Engineering:Musculair
Musculair | |
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Musculair II at the Deutsches Museum Flugwerft Schleissheim, Munich, Germany | |
Role | Human-powered aircraft |
Number built | 2 |
Musculair 1 and Musculair 2 are two human-powered aircraft designed and built by German academic and engineer Günther Rochelt.
Musculair 1
Rochelt designed Musculair 1 and completed building it in 1984. His son, Holger, won a Kremer prize in the same year for his flight over a 1,500 m (4,900 ft) triangular course, improving the record to 4 minutes and 25 seconds. In the same year, he set a world speed record at 35.7 km/h (22.2 mph), receiving a second Kremer prize. Later that year, Holger and his sister Katrin, at that time still a child, became the first passengers in a human-powered aircraft.[citation needed]
- Length: 7.20 m
- Wingspan: 22.00 m
- Wing area: 16.50 m2
- Glide ratio: 1:38
- Height: 2.20 m
- Mass of the aircraft: 28 kg
- Propeller diameter: 2.72 m
- Required minimum power: 200 watts
- Required performance (11m / s[clarify]): 280 watts
Musculair 2
Günther designed Musculair 2, and Holger slimmed down to just 41 kilograms (90 lb) to reduce the total mass of craft and human, leading to him setting a new Fédération Aéronautique Internationale world record for a human-powered aircraft at 44.32 kilometres per hour (27.54 mph) on 2 October 1985.[1] The record, which still stands as of 2023, was set over a circuit at the Sonderlandeplatz Oberschleißheim airfield, near Munich.[1]
- Length: 6.00 m
- Wingspan: 19.50 m
- Wing area: 11.70 m2
- Glide ratio: 1:37
- Height: 1.50 m
- Mass of the plane: 25 kg
- Propeller diameter: 2.68 m
Aircraft on display
Today, Musculair I is on display at the main Deutsches Museum, Munich. Musculair 2 is on display at the specialist Deutsches Museum Flugwerft Schleissheim in Oberschleißheim.
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Holger Rochelt (FRG) (389)" (in en). Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. 2023-03-02. https://www.fai.org/record/389.
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musculair.
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