Hiller OH-5A
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Hiller OH-5A
Hiller may refer to: * Hiller (surname) * Hiller, Pennsylvania * Hiller Aircraft Corporation: ** Hiller Hornet ** Hiller Flying Platform ** Tanner-Hiller Airport ** Hiller Aviation Museum ** Hiller X-18 ** Fairchild Hiller FH-227 ** YH-32 Hornet The Hiller YH-32 Hornet (company designation HJ-1) was an American ultralight helicopter built by Hiller Aircraft in the early 1950s. It was a small and unique design because it was powered by two Hiller 8RJ2B ramjet engines mounted on the rotor ...
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Hiller (surname)
Hiller is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Matthias Hiller (1646–1725), German Protestant theologian and philologist * Philip Frederick Hiller (1699–1769), German Evangelical parson and hymnwriter * Johann Adam Hiller (1728–1804), German composer * Johann von Hiller (1754–1819), Austrian general * Friedrich Adam Hiller (c. 1767–1812), German composer, son of Johann Adam Hiller * Ferdinand Hiller (1811–1885), German composer (born Ferdinand Hildesheim) * H. Gustave Hiller (1865–1946), artist and stained glass designer * Hiram M. Hiller, Jr. (1867–1921), American physician and ethnographer * Lejaren Hiller Sr. (1880–1969), American photographer and illustrator * Arthur Hiller (1881–1941), German football player * Kurt Hiller (1885–1972), German socialist writer * Marius Hiller (1892–1964), German football player * Hob Hiller (1893–1956), American baseball player * Wendy Hiller (1912–2003), English actress * Arthur Hiller (1923–2016 ...
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Hiller, Pennsylvania
Hiller is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 1,155, down from 1,234 at the 2000 census. It is located in Luzerne Township. Geography Hiller is located in western Fayette County at (40.009210, -79.904558). It is in the northeast corner of Luzerne Township, bordered to the east by Dunlap Creek, to the northeast by the borough of Brownsville, and to the northwest by the Monongahela River, which forms the Washington County line. Pennsylvania Route 43, the Mon–Fayette Expressway, passes just south of Hiller, with access from Exit 26, Telegraph Road, which becomes High Street in the center of Hiller. Via PA 43, Uniontown is to the southeast and downtown Pittsburgh is to the north. According to the United States Census Bureau, the Hiller CDP has a total area of , of which is land and , or 3.08%, is water. Demographics As of the census of 2000, there were 1,234 ...
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Hiller Aircraft
Hiller Aircraft Company was founded in 1942 as Hiller Industries by Stanley Hiller to develop helicopters. History Stanley Hiller, then seventeen, established the first helicopter factory on the West Coast of the United States, located in Berkeley, California, in 1942, under the name "Hiller Industries," to develop his design for the coaxial-rotor XH-44 "Hiller-Copter" for the U.S. Army. The XH-44 became operational in 1944.Hiller Helicoptertimeline(accessed Nov 9 2011) In collaboration with Henry J. Kaiser, it became United Helicopters in 1945. In the postwar years, United Helicopter produced a number of innovative helicopter designs for military and civilian purposes, including coaxial-rotor and tailless designs, as well as more conventional models. In January, 1949, a Hiller 360 became the first civilian helicopter to cross the United States. Besides helicopters, in the year after World War II, Stanley Hiller researched a two-man rocket-jet aircraft design that took off ...
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Hiller Hornet
The Hiller YH-32 Hornet (company designation HJ-1) was an American ultralight helicopter built by Hiller Aircraft in the early 1950s. It was a small and unique design because it was powered by two Hiller 8RJ2B ramjet engines mounted on the rotor blade tips which weigh each and deliver an equivalent of for a total of . Versions of the HJ-1 Hornet were built for the United States Army and the United States Navy in the early 1950s. The Hiller Museum identifies the YH-32A, named the ''Sally Rand'', as the first helicopter gunship. Design and development The Hiller HJ-1 Hornet was an early attempt to build a jet-powered helicopter using ramjets. Before that there had been experiments with the XH-26 Jet Jeep tip rotor pulse jets. The HJ-1 ramjet tipped rotor propels the rotor and the aircraft. Unlike a conventional helicopter, this mechanically simple design avoids the need for a tail rotor. Unfortunately, the tip speeds on helicopter rotor blades are subsonic, and ramjets are ine ...
