends specifically on the fundamental principle of
electricity that electric current always flows from negative to positive, and
it uses two basic pieces of equipment to take advantage of this principle -
tall metal spikes that are installed above an open wire-mesh grid.
High negative voltage is shot from the spikes toward the positively
charged wire grid, just like negative and positive poles on an ordinary
battery. As the negative charge leaves the spike arms, it peppers the
surrounding air like buckshot, putting a negative charge on some of the air
particles. Such negatively charged air particles are called ions, and these
are attracted downward by the positively charged grid.
"Okay," I said. "But I still don't see what holds it up." "I'm getting
to that," Yorysh assured me as he spelled out the rest of the Ionocraft
principle. In their mad rush from the ion emitter to the main grid, the ions
bump into neutral air molecules-air particles without electric charge.
The terrific wallop in these collisions hurls a mass of neutral air
down-ward along with ions. When they reach that air grid, the ions being
negative are trapped by positive charge on the grid. but the grid has no
attraction for the neutral air particles that got bumped along. So the air
flows right through the open grid mesh, making a downdraft beneath the
Ionocraft. The contraption rides on this shaft of air, getting lift just like
a helicopter - by sucking air down from the top.
"Aerodynamically, it works just like a chopper," Yorysh summed it up.
"But instead of using a rotor and blades, we create the downward air flow
electrically by means of ionic discharge. the ions act on the air like a man
treading water. They just push down."
The engineers working on Ionocraft are the first to admit that their
present rig is still a long way from any kind of practical aircraft. the model
we saw measures only 1296 square inches and consists of about $5 worth of
balsa wood and aluminum wire. But the principle holds an important promise for
the future of aviation.
The problem now is improving efficiency - getting enough lift from a
given grid area and a given amount of energy, Present models cannot yet lift
their own electric generators. they get power through a feeder cable, dangling
down like an umbilical cord. Ionocraft engineers tend to be close-mouthed on
performance figures.
But they will tell you that at present it takes 90 watts (30,000 volts
at 3 milliamperes) to fly a two ounce model. translated into ordinary
power-to-weight ratios, this works out to roughly .96 hp. per pound, as
compared with a typical .1 hp per pound of helicopter or .065 hp for a pound
Piper Cub.
But Ionocraft designers are hard at work upping efficiency. One
possible power - boosting technique is to pulse the power in short high energy
bursts rather than apply steady voltage. They are also trying out various grid
patterns and ion emitter layouts to minimize energy loss through turbulence in
the downdraft.
Despite such unresolved problems, the development crew almost bristles
with optimism, and the most optimistic of all is the Ionocraft's inventor
Major Alexander P. de Seversky. No crackpot, Major de Seversky is a practical
visionary who in many areas has been far in front of his field.
"We hope to fly a model with self-contained power, perhaps by the end
of the year," he told me, confidently. "Ultimately, the ionic drive will prove
more efficient than either propeller or jet as a method of aircraft
propulsion.
"It will achieve lift at less expenditure of energy and fuel than
existing form of aircraft. In fact, it will prove the most efficient method of
converting electricity into motion."
Coming from a man of de Seversky's background, such a statement has an
almost prophetic ring. A leading aircraft designer and ace flyer for the past
50 years, de Seversky's idea's have often been ahead of their time-sometimes
to the embarrassment of other aviation experts. Losing his right leg during
his first flying mission in World War I didn't deter him from downing 13 enemy
aircraft in later flights. After coming to the United States from Russia, de
Seversky developed bombsights and course computers during the 1920s that were
the forerunners of today's inertial guidance systems.
Worked with Billy Mitchell
Later he pioneered the design of the cantilever-skin stressed wing that
is now in general use. He was consultant to General Billy Mitchell in the
historic airplane-verses battleship tactical experiments of the 1920s, and as
a special consultant to the U.S. Chiefs of Staff helped formulate basic air
strategy in World War II. He also contributed to the designs of the P-35 and
P-43 which led to the development of the P-47 Thunderbolt, one of America's
most effective wartime fighter planes. Now a trim and sprightly man of 70, he
still likes to take out experimental jet planes for a spin.
"The idea hit me as I was working on an electric air-cleaning device
which I had invented," the major recalled. "That gadget was designed to fight
air pollution by electrically charging the particles in industrial smoke and
then trapping them on a liquid electrode with the opposite charge." De
Seversky noticed an air flow developing between the two electrodes, caused by
ionization process previous explained. "To an old flyer like me," said the
major, "anything that stirs up a wind is a flying machine. So I began to
develop the idea." The major seemed concerned that the Ionocraft might be
mistaken for a kind of space vehicle.
