crapworks said:
Actual experience tells me not so much. I've actually removed the flybar on my single rotor RC helicopter. Flew it without any electronic stabilization. Gyroscopic effects did very little to dampen roll/pitch. The helicopter was very unstable even if the weight is below the rotor disk.
As far a pitch / roll dampening goes, if the helicopter was perched on a single point, it would fall over faster with the rotor not spinning than with the rotor spinning (at 0 pitch with no crosswind), so there is some dampening. However this is offset by the fact that lift from the rotor increases with speed
2 of the rotor, so even a slight horizontal gust will upset a hovering helicopter due to the difference in lift from the advancing versus retreating blade (relative to the wind). The gyroscopic effect does shift the responce to cyclic roll / pitch torques almost 90 degrees to result in pitch / roll response, but this is taken care of by having the model shift the cyclic inputs about 90 degrees to compensate.
I have not flown a 'flybar less' coaxial helicopter yet
Should be much more stable, since any crosswind induced torque is virtually eliminated (the two rotors produce opposing torques). The small models have an issue that the same design that makes them stable about the rotor axis, tends to also make them climb as opposed to moving forwards at any significant speed, making them difficult to fly outdoors in even moderate wind, but that could be due to insufficient cyclic effect.
Getting back to the OP, as posted above, it would seem that the offset between the net drag force versus the net reaction force to deceleration is one factor in the stability of those models. I'm not sure what the other factors are in actual models that have flybars or the onboard electronics which may include gyros.
Danger said:
I would tend to think of the fuselage as a pendulum. With it hanging below the disk, it will oscillate under side loads to some extent, and soon dampen them.
Except the only source for side loads would be crosswinds. The main rotor generates lift (positive, zero, or negative) and torque. The tail rotor does generates some side load though, enough that a stable hover requires a slight lean.