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Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or
near a helicopter. The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J |
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"J" wrote in message
... Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or near a helicopter. Same here The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J If you're planning an emergency landing in water, is the first thing that springs to mind. -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 17:05:22 -0700 (PDT), J
wrote: Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or near a helicopter. The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J When I was aboard INTREPID one of our helo squadron, HS-11, pui one into the water. The co-pilot was a buddy of mine, know affectionately as "Dirty John" (he had a date with every single woman in RI...once :-) ). I was watching the PLAT when it happened. The helo went in upright and immediately flipped inverted. The sponson floatation bags inflated as advertised. He said that he waited 'till the bubbles cleared (just like in the Dilber Dunker), disconnected his head set, released his harness, and pulled the door jetteson handle. Nothing happened. He pulled harder, and nothing happened. Then he pulled as hard as he could. Nothing happend. At that point he got worried. Then he membered that the main door was open so he swam back through the fuselage and went out that way. He said if the floatation bags had not worked he would probably not have made it. So, yes, the ability to jetteson the doors is important. |
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On Sat, 17 Jul 2010 08:24:57 -0400, Bill Kambic
wrote: On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 17:05:22 -0700 (PDT), J wrote: Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or near a helicopter. The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J When I was aboard INTREPID one of our helo squadron, HS-11, pui one into the water. The co-pilot was a buddy of mine, know affectionately as "Dirty John" (he had a date with every single woman in RI...once :-) ). I was watching the PLAT when it happened. The helo went in upright and immediately flipped inverted. The sponson floatation bags inflated as advertised. He said that he waited 'till the bubbles cleared (just like in the Dilber Dunker), disconnected his head set, released his harness, and pulled the door jetteson handle. Nothing happened. He pulled harder, and nothing happened. Then he pulled as hard as he could. Nothing happend. At that point he got worried. Then he membered that the main door was open so he swam back through the fuselage and went out that way. He said if the floatation bags had not worked he would probably not have made it. So, yes, the ability to jetteson the doors is important. I have to correct myself: the H-3 did not have a "door jetteson handle" in the cockpit it had a "window jetteson handle." Served the same function as a crew escape route. |
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On Jul 17, 5:24*am, Bill Kambic wrote:
, the ability to jetteson the doors is important. Bill, Thanks for the clue. I get it now. I appreciate your time and effort. Cheers . . . .Jeff |
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On Sat, 17 Jul 2010 22:58:33 -0700 (PDT), J
wrote: On Jul 17, 5:24*am, Bill Kambic wrote: , the ability to jetteson the doors is important. Bill, Thanks for the clue. I get it now. I appreciate your time and effort. Cheers . . . .Jeff De nada!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
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On Jul 17, 12:09*pm, Bill Kambic wrote:
On Sat, 17 Jul 2010 08:24:57 -0400, Bill Kambic wrote: On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 17:05:22 -0700 (PDT), J wrote: Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or near a helicopter. The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J When I was aboard INTREPID one of our helo squadron, HS-11, pui one into the water. *The co-pilot was a buddy of mine, know affectionately as "Dirty John" (he had a date with every single woman in RI...once :-) ). I was watching the PLAT when it happened. *The helo went in upright and immediately flipped inverted. *The sponson floatation bags inflated as advertised. *He said that he waited 'till the bubbles cleared (just like in the Dilber Dunker), disconnected his head set, released his harness, and pulled the door jetteson handle. *Nothing happened. *He pulled harder, and nothing happened. *Then he pulled as hard as he could. *Nothing happend. *At that point he got worried. Then he membered that the main door was open so he swam back through the fuselage and went out that way. *He said if the floatation bags had not worked he would probably not have made it. So, yes, the ability to jetteson the doors is important. I have to correct myself: *the H-3 did not have a "door jetteson handle" in the cockpit it had a "window jetteson handle." *Served the same function as a crew escape route. Makes more sense than the helo ejection seat. Seems when you have a sinking helo the more holes in the fuselage for egress the better. I see to recall the ejection seat had some sequence of blowing the rotors, then the canopy then going out that way. Funny none of the parachute test guys (all enlisted for some reason) ever wanted to try the system, I think it got as far as a mockup. Then died, might have been an Army only or joint Army / AF project. Parachute test guys always made sure a dummy went first. Then they'd do it for real. Unlike the test pilots, of course they were all officers and engineers, do the 'it works trust us' they would fly anything. There's a moral somewhere... |
#8
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![]() "J" wrote in message ... Hi. An ignorant civilian here with a question. I've never been in or near a helicopter. The May 2010 USNI Proceedings (pg. 78) mentions that "[t]he Navy's H-72A's have several specific equipment additions, including jettisonable cockpit doors...." I can understand jet fighters have jettisonable cockpit canopies but I'm having trouble imagining circumstances in which a helicopter would need to have jettisonable cockpit doors. Can someone please clue me in? Thansk . . . J Helicopters in civilian use have jettisonable exits , you have to go through a training course including an underwater escape in a tank to qualify for offshore work. Most choppers quickly roll upside down on ditching so getting out the way you came in is not an option. Keith |
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