Relative Merits of Conventional, Tandem and Coaxial Rotor Configurations

The first successful helicopters were nearly all of the side-by-side or coaxial rotor configurations. This ensured no torque reaction on the airframe by equally balancing the torque supplied to both rotors. While an obvious principle, supporting, powering, and controlling two separate rotor systems led to complications in building the machine and often made for slow progress. The simpler idea of using a single rotor with a separate tail-rotor for anti-torque was known in the early days of helicopter experimentation, but this configuration was not widely used. Igor Sikorsky was to adopt the single main rotor configuration in the 1930's, and was ultimately the first to put the type into successful production during the early 1940's. Today, the single rotor helicopter is the most common design, comprising over 90% of all helicopters currently flying. To describe the relative merits of the single-rotor versus twin-rotor configurations, one must consider aerodynamic (performance) issues, as well as mechanical complexity, weight, handling qualities, vibration, noise and maintenance issues.


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