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UMD Submissions to the
VFS Student Design Competition

Every year since 1984, a student helicopter design competition has been co-sponsored by the American Helicopter Society, International, and the rotorcraft industry. Students from the University of Maryland first took part in 1988, placing third, but remained absent from the competition for 10 years until, in 1998, Andy Bernhard and a group of other graduate students of the Alfred Gessow Rotorcraft Center revived interest in it. Since then, Maryland teams have participated every year, winning first place in fifteen out of the nineteen competitions, over universities such as the Georgia Institute of Technology, the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, and the U.S Air Force Institute of Technology. The students develop the design during a one-semester class in Helicopter Design (ENAE 634) offered by the Department of Aerospace Engineering in the spring of each year. The class is co-taught by Professor Inderjit Chopra and Senior Research Scientist Vengalattore Nagaraj.

Something, 1st Place (2019)

Team: Seyhan Gul, Ravi Lumba, Abhishek Shastry, Mrinalgouda Patil, Shashank Maurya, Amy Morin, Nishant Nemani

Challenge: To design an ...

Kwatee, 1st Place (2018)

Team: Alexander Cheung, Ian Bahr, Jonathan Detoro, Westley Weinkam, Havya Patel, Matthew David, Jason Xu, and Samuel Dame

Challenge: To design a reconfigurable VTOL aircraft to operate in a megacity-type environment with a payload of 100kg or higher. The aircraft must have a minimum cruise speed of 333 km/h and maximum gross takeoff weight of 600kg. 

Chezoia, 1st Place (2017)

Team: Andrew Desrochers, Andrew Dallas, Jeremy Foust, and Scott Jordan

Challenge: To design an unmanned aircraft capable of hover for a cumulative duration of 24 hours inside three hover stations separated by a distance of 0.54 nm (1 km). The aircraft must be able to withstand a helicopter operating environment throughout the mission duration and carry a simulated passenger weighing 176.4 lb (80 kg).