"This is not a spacecraft," he explained emphatically to forestall any
misunderstanding. "It's an airplane, designed to operate within the
atmosphere. But it will be able to do things no present type aircraft can
accomplish."
Pointing out the potential advantage of Ionocraft over conventional
planes or helicopters, de Seversky ticks of a whole string of radical notions:
High-altitude flight. Helicopters whirl their blades in utter
frustration at altitudes where the air gets thin. Beyond 20,000 feet, they get
almost no lift. By contrast, experts calculate that Ionocraft can kick up
(rather kick down) enough air to stay aloft at 300,000 feet.
Unlimited size. The bigger it gets the better it flies. Efficiency
increases with grid area. Distributing airflow around the grid edge becomes
proportionately less important in larger craft. the reason:
Grid area increases faster than circumference with growing size.
"We'll be able to build them as big as a city block" claimed de
Seversky.
High speed. No practical speed limit has been determined. The ions
themselves flash from emitter to grid impart to the very high-velocity
impulse. Aerodynamic drag would be the chief speed-limiting factor. But,
streamlining of the grid edge and careful contouring of the craft, could
minimize air drag.
Safety. No moving parts in propulsion and no wear, means less chance of
failure, simpler maintenance.
Steering with Voltage
Steering control is accomplished by applying different voltages to
various parts of the craft. The part with the high voltage gets more lift,
hence tilts up. The form of the Ionocraft does not matter. Any shape will fly,
but de Seversky assumes that round models in the from of a flying saucer will
be the most easily manuverable.
By a simple joystick control, the pilot can lift any edge of the craft,
producing pitch and roll as if the Ionocraft had elevators and ailerons. He
can put the craft into any flight attitude-noise up or down, or banking to
either side. Like the tilt of a helicopter rotor, this inclination pushes the
craft forward, rearward, or sideways.
J.F. Bruno, the technical director of de Seversky's staff, spoke of a
passenger gondola in future models, suspended from gimbals below the main grid
so that it remains level regardless of how the main deck is tilted. Locations
below the main grid also shields passengers from high energy flow. But, even
if the passengers somehow got into the ion stream, it wouldn't electrocute
them unless they got "grounded" to the main grid. "It would be just like birds
sitting on a wire," said Yorysh, the man in charge of electronic design.
Until patents for Ionocraft were firmly nailed, de Seversky kept his
ideas carefully under raps. That's another reason no full-scale prototype has
yet been built. But even present scale models set the imagination buzzing.
Manned craft are envisioned for:
Commuter transport, With no size limit, you can pack trainloads of
people into this VTOL craft, relieve traffic congestion around urban centers.
The type of craft used as long-distance transport possibly at supersonic
speeds-would not need big airports with long run ways.
Airborne traffic monitors. Hovering above bridges and major
intersections, or patrolling above highways, one-man Ionocraft would provide a
panoramic view of traffic conditions, radio information to ground
traffic-control centers.
Grid Is Hard to Hit
Military reconnaissance and rescue. Without moving parts, the Ionocraft
is less vulnerable to small-arms fire than helicopters. the open grid makes a
poor target. Most bullets would whizz right through it. Even if the grid is
hit, the electric charge would be maintained despite the damage to some
portions. Unlike a copter with shattered blades, the Ionocraft would not
crash.
Weather observation. While satellites like Tiros look down on the
atmosphere from outer space. Ionocraft could sail right into the
weather-making air layers, providing valuable supplemental information. Being
steerable, Ionocraft would not drift with the wind like weather balloons, but
could hold a position over crucial areas, making local forecasts more
reliable.
Skyborne antenna, kept aloft indefinitely in a fixed position by ground
based energy supply. Ionocraft could also act as a skyborne antenna, extending
the range of defense radar. "It would be like raising the DEW-line 60 miles up
into the air," suggested de Seversky, "adding 15 to 25 minutes warning time
against missiles."
Anti-missile machine. Always alert to military tactics, de Seversky
believes that Ionocraft could be used as missile interceptors. Normally the
craft would hover at high altitudes, scanning the horizon for a 700-mile
range. As soon as it spotted and identified a hostile missiles through an
infrared detection system, the Ionocraft would hurl itself at the enemy rocket
on a collision course and blow it out of the air.
When practical craft are built, their designers expect to have a choice
of several power supply systems now under development for NASA's space
program. Some of these include:
Gas-turbine generators. Several firms, notably General Electric and
Allis-Chalmers, have come up with compact, light weight, kerosene- fueled
turbines, originally intended as power sources for spacecraft. These may be
used to generate electricity aboard Ionocraft.
