William S. Hindson
Ames Research Center
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Featured researches published by William S. Hindson.
17th Atmospheric Flight Mechanics Conference | 1990
William S. Hindson; Jeffery A. Schroeder; Michelle M. Eshow
A pilot rating scale was developed to describe the effects of transients in helicopter flight-control systems on safety-of-flight and on pilot recovery action. The scale was applied to the evaluation of hardovers that could potentially occur in the digital flight-control system being designed for a variable-stability UH-60A research helicopter. Tests were conducted in a large moving-base simulator and in flight. The results of the investigation were combined with existing airworthiness criteria to determine quantitative reliability design goals for the control system.
Flight Simulation Technologies Conference | 1992
Edwin W. Aiken; Robert A. Jacobsen; Michelle M. Eshow; William S. Hindson; Douglas H. Doane
Salient design features of a new NASA/Army research rotorcraft - the Rotorcraft Aircrew Systems Concepts Airborne Laboratory (RASCAL) - are described. Using a UH-60A Black Hawk helicopter as a baseline vehicle, the RASCAL will be a flying laboratory capable of supporting the research requirements of major NASA and Army guidance, control, and display research programs. The paper describes the research facility requirements of these programs together with other critical constraints on the design of the research system, including safety-of-flight. Research program schedules demand a phased development approach, wherein specific research capability milestones are met and flight research projects are flown throughout the complete development cycle of the RASCAL. This development approach is summarized, and selected features of the research system are described. The research system includes a full-authority, programmable, fault-tolerant/fail-safe, fly-by-wire flight control system and a real-time obstacle detection and avoidance system which will generate low-latitude guidance commands to the pilot on a wide field-of-view, color helmet-mounted display.
AIAA Modeling and Simulation Technologies Conference and Exhibit | 2002
Chad R. Frost; William S. Hindson; Moralez. Ernesto; George E. Tucker; James B. Dryfoos
Two unique sets of flight control laws were designed, tested and flown on the Army/NASA Rotorcraft Aircrew Systems Concepts Airborne Laboratory (RASCAL) JUH-60A Black Hawk helicopter. The first set of control laws used a simple rate feedback scheme, intended to facilitate the first flight and subsequent flight qualification of the RASCAL research flight control system. The second set of control laws comprised a more sophisticated model-following architecture. Both sets of flight control laws were developed and tested extensively using “desktop-to-flight” modeling, analysis, and simulation tools. Flight test data matched the modelpredicted responses well, providing both evidence and confidence that future flight control development for RASCAL will be efficient and accurate.
SPIE's International Symposium on Optical Engineering and Photonics in Aerospace Sensing | 1994
William S. Hindson; Chima E. Njaka; Edwin W. Aiken; Warren Barnhart
The Rotorcraft Aircrew Systems Concepts Airborne Laboratory (RASCAL) is a UH-60A Black Hawk helicopter that is being modified by the US Army and NASA for flight systems research. One of the objectives of the research is to develop and integrate technologies for Automated Nap-of-the Earth (ANOE) flight. The principal elements of this system include video imaging sensors, advanced real-time image processing capabilities, a graphics supercomputer, a wide field-of-view color helmet mounted display (HMD), and an advanced fly-by-wire flight control system. The development methodology and the current status of the ANOE Flight Program are summarized, a description of the visionics system is provided, and the plans for the initial applications of the color HMD are presented.
SAE transactions | 1991
Michelle M. Eshow; Edwin W. Aiken; William S. Hindson; J. V. Lebacqz; Dallas G. Denery
A new flight research vehicle, the Rotorcraft-Aircrew Systems Concepts Airborne Laboratory (RASCAL), is being developed by the U.S. Army and NASA at Ames Research Center. The requirements for this new facility stem from a perception of rotorcraft system technology requirements for the next decade together with operational experience with the CH-47B research helicopter that was operated as an in-flight simulator at Ames during the past 10 years. Accordingly, both the principal design features of the CH-47B variable-stability system and the flight-control and cockpit-display programs that were conducted using this aircraft at Ames are reviewed. Another U.S. Army helicopter, a UH-60A Black Hawk, has been selected as the baseline vehicle for the RASCAL. The research programs that influence the design of the RASCAL are summarized, and the resultant requirements for the RASCAL research system are described. These research programs include investigations of advanced, integrated control concepts for achieving high levels of agility and maneuverability, and guidance technologies, employing computer/sensor-aiding, designed to assist the pilot during low-altitude flight in conditions of limited visibility. The approach to the development of the new facility is presented and selected plans for the preliminary design of the RASCAL are described.
Archive | 1986
Robert T. N. Chen; William S. Hindson
AHS International Forum 60 | 2004
Ernesto Moralez; George E. Tucker; William S. Hindson; Chad R. Frost; Gordon H. Hardy
Journal of The American Helicopter Society | 1998
William S. Hindson; Robert T. N. Chen
Archive | 1995
Robert T. N. Chen; William S. Hindson; Arnold W. Mueller
AHS International Forum 51 | 1995
Vivek Sharma; Yiyuan Zhao; Robert T. N. Chen; William S. Hindson; br