Parachute Museum Profile picture
Parachute Museum tells the story of development of the free fall parachute from invention at McCook Field up to the role it plays in landing todays spacecraft.

Dec 27, 2019, 5 tweets

Designed & tested at McCook field in 1948 by Heinrich and Gross: the highly-stable ribless guide-surface parachute. This chute was mass-produced mostly as stabilization chutes; but there was a version aimed at landing personnel as well. 1/5. @McCookField @AFmuseum @AFResearchLab

This design was deemed “stable”, I.e., less prone to swinging like a pendulum during descent or while decelerating payload. Per frame “e” below, it generates a stronger restoring moment whenever tilted. Figure from T. Knacke’s “Parachute recovery systems design manual”. 2/5.

Guide-surface chutes are still used today as ejection seat drogues. They are based on a gore pattern that is easier to sew together. Top right photo from Kididis’ “Art of Drag“. Harrier jet e-seat drogue pics by @LaboPotvin . 3/5

There was a personnel recovery version, the C-11, fielded by the USAF in the late 50’s but only on few acft (e.g. F-86D). Versus today’s C-9 canopy, their stability was better; but they were slow inflators and so unfit for low-altitudes ejections. Left pic from “Art of Drag”. 4/5

Helmut Heinrich invented the guide-surface parachute in 1941 as a munition decelerator. The design was more complicated and included ribs sewn onto guide surface and roof panels (per gore). 5/5. More details in apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fullte…
#parachute @Skydivethemag #aviationhistory

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling