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#21
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I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in
Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? And adding to that, don't omit what it is they're doing with them in Australia either. They work those machine very hard, way over the limit, often flown at or above redline. It's no wonder they ball them up pretty regularly just due the higher risk of what they're doing. They've had high hours put on them, low or poor maintenance, usually followed with padding to logs to attempt to hide this. Considering how hard they're flown, you have to give the little R22 a little credit. Its' not a bad machine. You just gotta learn to control that *less* bit of energy a little better than you do in something with a heavier blade. There's no arguing that it's less forgiving, that's a fact, but it's nothing that can't be learned and controlled with "good" instruction. I have done full downs in R22's but have to admit, they're much less in heavier machines. PJ ============================================ Here's to the duck who swam a lake and never lost a feather, May sometime another year, we all be back together. JJW ============================================ |
#22
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On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 11:33:33 +0200, "Hennie Roets"
wrote: Given a choice, I'd do full touch down autos but not in my helicopter. Ever price new skids? I'll pass on doing full touch downs in a R-22. In fact, I'll pass on doing anything in a R-22. Biff I do not think you should write off the R22 that quick. There are about 80% more new R22 sold than any other helicopter in the world together. More of them are used for training than any other heli. If you look at the hours flown worldwide they fly the most as well. I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? It might not be the most rugged helicopter in the world. I also do not have the highest inertia in the main rotor blades but I can tell you if you can safely fly an R22 you will not have problems with any of the others. Regards Hennie I agree with your comments re flying the R-22 safely. It demands respect. I have flown them and agree that if you can fly the R-22 you can pretty much fly anything. I just dont think that the way the R-22 is built I'd be doing full down autos in one if I owned it. |
#23
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Biff Douglas wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 11:33:33 +0200, "Hennie Roets" wrote: Given a choice, I'd do full touch down autos but not in my helicopter. Ever price new skids? I'll pass on doing full touch downs in a R-22. In fact, I'll pass on doing anything in a R-22. Biff I do not think you should write off the R22 that quick. There are about 80% more new R22 sold than any other helicopter in the world together. More of them are used for training than any other heli. If you look at the hours flown worldwide they fly the most as well. I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? It might not be the most rugged helicopter in the world. I also do not have the highest inertia in the main rotor blades but I can tell you if you can safely fly an R22 you will not have problems with any of the others. Regards Hennie I agree with your comments re flying the R-22 safely. It demands respect. I have flown them and agree that if you can fly the R-22 you can pretty much fly anything. I just dont think that the way the R-22 is built I'd be doing full down autos in one if I owned it. ******************************** Why not? Is the R-22 not safe for full down autos? Is your skill or training level not up to it? Or is it just a matter of dollars? I don't believe in crashing my car just because it has all the airbags either but I've driven enough miles that I can avoid most of those accidents. Same in helicopters and airplanes. Now just watch....I'll trip over a damned tiedown cable and break my neck at the airport!!! ggg Part of what I perceive to be a problem is, if there is too great a potential for damaging the training equipment, we don't do the training in that equipment because it costs too much to replace it or fix it. So, let's just talk about it and not actually do it. Wait until you are actually faced with the real emergency and see if the talk works? I think that kind of training only leads pilots to be shaky in their own abilities, or on the other side of that coin, to be overconfident. There it becomes mostly a matter of the individual being able to adapt to the situation. When I was asked to ferry some Hughes 500's down to South America, I demanded some recurrent training before I did so. Hadn't flown one in a few years and wanted to make sure I was up to speed before I headed south. It included some touchdown autos. No problems and it certainly made me feel better. Glad to see some good input and response to this question. Thanks for your response. Ol Shy & Bashful |
#24
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![]() "SelwayKid" wrote in message om... "Hennie Roets" wrote in message ... I know this is a contraversial subject but I had the experience to do a full down auto in the R22. Maybe I was lucky because I did not damage the heli and did not even slide on. It was a bit of a rough landing but otherwise ok. I have a total of apprixmately 300 hours heli time. Enstrom, Mini 500, R22 etc. I was never taught to do a full down but Rocky might add some comments to what I want to say. I think you should FLY THE HELI UNTILL YOU ARE ON THE GROUND Just remember even with the low rotor rpm horn sounding you still have control. In the R22 you have still got control at 80% rotor rpm but I do not think it can be streched any further. I might have been lucky with mine but it is a lot easier to just land the heli than to do a power recovery. Regards Hennie ***************************** Hennie One of the things that prompted my original post was recalling that at most of the helicopter repair shops I have visited, you can nearly always find a tail boom that was chopped off by a hard landing. I have been puzzled by that for years and always asked how it happened. In most cases it was the direct result of a flawed pilot technique in a full down auto, either actual or practice. I could never figure out why it happened so often and came to the conclusion it was from poor pilot technique that came from poor training or just sloppy flying. With all that I have done with different machines and without further damage has me wondering. Don't misunderstand me...I'm not the ace of the base by any means. Did I get lucky and get some superb instruction (compared to today), or was it just luck? Rocky, as I never reached the auto stage in full sized heli's (health defeated me there) I can't say for definite what causes boom strikes, but on the RC models I've been teaching people to fly for years (well 25 of them) the boom killer is the cyclic stick position when the skids make contact with the ground. If there's even a TOUCH of back stick held in after the flare, the boom is a thing of the past, but a touch of forward cyclic at that point stops even a badly cacked up auto from turing into a badly cacked up boom. In fact, some of the guys I've taught to auto do the most tremendous slide-ons imaginable and don't break anything. This also applies to powered landings too. No back stick or you've no boom. Beav |
#25
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![]() "SelwayKid" wrote in message om... Biff Douglas wrote in message . .. On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 11:33:33 +0200, "Hennie Roets" wrote: Given a choice, I'd do full touch down autos but not in my helicopter. Ever price new skids? I'll pass on doing full touch downs in a R-22. In fact, I'll pass on doing anything in a R-22. Biff I do not think you should write off the R22 that quick. There are about 80% more new R22 sold than any other helicopter in the world together. More of them are used for training than any other heli. If you look at the hours flown worldwide they fly the most as well. I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? It might not be the most rugged helicopter in the world. I also do not have the highest inertia in the main rotor blades but I can tell you if you can safely fly an R22 you will not have problems with any of the others. Regards Hennie I agree with your comments re flying the R-22 safely. It demands respect. I have flown them and agree that if you can fly the R-22 you can pretty much fly anything. I just dont think that the way the R-22 is built I'd be doing full down autos in one if I owned it. ******************************** Why not? Is the R-22 not safe for full down autos? Is your skill or training level not up to it? Or is it just a matter of dollars? I don't believe in crashing my car just because it has all the airbags either but I've driven enough miles that I can avoid most of those accidents. Same in helicopters and airplanes. Now just watch....I'll trip over a damned tiedown cable and break my neck at the airport!!! ggg You shouldn't even joke about it Rocky:-) A pal of mine ran a full weekend on the racetrack with his "pretty" quick motorcycle (trackbike special 200mph+) and walking back to his car/trailer, he tripped and landed on his elbow. It blew up like it'd been hit with a sledgehammer. For a full year he could barely use his arm and even now he still can't straighten it. So that's two useless elbows he's got now:-)) (He did bust the other on his bike a few years earlier) Beav |
#26
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On Sat, 4 Dec 2004 22:00:10 -0000, "Beav"
wrote: "SelwayKid" wrote in message . com... "Hennie Roets" wrote in message ... I know this is a contraversial subject but I had the experience to do a full down auto in the R22. Maybe I was lucky because I did not damage the heli and did not even slide on. It was a bit of a rough landing but otherwise ok. I have a total of apprixmately 300 hours heli time. Enstrom, Mini 500, R22 etc. I was never taught to do a full down but Rocky might add some comments to what I want to say. I think you should FLY THE HELI UNTILL YOU ARE ON THE GROUND Just remember even with the low rotor rpm horn sounding you still have control. In the R22 you have still got control at 80% rotor rpm but I do not think it can be streched any further. I might have been lucky with mine but it is a lot easier to just land the heli than to do a power recovery. Regards Hennie ***************************** Hennie One of the things that prompted my original post was recalling that at most of the helicopter repair shops I have visited, you can nearly always find a tail boom that was chopped off by a hard landing. I have been puzzled by that for years and always asked how it happened. In most cases it was the direct result of a flawed pilot technique in a full down auto, either actual or practice. I could never figure out why it happened so often and came to the conclusion it was from poor pilot technique that came from poor training or just sloppy flying. With all that I have done with different machines and without further damage has me wondering. Don't misunderstand me...I'm not the ace of the base by any means. Did I get lucky and get some superb instruction (compared to today), or was it just luck? Rocky, as I never reached the auto stage in full sized heli's (health defeated me there) I can't say for definite what causes boom strikes, but on the RC models I've been teaching people to fly for years (well 25 of them) the boom killer is the cyclic stick position when the skids make contact with the ground. If there's even a TOUCH of back stick held in after the flare, the boom is a thing of the past, but