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Hiller Flying Platform
The Hiller VZ-1 Pawnee (U.S. Army designation; earlier Army designation: HO-1) was a unique direct-lift rotor aircraft, using contra-rotating ducted fans for lift inside a platform upon which the single pilot shifted body weight for directional control. The platform was developed starting in 1953 under an Office of Naval Research (ONR) contract to Hiller Aircraft, and flew successfully beginning in 1955. Design and development The original concept had been developed by Charles H. Zimmerman in the late 1940s. Further development followed, both by Hiller Aircraft and the De Lackner Company. There were two main models, the ONR model 1031-A-1, and the somewhat larger VZ-1 Pawnee model produced in 1956 for the U.S. Army. Three of each model were built as prototypes. Neither of the variants was put into production. The smaller ONR model used two Nelson H-59 piston engines, coupled to the propellers by a modified helicopter transmission built by the Industrial Power Division of Hall ...
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Hiller Aviation Museum
The Hiller Aviation Museum is an aircraft history museum located at the San Carlos Airport in San Carlos, California. The museum was founded by Stanley Hiller in June 1998. and is endowed by members of the Hiller family. It specializes in Northern California aircraft history and helicopter history. The museum is also an affiliate within the Smithsonian Affiliations program. Permanent exhibits This museum has more than 50 aerospace vehicles along with companion descriptive displays concerning the history of flight. Some of the exhibits include: * The Hiller XH-44 (replica), first coaxial helicopter to fly in the US * The Hiller Flying Platform, an experimental aircraft from 1955 to give a single passenger low-altitude flight * The front 45 feet of a Boeing 747 * Fairchild 24 *Stearman-Hammond Y-1, a mid-1930s trainer also used as a remotely piloted aircraft * The Rutan Defiant, Burt Rutan's personal homebuilt airplane. * A Grumman HU-16 Albatross that was the first to circumna ...
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Hiller X-18
The Hiller X-18 was an experimental cargo transport aircraft designed to be the first testbed for tiltwing and V/STOL (vertical/short takeoff and landing) technology. Development Design work started in 1955 in aviation, 1955 by Stanley Hiller Jr and Hiller Aircraft Corporation received a manufacturing contract and funding from the United States Air Force, U.S. Air Force to build the only X-18 built, serialled ''57-3078''. To speed up construction and conserve money, the plane was constructed from scavenged parts including a Chase C-122 Avitruc, YC-122C Avitruc fuselage, ''49-2883'', and turboprops from the Lockheed XFV, Lockheed XFV-1 and Convair XFY, Convair XFY-1 Pogo experimental fighter programs. The tri-bladed contra-rotating propellers were a giant 16 ft (4.8 m) across. The Westinghouse turbojet engine had its exhaust diverted upwards and downwards at the tail to give the plane pitch control at low speeds. Hiller nicknamed their X-18 the Propelloplane for public re ...
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Fairchild Hiller FH-227
The Fairchild F-27 and Fairchild Hiller FH-227 were versions of the Fokker F27 Friendship twin-engined turboprop passenger aircraft manufactured under license by Fairchild Hiller in the United States. The Fairchild F-27 was similar to the standard Fokker F27, while the FH-227 was an independently developed stretched version. Design and development The Fokker F27 began life as a 1950 design study known as the P275, a 32-seater powered by two Rolls-Royce Dart turboprops. With the aid of Dutch government funding, the P275 evolved into the F27, which first flew on November 24, 1955. The first prototype was powered by Dart 507s and would have seated 28. To correct a slight tail-heaviness and to allow for more seats, the second prototype (which first flew in January 1957) had a fuselage, which would allow seating for 32. By this stage, Fokker had signed an agreement that would see Fairchild build Friendships in the U.S. as the F-27. The first aircraft of either manufacturer to enter ...
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