CN Chinese Inventor Told to Stop Testing His Homemade Helicopter - I dunno man, doesn't look any less safe as any other Chinese invention.

Chinese Inventor Told to Stop Testing His Homemade Helicopter
By John Feng


Article / Archive [ https://archive.ph/6VXfe ]



Police in eastern China have asked a local inventor to stop testing a homemade helicopter after he had a friend take off in the rudimentary aircraft earlier this month.

The crude one-seater designed by Chen Ruihua, 59, was assembled with basic parts sourced both locally and off the internet. The authorities in the town of Miaoquan, in Changshu in Jiangsu province, deemed it a "potential safety hazard," according to a statement released on WeChat [A] last Friday.

Local police, who had come across a video of previous test flights, visited his workshop to prevent another. Building homemade aircraft isn't against the law, they said, but it is unlawful to pilot one without authorization from the civil aviation authority, and without the requisite training and qualifications.

HomemadeHeli.jpg

© Changshu PSB
A picture released by the Changshu Public Security Bureau in Jiangsu, China, on March 25, 2022, shows part of a homemade helicopter designed by local inventor Chen Ruihua, 59.



Chen, whose family owns a plastic mold plant, has neither an engineering degree nor a pilot license. He told the police he had been making aircraft as a pastime for a decade, but said he had no intention of selling any and didn't allow any observers to watch his test flights.

His latest invention weighs 375 pounds and measures nearly 12 feet long. It has a folding fuselage and was able to reach an altitude of "several hundred meters," he said. Chen said it was the third generation of the same design, after two previous versions had failed to leave the ground.

He didn't disclose how much time and money he had put into his working model, but suggested it wasn't a small sum.

In its statement, the Changshu Public Security Bureau said Chen's simple helicopter was based on an unspecified Russian [A] rotorcraft. It was powered by a boat engine, said the police, who also released footage of the aircraft taking off and landing at different locations.

HomemadeHeli2.jpg

© Changshu PSB
A picture released by the Changshu Public Security Bureau in Jiangsu, China, on March 25, 2022, shows the aircraft workshop of local inventor Chen Ruihua, 59.


HomemadeHeli3.jpg

© Changshu PSB
A picture released by the Changshu Public Security Bureau in Jiangsu, China, on March 25, 2022, shows the aircraft workshop of local inventor Chen Ruihua, 59.



"The person test-flying the aircraft wasn't me, but rather my partner," Chen told Chengdu's Red Star News on Monday. He plans to upgrade the helicopter's equipment and turn it into a drone for crop dusting.

Gong Jian, an officer with Miaoquan police, praised Chen's work ethic and courage, but said the law had to be observed in order to ensure public safety.

"The aircraft is crude and has no safety equipment," said Gong. "Careless test flights could threaten the life and property of the operator himself and those of nearby residents, and will also hinder air traffic management."

Local police said Chen promised never to test his homemade helicopter again. It apparently took some convincing.




Edit: So I've been unable to find the video footage in a format I can convert into an MP4 easily, but it is available on this Newsweek article [A]
 
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I trust that helicopter made by this guy than if it were to be made in a local factory. Definitely more quality control here than in a Foxcomm factory.
And it's not just him.

What aircraft, on average, is safer?

One where the builder has a vested interest in strangers not dying in it?

Or one where the BUILDER has a vested interest in not dying in it?
 
And it's not just him.

What aircraft, on average, is safer?

One where the builder has a vested interest in strangers not dying in it?

Or one where the BUILDER has a vested interest in not dying in it?
Going by the flat earther who took a flight in his steam powered rocket, probably the former.
 
I feel like a used boat engine might not be the best choice for a flying machine. Every time you see a boat it's broken down and don't they usually cool with sea/lake water rather than a radiator system?
It would be trivial to rig up a coolant system to a boat motor, and it's already set up with the right kind of gearbox, plus it's super compact. The only real issue is running at altitude where pressures and air density start coming into play but I doubt this is a risk in this case.

It doesn't look any less sketchy than any commercially available micro light. I'm blown away he went with 2 counter rotating props instead of settling for an auto gyro like a reasonable human
 
That's pretty awesome work. Not least because I'd swear it reminds me of something used in one of the older Bond films.
If you mean Little Nellie in "You Only Live Twice", that was an autogyro. Close, but not quite a helicopter. She was perhaps the manliest autogryo ever built or flown thanks to Q and its pilot, though.
 
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I feel like a used boat engine might not be the best choice for a flying machine. Every time you see a boat it's broken down and don't they usually cool with sea/lake water rather than a radiator system?
Some people build planes with motorcycle engines, this is nothing. Boat engines can have some insane power, there are V-12 engines made for speedboats, this guy isn't going with the worst bet he could make for a project of this size!

Every day I wonder what it would be like if the Chinese never had the revolution and what kind of government they would have had. Honestly, could you imagine a still almost Chinese monarchy equivalent with some nigga dressed like a wizard saying he is of divine blood and that Russia/Japan must be demolished for the good of the kingdom?

The sad thing is, is that it still probably would have led to a more stabilized and brighter future than what China has now.
Taiwan is proof that the chinese are compatible with democracy and that the notion of them being unable to live outside dictatorships is horseshit. If the KMT won and took it's time in stabilizing the country, we would be living in a very different World: To begin with, the "Bamboo Curtain" would likely not have existed as China would be a major barrier to many of it's states, the U.S.S.R. would still be their enemies but the U.S. would have a friendlier relationship with them from the get go, meaning they would still rise economically but eventually turn into a democratic state instead. Would be pretty interesting to see if this World would be better than ours, albeit it sounds better already lol!

I wish I knew, too bad the Chinese government didn't stop that nut guy who invented the social credit.
They probably comissioned the project themselves. If there is one thing the Chinese Government likes, is controlling fucking everything at their sights. having even more control over the population is natural progression for authoritarian assholes!
 
I might buy one from him and learn to fly it. All I need is a cage with gate that can open downwards remotely. I have some communists cargo that needs to be dropped off.
 
Looks like a fairly standard ultralight helicopter kit the plans for which used to be sold out of the back of popular mechanics' magazines. Not surprised that it works, it's a old as fuck design.

Not surprised he got dinged by the police, chinese airspace is owned by their army, period.
 
The only real issue is running at altitude where pressures and air density start coming into play but I doubt this is a risk in this case.
Or making ANY DIY thing flight ready, IDK man he should just fly out of china 2 somewhere free to live his dreams.

Come to America Chinese Helicopter man, your country does not appreciate you. While I as a white american would not be allowed to do this here, there is a chance if you get startup money from google it will be somehow okay, and you can make the uber of helicopters.
 
@Psychotron

If he gave up his helicopter dreams he could fly a fixed wing micro light with no licenses in the US of A
 
If you mean Little Nellie in "You Only Live Twice", that was an autogyro. Close, but not quite a helicopter. She was perhaps the manliest autogryo ever built or flown thanks to Q and its pilot, though.
I don't know if it's still a thing but gyrocopters/autogyros was popular some years back, at least in my podunk hometown, and those looked very similar to the Chinese build. The real danger is that he bought the kit off of Wish.
 
Looks more like a gyrocopter than a heli, anyone got links to the video? I cant see it
 
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