Cicaré CH-8 explained

The Cicaré CH-8 is a series of ultralight, kit-built helicopters based on a single-seat Argentinian design from the late 1980s. It was later developed into a tandem two-seater, and later into a tandem side by side ULM and remains in production.

Design and development

The piston engine-powered CH-8 ultralight series use the traditional "penny-farthing" layout with two-bladed main and tail rotors. The main rotor is formed from composites and is a teetering, semi-rigid design with 6° of twist. The pod-and-boom fuselage has a carbon fiber and epoxy resin cabin with a long transparent forward-opening canopy. This large windshield allows the pilot to see the tip of the skid making easier to get a ground reference while landing.The frame is built on aeronautical SAE 4130 chrome molybdenum steel tube and welded in spatial reticulated configuration.The steel frame also carries the engine, semi-exposed behind the accommodation and connected to the main rotor shaft by a belt drive. A slender aluminium boom, strengthened by a pair of long struts to the lower fuselage frame, carries both the tail rotor and swept fins. The upper fin is topped with a short horizontal T-shaped tailplate, with small endplate fins, and the lower one ends with a tailskid.

Operational history

100 Helis were built between 2014 and 2021.

References

Notes

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cicaré CH-8".

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