MightyGNU- I fully understand why you may be upset that people are not just pointing you toward a catalog where you can buy what you need... but there's a couple of reasons for that.
I applaud your enthusiasm. As a licensed helicopter pilot myself, I can appreciate why you'd want to build one. They are a unique type of fun that you can't really replicate in any other man-made moving object.
With that said- these people are responding the way they are for a reason.
Helicopters, even well-engineered, 8-figure airframes, are very dangerous. That danger is mitigated only through two things: very careful, meticulous operation by pilots, and very very detailed engineering by designers.
If you're already a licensed helicopter pilot, I may be telling you things you already know. But a helicopter is NOT an airplane. They are fundamentally different, and in a helicopter it is very, very easy to put aircraft into a situation that feels fine but is actually extremely dangerous.
If you are able to build a functional helicopter, and it flies, and you start buzzing around with no training, I can almost guarantee you that isn't going to end well. Helicopters have a number of very unique responses to flight conditions that are NOT intuitive and can quickly result in an unscheduled high speed appointment with the ground. Any helicopter, let alone one without FADEC or aircraft state monitoring systems, can be put by the pilot into a state which is extremely precarious- and without training, you will not know how to respond. A helicopter which has entered a vortex ring state, for example, will kill you on the first try if you don't know how to identify it and how to respond.
The gearbox of a modern helicopter is literally one of the most intensely engineered components of any mechanical system currently in existence. A helicopter gear box has to do a lot of things all at once - it has to transmit a lot of power without generating a lot of heat or vibration; in many cases it has to help handle a significant portion of loads transmitted from the rotor to the airframe, which can be gigantic; it has to be absolutely reliable, and if it does fail, it has to do so in a way that gives the aircrew and cargo or passengers the best possible chance of avoiding a fiery death.
Designing a mechanical assembly that can do all of that is exceedingly difficult.
You will not be able to buy the right assembly off the shelf for cheap. And unless you plan to spend a very long time performing testing and paying for very expensive one-off parts, and very expensive non-destructive testing of those parts, you will not be able to build the right assembly yourself.
If you build a gearbox yourself, it is very likely that you will experience a failure- and if that happens at more than a few feet off the ground, or if it happens on the ground at anything above idle, this failure
will kill you.
MightyGNU said:
If they don't show damage after an hour or so at %150 maximum rpm they should be OK for flight
This test, were you to run it, would tell you nothing without very expensive NDT that you can't perform at home- unless you are set up for x-ray and dye penetrant testing- which I'm pretty sure I can safely assume you aren't. As a side note, you should
never test a flight critical rotating component at 150% of anything. Centrifugal force is a square function- meaning if you test rotors at 150% of rated RPM, they are very likely to come apart, or suffer damage such that when they are rotating and loaded at full power, they will come apart. Don't do that. Please.
MightyGNU said:
Yes that is what I meant.
I'm not sure you understand what he is saying - inspecting the gears of a helicopter doesn't mean opening the case and looking at them for a few minutes. It usually means completely disassembling the entire gearbox, and having the gears, shafts, bearings, and sensors sent off for very detailed dye penetrant and/or (usually and) x-ray testing to look for cracks. This is expensive - and if you don't do it, at some point you
will experience a catastrophic failure.
As trained engineers, most of us have seen what happens when engineered systems fail. I would hesitate to ever tell anyone that what they want to try to build is impossible. But if $10,000 for a kit is an impossible extension of your budget, than it seems to me that your current circumstances are not likely to permit you to do what you're telling us you want to do. Ultimately we can't stop you- but what we can do is try to make it clear, from our experience, what you are up against and what risks you are taking that you may not be considering. That's what we do for a living, and that's what we are doing here.