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"Joerg" wrote in message
om... Helicopters are sensitive things. When something would go wrong with the rotor it may not be recoverable. We had one go down about 1/2 mile from here last year and unfortunately that one was fatal. I believe a bolt had come off the rotor assy so there probably was nothing the pilot could have done. There was one in the North Sea not so long ago, where a manufacturing fault in a blade was exacerbated by a lightning strike, and failed sometime later in flight. The aircraft was based at my local airport. That is scary. I bet the first time a crew experienced a flame-out because the Concorde flew by got white knuckles, too. What I read was that it affected all the engines. There was a BA 747 that lost all four engines in a cloud of volcanic ash. The captain (Eric Moody, I think his name was) was quoted as telling the passengers something along the lines of: "All four engines have stopped, but rest assured we're doing our damndest to get them going again". They descended from cruise altitude in a glide, assuming they'd have to ditch, and when they popped out of the ash cloud at about 12,000 feet, the engines spooled up one by one (they'd been left in auto-start mode) and they limped into a nearby airport. The engines were all knackered thanks to being shotblasted by the ash (and the windscreen was almost opaque) but provided enough power that they got away with it. I remember that we got some serious attention when landing in Franfurt on one engine. All the fire trucks and ambulances they could muster were seen on the ground, lights flashing and all. They cleared the whole airspace and that alone was an unusual sight. It wasn't too scary for me because I used to parachute. That's where you have to stick the landing no matter what. No engines... Well, there's no harm in erring on the side of caution. I remember when a club at my airport ran a Jet Provost, and the pilot called to report smoke in the cockpit. Flashing lights, immediate clearance to land however he wanted on whatever he wanted, everything else in the area told to bugger off for a while or orbit where they were, you name it. Turned out everything was fine and it was actually a tiny fluid leak onto a hot pipe, but if the controller gives you unconditional free rein, it's one less thing to worry about. D. |
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