a touch of forward cyclic at that point stops even a badly cacked up auto from turing into a badly cacked up boom. In fact, some of the guys I've taught to auto do the most tremendous slide-ons imaginable and don't break anything. This also applies to powered landings too. No back stick or you've no boom. Beav Beav, it really depends on the helicopter on how much aft cyclic if any at all. In all the one's that I fly you keep a slight aft cyclic. Most helicopters mast is tilted forward (an A-Star is 2 degree's if I recall right), and any forward cyclic you go skidding for a pretty good distance. Not something you really want. A little aft and you can stop in 5-10 feet. And all this without the tailboom getting hit. I bet the ones that the tailboom are getting whacked are mainly two bladed copters, low RPM (bad flair), and the pilot has a hefty aft cyclic when he is hitting the runway. And I bet the decent hasn't been slowed down like it should have been. -Mark |
#27
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![]() Beav wrote: "SelwayKid" wrote in message om... Biff Douglas wrote in message . .. On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 11:33:33 +0200, "Hennie Roets" wrote: Given a choice, I'd do full touch down autos but not in my helicopter. Ever price new skids? I'll pass on doing full touch downs in a R-22. In fact, I'll pass on doing anything in a R-22. Biff I do not think you should write off the R22 that quick. There are about 80% more new R22 sold than any other helicopter in the world together. More of them are used for training than any other heli. If you look at the hours flown worldwide they fly the most as well. I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? It might not be the most rugged helicopter in the world. I also do not have the highest inertia in the main rotor blades but I can tell you if you can safely fly an R22 you will not have problems with any of the others. Regards Hennie I agree with your comments re flying the R-22 safely. It demands respect. I have flown them and agree that if you can fly the R-22 you can pretty much fly anything. I just dont think that the way the R-22 is built I'd be doing full down autos in one if I owned it. ******************************** Why not? Is the R-22 not safe for full down autos? Is your skill or training level not up to it? Or is it just a matter of dollars? I don't believe in crashing my car just because it has all the airbags either but I've driven enough miles that I can avoid most of those accidents. Same in helicopters and airplanes. Now just watch....I'll trip over a damned tiedown cable and break my neck at the airport!!! ggg You shouldn't even joke about it Rocky:-) Beav Why not joke? Sure beats crying! I've been so beat up/busted up/shot/stabbed and generally treated ugly that it doesn't matter anymore! I've walked into wings, rotor blades, tail rotors,(mostly at night) tripped over tie downs, slipped on ice and oil, and wondered why I ever bothered to get into aviation? Still, in at least 18 mayday situations, I've only really been injured once in aircraft. Night time in a phyxed wing with an engine failure over the pine swamps. Just another adventure...... BTW, shootings and stabbings are for real. Rocky A pal of mine ran a full weekend on the racetrack with his "pretty" quick motorcycle (trackbike special 200mph+) and walking back to his car/trailer, he tripped and landed on his elbow. It blew up like it'd been hit with a sledgehammer. For a full year he could barely use his arm and even now he still can't straighten it. So that's two useless elbows he's got now:-)) (He did bust the other on his bike a few years earlier) Beav |
#28
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![]() hellothere.adelphia.net wrote in message ... On Sat, 4 Dec 2004 22:00:10 -0000, "Beav" wrote: "SelwayKid" wrote in message .com... "Hennie Roets" wrote in message ... I know this is a contraversial subject but I had the experience to do a full down auto in the R22. Maybe I was lucky because I did not damage the heli and did not even slide on. It was a bit of a rough landing but otherwise ok. I have a total of apprixmately 300 hours heli time. Enstrom, Mini 500, R22 etc. I was never taught to do a full down but Rocky might add some comments to what I want to say. I think you should FLY THE HELI UNTILL YOU ARE ON THE GROUND Just remember even with the low rotor rpm horn sounding you still have control. In the R22 you have still got control at 80% rotor rpm but I do not think it can be streched any further. I might have been lucky with mine but it is a lot easier to just land the heli than to do a power recovery. Regards Hennie ***************************** Hennie One of the things that prompted my original post was recalling that at most of the helicopter repair shops I have visited, you can nearly always find a tail boom that was chopped off by a hard landing. I have been puzzled by that for years and always asked how it happened. In most cases it was the direct result of a flawed pilot technique in a full down auto, either actual or practice. I could never figure out why it happened so often and came to the conclusion it was from poor pilot technique that came from poor training or just sloppy flying. With all that I have done with different machines and without further damage has me wondering. Don't misunderstand me...I'm not the ace of the base by any means. Did I get lucky and get some superb instruction (compared to today), or was it just luck? Rocky, as I never reached the auto stage in full sized heli's (health defeated me there) I can't say for definite what causes boom strikes, but on the RC models I've been teaching people to fly for years (well 25 of them) the boom killer is the cyclic stick position when the skids make contact with the ground. If there's even a TOUCH of back stick held in after the flare, the boom is a thing of the