Have
you ever flown in a helicopter? They
seem such a glamorous (if expensive) way to travel, bypassing the traffic
enroute to the airport or sightseeing over rugged terrain.
But
do you know that the helicopter had its first flight ever right here in
Connecticut, the creation of Russian immigrant and inventor Igor Sikorsky, 80
years ago.
Sure,
Leonardo da Vinci made early drawings of a vertical flying machine, but that
was in the 1480’s. And kids had been
playing with hand-turned, propeller-driven toys for centuries before that.
Sikorsky
drew his earliest concept drawings of a helicopter years before the Wright brothers
ever flew at Kitty Hawk. But when he
fled Russia with his family, it was fixed-wing aircraft that gave Sikorsky his start
in aviation.
At
the age of 21 he designed his first airplane, the S-1, a single-engine pusher
biplane. Twenty-three designs later he built the S-42
flying boat, made famous by Pan
American as “The Flying Clipper”. The
four-engined craft had a range of 1200 miles carrying 37 passengers by day or
14 by night in berths, cruising at 170 mph.
Even
as Pan Am was opening literally over-seas markets, Sikorsky was still working
on his dreams of a helicopter. At his
plant in Stratford his VS-300
made its first flight, albeit tied to the ground, in September of 1939.
A
1942 version, the Sikorsky R-4,
became the first mass-produced helicopter, quickly adopted by the armed forces
of the US and UK. It had only one crew member, could only carry 500 pounds, but
had a range of 130 miles flying 65 mph at up to 8000 feet.
Flash
forward to the present and Sikorsky’s old company, now part of Lockheed Martin,
still produces helicopters. Sikorsky’s successor companies, then part of United
Aircraft Corp, even designed the short-lived (1968 -1976) Turbotrain, powered by a Pratt & Whitney turbine “jet
engine”. The train could make the 230
mile New York to Boston run in three hours and 39 minutes. Today’s Acela can do the same run in no less
than 3 hours 55 minutes.
In
a competition with the electric-powered Metroliner in 1967, the Turbotrain hit
170 mph, a land speed record for a gas turbine-powered rail vehicle. Acela does
no better than 145 mph.
Today’s
modern helicopters come in all sizes and speeds… from the beefy Seahawk SH-3 “Sea King”
which can carry five tons over 600 miles at 166 mph… to “personal” helicopters
for one person flying 60 miles at 80 mph.
For
helicopter fans, New York’s east-side heliports at Wall Street and 34th
Street offer the chance to see luxury craft in action, some privately owned,
others offering passenger service. BLADE Helicopters will get you to the Hamptons from midtown in 33 minutes
starting at $695 one-way.
In
the 1960’s NY Helicopter flew from the NY airports to the top of the Pan Am
building. I took that flight once, transferred to an elevator and walked onto a
train in Grand Central. For awhile they
even choppered to Stamford’s heliport
on Canal Street in the South End.
Much
has changed in aviation in the last 80 years since Sikorsky’s first helicopter
took to the air. And to think that it
all started here in Connecticut.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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