That's kinda stupid garage-scienticism to be honest.
- TFA does not mention the stability issue. Guess why people and drones fly tri, quads, etc and not regular helis. Yeah. (a simplification: stand on one leg. Now stand on 2, and use your 2 hands as well. 4 legs. Stable heh?)
- Yes single large prop is more efficient than many tiny props. But put many large props and the difference isn't so big. Let's take a $1000 ultra efficient quad: www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0SR5bzuFq4 yeah thats 100min of flight time for something smaller than the Align Trex of the video. And it's cheaper too.. The trex flies 5 to 10minutes (6S 5000mah). At equivalent batteries, the trex flies 25min (hint: the trex is not made for efficiency, it's made for 3D). An average camera-less quad flies 10 to 15min (3S 3000mah).
- TFA compares a $5000 Align Trex 700 with a bunch of expensive upgrades - the top of the top - with one very good pilot with decades of training... to a $200 toy.
- Taking cheap shots about their measures of efficiency is hypocritical. TFA says that the researchers did investigate the efficiency and calculated a 25% gain. Presumably their calculations will be in their research paper. You on the other hand have just given a YouTube video and battery capacities as your 'proof'. Heck, the researchers went as far as constructing a device to test their efficiency claims.
- The stability might be an issue for completely manual flight (but then, people fly ordinary helicopters just fine...) but with computer-assisted balancing, the problem can be much reduced. Even existing quad copters often have computer-aided stability.
I investigated and I say this is wrong. No backup either.
= The point.
Now then again, I actually fly every of these so I pretty much know what the efficiency is.
YES they gain 25% efficiency with the tricopter that has a huge prop in the middle, I TRUST that. But the test is meaningless:
If you change the 3 props instead and put big props, with corresponding motors. Guess what. Efficiency is probably higher than the 25% difference. I actually design my own. In fact, I also design my own control boards (the software that is)
Quadcopters use accelerometers, barometers, gyroscopes and magnetometers (and GPS) to ensure stability.
Guess what. Measurement from these devices isn't 0ms. Actuating the motor control isn't 0ms.
On regular 1 rotor head heli it isn't either. In fact, it's longer.
Result? it's more stable with 4 props than one prop. It has more inherent stability., even if it wasn't "computer assisted". Timecop did a fully gyro stabilized quad copter recently that shows exactly that, if any "actual proof" was needed. Gyro stabilized can be made with no computer whatsoever (like helicopters are/used to be - that's why they're very, very hard to pilot, real ones and RC ones).
The physics makes sense. larger rotors are more efficient because they have lower disk loading. At really low loadings you can lift a human with their own power.
Not to mention simplicity. I suppose it wouldn't matter as much for commercially manufactured rigs, but for hobbyists this thing is a lot more complicated.
Maybe there is something more complicated going on with helicopters that I am not aware of, but a helicopter would not be an inherently stable system due to it "hanging" from the rotor because the direction the rotors are providing thrust changes (all other things being equal), when the helicopter starts to tip one direction.
- TFA does not mention the stability issue. Guess why people and drones fly tri, quads, etc and not regular helis. Yeah. (a simplification: stand on one leg. Now stand on 2, and use your 2 hands as well. 4 legs. Stable heh?)
- Yes single large prop is more efficient than many tiny props. But put many large props and the difference isn't so big. Let's take a $1000 ultra efficient quad: www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0SR5bzuFq4 yeah thats 100min of flight time for something smaller than the Align Trex of the video. And it's cheaper too.. The trex flies 5 to 10minutes (6S 5000mah). At equivalent batteries, the trex flies 25min (hint: the trex is not made for efficiency, it's made for 3D). An average camera-less quad flies 10 to 15min (3S 3000mah).
- TFA compares a $5000 Align Trex 700 with a bunch of expensive upgrades - the top of the top - with one very good pilot with decades of training... to a $200 toy.
- $200 toys made of wood and plastic flown by random people are actually pretty good at acro. Why? Because being more stable they're much easier to fly. Ex: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzu5eSZqKpY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QP0QjIsTTM
So yeah. Not exactly impressed when that's coming from a university. I expected much better.