past, but a touch of forward cyclic at that point stops even a badly cacked up auto from turing into a badly cacked up boom. In fact, some of the guys I've taught to auto do the most tremendous slide-ons imaginable and don't break anything. This also applies to powered landings too. No back stick or you've no boom. Beav Beav, it really depends on the helicopter on how much aft cyclic if any at all. In all the one's that I fly you keep a slight aft cyclic. Most helicopters mast is tilted forward (an A-Star is 2 degree's if I recall right), and any forward cyclic you go skidding for a pretty good distance. Not something you really want. A little aft and you can stop in 5-10 feet. And all this without the tailboom getting hit. That forward tilt on the mast would make up for the difference I would imagine Mark, and it's something I forgot about. (I know the 206 has a forward AND a sideways tilt built in, but it slipped my mind). I didin't know the Squirrel (A-Star) did though. Thanks for the info. I bet the ones that the tailboom are getting whacked are mainly two bladed copters, low RPM (bad flair), and the pilot has a hefty aft cyclic when he is hitting the runway. And I bet the decent hasn't been slowed down like it should have been. Most of the models are two bladers, with blades that are free to move within the grips. If these slow down, the lag is sufficient that a handful of collective can see a blade hooked under the vertical stab, and that's not even REALLY slowed down. Even at these rpm, the blades are still lifting and no out of the ordinary coning is happening. Mind you, I bet you full size guys would LOVE the blade rigidity that we RC guys have. We can pick up the whole machine by the blade tips:-) They don't flex much as you can guess:-) Beav |
#29
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Beav wrote: "SelwayKid" wrote in message om... Biff Douglas wrote in message . .. On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 11:33:33 +0200, "Hennie Roets" wrote: Given a choice, I'd do full touch down autos but not in my helicopter. Ever price new skids? I'll pass on doing full touch downs in a R-22. In fact, I'll pass on doing anything in a R-22. Biff I do not think you should write off the R22 that quick. There are about 80% more new R22 sold than any other helicopter in the world together. More of them are used for training than any other heli. If you look at the hours flown worldwide they fly the most as well. I saw statistics a while ago on the internet about helicopter accidents in Australia and do you know who came out on top. Guess????? It might not be the most rugged helicopter in the world. I also do not have the highest inertia in the main rotor blades but I can tell you if you can safely fly an R22 you will not have problems with any of the others. Regards Hennie I agree with your comments re flying the R-22 safely. It demands respect. I have flown them and agree that if you can fly the R-22 you can pretty much fly anything. I just dont think that the way the R-22 is built I'd be doing full down autos in one if I owned it. ******************************** Why not? Is the R-22 not safe for full down autos? Is your skill or training level not up to it? Or is it just a matter of dollars? I don't believe in crashing my car just because it has all the airbags either but I've driven enough miles that I can avoid most of those accidents. Same in helicopters and airplanes. Now just watch....I'll trip over a damned tiedown cable and break my neck at the airport!!! ggg You shouldn't even joke about it Rocky:-) Beav Why not joke? Sure beats crying! Well go one then, I did :-)) I've been so beat up/busted up/shot/stabbed and generally treated ugly that it doesn't matter anymore! I've walked into wings, rotor blades, tail rotors,(mostly at night) tripped over tie downs, slipped on ice and oil, and wondered why I ever bothered to get into aviation? I think in your shoes I'd be wondering why I ever got out of BED!! :-))) Still, in at least 18 mayday situations, I've only really been injured once in aircraft. I congratulate you Rockster, that's a bloody good record in anyone's book. Night time in a phyxed wing with an engine failure over the pine swamps. Just another adventure...... BTW, shootings and stabbings are for real. I didn't doubt it for a second. I *WAS* going to say "Take care", but I have a feeling it'd fall on deaf ears, so I'll just say "Keep it up" instead ![]() And keep up with the histories, they make fascinating reading. Beav |
#30
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Beav
You guys always make me laugh with your wry sense of humor! For a while my wife would walk in the door and ask me, "Well, what have you done today to damage your beautiful body?"...(she has this illusion that I am special) and it got to the laughable point she'd nearly do a strip search checking for bloody areas. At least I have gotten over it for at least the past 12 months or so. Hmmmm, perhaps I should go risk my neck again.. On the helicopter side, there has been a lot of discussion about the relative merits of different machines for touchdown autos over in JustHelicopters forum. there are some pretty abrasive people there and some who will jerk your chain just because, but if you can get past that and learn how to navigate the posts, there is a plethora of deep solid information to be gained. Trying to think of the different helicopters I've done full down autos in will include the Bell 47 series(lots of them), Hughes 269/300 (dates me huh?), H-500 series, Hiller 12 series, Bell 206, UH-1, R-22(yeehaww), Enstrom F28, probably some others that I can't think of at the moment. A technique we learned in the USMC while working down under was to just simply roll inverted and autorotate for a rapid gain in altitude ; ) Merry Christmas y'all Ol Shy & Bashful aka Rocky |
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