1 / 18

Single Line Tethered Glider

Jon Erbelding Paul Grossi Sajid Subhani. Single Line Tethered Glider. Kyle Ball Matthew Douglas William Charlock. Agenda. Team introduction Problem definition Private and academic development Customer needs Engineering requirements Timeline moving forward. Team Introduction.

lei
Download Presentation

Single Line Tethered Glider

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jon Erbelding Paul Grossi SajidSubhani Single Line Tethered Glider Kyle Ball Matthew Douglas William Charlock

  2. Agenda • Team introduction • Problem definition • Private and academic development • Customer needs • Engineering requirements • Timeline moving forward

  3. Team Introduction

  4. Problem Definition • Goal: Design, build, and test a tethered, small-scale, human-controlled glider. • Critical project objectives • Maintain maximum tension on the tether • Sustaining horizontal and vertical flight paths • Measure/record tether tension & position • Understand the influential parameters for sustained, tethered, unpowered flight Glider Tether Base Station Operator w/ controller

  5. Private Development • Ampyx Power • Tethered Glider • Ground power generation • Figure-8 pattern • Capable of generating 850kW

  6. Private Development • Makani Power • Tethered Glider • Airborne wind turbines • Circular pattern • Tested 30kW; Goal of 600kW

  7. Academic Papers • Loyd • 1980 Paper outlining how to harness high altitude wind energy • 3 Different Methods • Simple Kite • Crosswind Powered Kite • Drag Powered Kite • Uses turbines on kite rather than a ground based generator

  8. Academic Papers • Lansdorp • Two Different Arrays of Kites • Pumping Mill • Laddermill • Created a system to measure the tension magnitude and direction using 3D load cell assembly • Basis for our system Three axis load cell system created by Lansdorp et al.Image taken from [Lansdorp 2007].

  9. Academic Papers • Donnelly • Fighter Kites • Theoretical model to predict motion of fighter kite • Created a method to control the fighter kite motion • Created an experimental rig with generator and variable tether length similar to Lansdorp’s. Three axis load cell allowing for variable tether length created by Chris Donnelley. Image taken from [Donnelly 2013].

  10. Customer Needs

  11. Engineering Requirements

  12. House of Quality

  13. Timeline • Phase 1 (wk 1-3) - COMPLETE! • Define/understand problem definition • Research similar projects • Organize as a team • Phase 2 (wk 4-6) - In progress • Learn to fly • Research production load cells & gliders • Identify/understand critical engineering theory

  14. Timeline • Phase 3 (wk 7-9) • Determine glider design • If building glider from scratch • Identify airfoil types, materials, control/communication features • Develop theoretical simulation of flight • Phase 4 (wk 10-13) • Refine glider design • Refine theoretical simulations • Phase 5 (wk 14-15) • Order materials

  15. Using Asana

  16. Summary • Team introduction • Problem definition • Private and academic development • Customer needs • Engineering requirements • Timeline moving forward

  17. References • Ampyx Power. http://www.ampyxpower.com/ • Makani Power. http://www.makanipower.com/home/ • Loyd, Miles L. “Crosswind Kite Power.” Journal of Energy 4.3 (1980): 106–111. Print. • Lansdorp, Bas. “Comparison of Concepts for High-altitude Wind Energy Generation with Ground Based Generator.” Proceedings of the NRE 2005 Conference,Beijing, (2005): 1–9. Web. 17 Feb. 2011. • Donnelly, Christopher. “Dynamics and control of a single-line maneuverable kite.” Rochester Institute of Technology. (2013).

  18. Questions?

More Related