Fuel cells. these are chemical reactors producing electricity like a
storage battery, but drawing their chemicals from external supply tanks. NASA
is currently testing fuel cells converting hydrogen and oxygen to electricity,
with drinking water as a byproduct.
Solar cells, directly convert sunlight to electricity-the present
energy source of most satellites. When high-efficiency solar cells are
available, they may keep Ionocraft aloft for indefinite periods.
Power from Boiling Mercury
Sunflower - a code name for another project aimed at deriving electric
power directly from sunlight. It employs an umbrella-like reflector that
focuses the sun's heat to boil mercury, which expands through a turbine and
drives an electric generator. (Solar-power supplies would be back-stopped by
other kinds of power generators to take over whenever no sunlight is
available.)
Microwave radiation. Concentrated beams of high-frequency radio waves
may transfer energy from ground stations to the Ionocraft if the craft is to
be used as a hovering platform in a fixed position. Raytheon has pioneered
this type of energy transmission through its Amplitron tube and has recaptured
as much as 72 percent of the radiated energy at the receiver site. High-power
laser beams may be similarly used for transmission.
Experimental hardware has already been produced for each of these
off-beat power-supply systems.
None of the men working on the Ionocraft will be pinned down to any
production timetable. "It's a pretty wild project," admitted technical
director Bruno, a veteran 20 years in the missile business. "But that's what
they said when we started working on rockets."
Major de Seversky, whose own career goes back to the beginnings of
aviation, views his invention in historical perspective:
"We are exploring an entirely new principle of flight. We're just at
the spot where the Wright Brothers were in 1903. We are just beginning to see
the possibilities."
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The following were captions for pictures or diagrams which were not
included in the computer version of the article as sent to KeelyNet.
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ION - PROPULSION is produced when negative charge from
upright arms charges surrounding air particles into ions.
Negatively charged ions rush toward positively charged
grid, pushing neutral air particles before them
Figure 1:
IONS RUSHING TOWARDS POSITIVELY
CHARGED GRID COLLIDE /\
WITH NEUTRAL AIR / Þ \
MOLECULES AND / Þ \
THRUST AIR - é Þ é -
DOWNWARD, IONS / \ / \
STOP AT GRID - / \- - / \ -
+ -------------------------------------- + GRID
| | | |
| | | | (NEUTRAL +/-)
\/ \/ \/ \/
NEUTRAL AIR MOLECULES WHACKED DOWNWARD BY
IONS, PASS THROUGH MESH OF ION-ACCEPTOR
GRID. DOWN WASH KEEPS IONOCRAFT ALOFT
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MAJOR DE SEVERSKY became interested in ion propulsion when he noticed
air flow between two electrodes while working on another of his inventions.
IONOCRAFT MODEL takes to air, completely unsupported except for
downwash of air. Next step is to develop model that can carry its own power
supply
IONOCRAFT COMMUTER maybe solution for suburbanites of the future in congested
areas, speeding hundreds of them short distances over heavy city traffic.
Power would be supplied by chain of ground-based master stations.
ONE MAN IONOCRAFT could be tomorrow's traffic patrol car or, in
combat, hovering vehicle for guerrilla wars, all but impervious to some minor
grid damage
ANTI-MISSILE IONOCRAFT, powered by sunlight, could hover indefinitely
in upper atmosphere, then home in on incoming warhead and blast it out of sky.
Vanguard Notes...
This file was updated October 30th, 1993 when the MAJORDE1.GIF was
uploaded to us.
One more point of interest here based on modern developments is the
invention of the RECTENNA. This is an antenna array that is mounted on the
flying machine and RECEIVES high density microwave transmissions FROM a ground
transmitter.
The antenna has a built-in diode network that rectifies the alternating
current into direct current. Note the Ionocraft requires 30,000 volts at about
3 milliamperes (90 WATTS) which is relatively LOW when speaking of high
voltages. This could be achieved in multiple ways.
As stated in the text, the larger the surface area of the grid, the
GREATER the weight (payload) the craft can lift. The idea of an attached
gondola to the bottom of the craft would not only provide for a payload
carrying area but also help to stabilize the craft much as a basket beneath a
balloon.
A final comparison is the work of Townsend Brown with the Bifeld/Brown
Effect. It requires a minimum of 50,000 volts, again with the larger payloads
requiring higher voltages. Spin can also increase the payload capacityby
vortex amplification.
Transdimensional
Tech Power Cubed
this is the exact same thing which barely lifts itself
and won't lift a power supply
they should do their homework, see how easy
it is to get money???
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