My company C-LVL is working on a small rugged tactical autogyro. We based our design on a civilian model and modified it extensively to build a working ultralight (lifting body, crash proof cabin,efficient powerful turbocharged Rotax engine, hard-points, ...).
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The TOAD (Tactical Organic Airborne Demonstrator) has a simple autogyro design you can learn to fly in 2 weeks, the payload is limited compared to a typical helicopter but the cost enables swarm deployment. It is a VSTOL design that can land almost vertically but needs a short rolling take off.
Capable of transporting up to 3 crew members, it can be used for damage assessment, search and rescue, surveillance, tracking of vehicles and vessels, photography and reconnaissance.
It is like an “airborne horse”, capable of moving light supplies and carry out reconnaissance quickly and stealthily. It is cheap and rugged enough so one could be used over every convoy, or deployed to every FOB.
More information is available on our website : c-lvl dot com (I can't post URL yet, maybe someone can post it in a comment) .
I would be curious to hear what you think about our low cost / low tech approach to the scarcity of air assets.
Laurent, aka KFRtoad
View attachment 2365
The TOAD (Tactical Organic Airborne Demonstrator) has a simple autogyro design you can learn to fly in 2 weeks, the payload is limited compared to a typical helicopter but the cost enables swarm deployment. It is a VSTOL design that can land almost vertically but needs a short rolling take off.
Capable of transporting up to 3 crew members, it can be used for damage assessment, search and rescue, surveillance, tracking of vehicles and vessels, photography and reconnaissance.
It is like an “airborne horse”, capable of moving light supplies and carry out reconnaissance quickly and stealthily. It is cheap and rugged enough so one could be used over every convoy, or deployed to every FOB.
More information is available on our website : c-lvl dot com (I can't post URL yet, maybe someone can post it in a comment) .
I would be curious to hear what you think about our low cost / low tech approach to the scarcity of air assets.
Laurent, aka KFRtoad