Sikorsky R-4
The Sikorsky R-4 is a two-seat helicopter designed by Igor Sikorsky with a single, three-bladed main rotor and powered by a radial engine. The R-4 was the world's first large-scale mass-produced helicopter and the first helicopter used by the United States Army Air Forces, the United States Navy, the United States Coast Guard and the United Kingdom's Royal Air Force and Royal Navy. In U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard service, the helicopter was known as the Sikorsky HNS-1. In British service it was known as the Hoverfly.
Development
The VS-316 was developed from the famous experimental VS-300 helicopter, invented by Igor Sikorsky and publicly demonstrated in 1940. The VS-316 was designated the XR-4, under the United States Army Air Forces' series for "Rotorcraft". The XR-4 first flew on 14 January 1942 and was accepted by the Army on 30 May 1942. The XR-4 exceeded all the previous helicopter endurance altitude and airspeed records that had been set before it. The XR-4 completed a cross-country flight from Bridgeport, Connecticut, to Wright Field Ohio, set a helicopter peak altitude record of, while achieving 100 flight hours without a major incident and top airspeed approachingThe British Admiralty, having learned of the VS-300, made a ship available, Empire Mersey, fitted with an landing platform, intended to show the USN their work with ship-borne autogyros. After her loss in 1942 to a U-boat, she was replaced by SS Daghestan. The first deck-landing trials aboard Daghestan were carried out in 1944. The British received two of the first eight helicopters built.
On 5 January 1943, the United States Army Air Forces ordered 29 prototypes. The first three were designated YR-4A and used for evaluation testing. The YR-4A benefited from a Warner R-550-1 engine, compared to the R-500-3 in the prototype, and a rotor diameter increased by. Evaluation of the YR-4A demonstrated a need for further improvements, including moving the tailwheel further aft on the tailboom, venting the exhaust to the side instead of downward, and increasing the fuel capacity by. These and other design changes led to the designation of later prototypes as YR-4B, which were used for service testing and flight training.
United Aircraft announced on 5 November 1944 that the one hundredth helicopter had been completed, and that the production rate had reached five every six days.
Operational history
Following the sinking in January 1944 of USS Turner, a Sikorsky R-4 flew life saving blood plasma for the casualties from New York.On 22–23 April 1944, U.S. Army Lieutenant Carter Harman of the 1st Air Commando Group conducted the first combat rescue by helicopter using a YR-4B in the China-Burma-India theater. Despite the high altitude, humidity, and capacity for only a single passenger, Harman rescued a downed liaison aircraft pilot and his three British soldier passengers, two at a time. On 22–23 January 1945, another rescue by the R-4 involved several legs for refueling and navigating through passes between mountains nearly 10,000 feet tall, to reach a weather station located at an elevation of 4,700 feet. The higher-than-normal altitude required a downhill run of 20 ft to get airborne.
While the R-4 was being used for rescues in Burma and China, it was also being used to ferry parts between floating Aviation Repair Units in the South Pacific. On 23 May 1944, six ships set sail with two R-4s on board each vessel. The ships had been configured as floating repair depots for damaged Army Air Forces aircraft in the South Pacific. When the helicopters were not being used to fly the parts from one location to another, they were enlisted for medical evacuation and other mercy missions.
In Royal Air Force service, the R-4 was called the Hoverfly. The Helicopter Training School, formed January 1945 at RAF Andover, was the first British military unit to be equipped with the helicopter. Many RAF Hoverfly Mark Is were transferred to the Royal Navy for training and one was used in 1945/46 by Fairey Aviation to develop rotor systems for their Gyrodyne helicopter.
Variants
Some R-4s had the tailwheel located at the extreme aft end of the boom near the tail rotor while others had it positioned at the midpoint of the boom. Additionally, some had short "stub" exhaust pipes from the engine while others had a much longer one which extended vertically and then aft above the main landing gear struts.;XR-4
;YR-4A
;YR-4B
;R-4B
;XR-4C
;HNS-1
;Hoverfly I
;Sikorsky S-54
Operators
- Fleet Air Arm
- * 703 Naval Air Squadron
- * 705 Naval Air Squadron
- * 771 Naval Air Squadron
- * Royal Naval Flying School
- Royal Air Force
- * Helicopter Training Flight
- * No. 529 Squadron RAF
- * No. 657 Squadron RAF
- United States Army Air Forces
- United States Coast Guard
- United States Navy
Aircraft on display
- R-4B in the reserve at the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum. It was acquired by the Museum in 1983
- Hoverfly Mk.1, KL110 at the Royal Air Force Museum London. Supplied under lend-lease, it arrived in Britain in February 1945. It flew with the RAF, later the Royal Navy, until 1951. It was used by the College of Aeronautics, Cranfield until it was presented to the RAF museum in 1966.
- XR-4C prototype, the Smithsonian Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
- R-4B is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio. It was donated by the University of Illinois in 1967.
- R4-B is on display at the New England Air Museum, located next to Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks, CT.
- National Museum of Naval Aviation in Pensacola, Florida. Exhibit is an HNS-1 Hoverfly - On indoor static display in US Coast Guard markings.
- Army Aviation Museum at Fort Rucker, Alabama. U.S. Army R-4B Hoverfly and R-6A Hoverfly II on indoor static display.
- Yanks Air Museum in Chino, California has an R-4B in their restoration hangar.
Specifications (R-4B)