For decades, backcountry aviation has relied on a static formula: massive wing area, nose-heavy engines, and complex mechanical flaps. This approach forced a compromise between low-speed performance and cruise efficiency. The Virtual Wing Sport-Camper breaks this cycle by replacing passive structural mass with active fluidic energy, delivering elite STOL performance without the traditional aerodynamic penalties.
Core Philosophy: Energy over Area
Traditional wings are passive structures. To reduce stall speeds, designers increase wing size, which adds weight and creates immense drag at cruise. The "Virtual Wing" utilizes Active Flow Control (AFC) to manipulate airflow dynamically. By injecting high-energy air over the wing surface only when needed, we generate the lift of a massive wing using the physical footprint of a small, fast one.
Propulsion: Distributed and Redundant
The aircraft utilizes a distributed power architecture to eliminate single points of failure and optimize fluidic paths.
Twin Root-Mount Engines: Two 75 hp units are integrated at the wing-root leading edges. This placement allows for the shortest possible path between the exhaust manifolds and the internal wing plenum, minimizing thermal and pressure losses.
Remote-Drive Pusher Props: Short, stiff driveshafts power trailing-edge propellers. This "pusher" configuration ensures the wing operates in clean, laminar air, increasing L/D efficiency by ~8% and protecting the props from ground debris.
Integrated Air Augmentation: Each engine feeds a multi-stage interstage burner. This system energizes exhaust gas with additional fuel and air, which is then diverted to Boundary Layer Suction (BLS) inlets and trailing-edge blowing slots. This prevents flow separation at high angles of attack and exponentially increases circulation.
Tactical Agility
Backcountry utility is often limited by physical span.
Obstacle Avoidance: An 8-meter span allows access to narrow riverbeds and forest clearings that would clip the wings of an 11-meter Super Cub.
Structural Safety: Despite the short span, a high-camber airfoil and Hoerner wingtips provide a "Dead-Stick" buffer. If all power is lost, the plane maintains a safe, predictable 65 km/h stall speed—ensuring the aircraft is never entirely dependent on active systems for a safe landing.
Ground-View Vision Suite
Precision landing on unknown surfaces requires total situational awareness.
Panoramic Cockpit: Moving the engines and props to the rear eliminates the nose-blind spot.
Analog/Digital Fusion: A reinforced polycarbonate floor window provides zero-power depth perception. This is paired with a 4K Near-Infrared (NIR) "Chin" camera and dual-spectrum (White/IR) lighting. This suite allows the pilot to identify 15 cm obstacles or soft mud even in fog or total darkness.
Technical Specifications
MTOW: 600 kg
Landing Distance: 15–20 meters
Active Stall Speed: ~40 km/h
Cruise Speed: 200–220 km/h
Safety: Full twin-engine redundancy for thrust and virtual lift.
Conclusion
The Virtual Wing Sport-Camper moves backcountry flight from the era of mechanical trade-offs to the era of systems integration. The result is a 600 kg aircraft that lands in 15 meters, has a true redundancy fail-safe, maintains fighter-jet-like controllability even in high crosswinds, cruises faster and more efficiently than a Super Cub, and offers the situational awareness necessary for the most challenging backcountry exploration. This is the new standard for the camping spots—a plane designed not just to fly, but to survive and conquer the wilderness.







