Bensen B-12 Explained
The
Bensen B-12, variously dubbed the
Sky-Way or
Sky-Mat was an unconventional
multirotor developed by
Igor Bensen in the United States in the late 1950s. Extremely unorthodox, the design sprang from Bensen's thinking about the engine
redundancy necessary to ensure the safe operation of small, personal rotorcraft operating at low altitudes and slow speeds. The result was a broad aluminum framework supporting an array of ten engines and rotors that Bensen likened to a "
magic carpet".
[1] The design was later refined to include eight rotors, each driven by two engines for a total of sixteen.
Successfully flown in 1961 at altitudes up to 20 ft (6 m), Bensen felt that the approach had potential for military heavy-lift or agricultural applications, but nothing further came of it.
References
- Book: Simpson, R. W. . Airlife's Helicopters and Rotorcraft . 1998 . Airlife Publishing . Ramsbury . 210 .
- Book: Bensen, Igor . A Dream of Flight . 1992 . Aviation Book Co . 109–10 .
- aerofiles.com
- Bensen Aircraft Foundation
Notes and References
- Bensen 1992, 110