Are you a pilot?......
I’m guessing no......
What makes you say that?
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Are you a pilot?......
I’m guessing no......
There are VFR flyways in and around the LA area, but in degrading weather TCAS will only help so much. At some point the pilot has to commit to IFR. VFR to IFR (IMC) kill many pilots. If you've never experienced it, you have no idea what an uncertain 60 seconds that can become. I've heard a report that the aircraft was descending at greater than 2000' per minute. Bottom line, the pilot lost his situational awareness and either pull so much power he drooped the rotor, or he reduce the power enough to enter an autorotational descent. Neither one of those implies good decision making. Bottom line, we'll probably find out he lost his situational awareness and became spatially disoriented. Quite possibly the most uncomfortable phenomenon you'll ever feel. Your body screams one thing, the instruments say the other. 99.99% of the time the instrument are right. If they are wrong, it's usually only one, and you have to fill in the gap with the information from the other. Now, the S-76 typically has some level of an autopilot. But if you put off your decision to land until you can't, then you try to commit to IFR and haven't trained the transition in a while, it can end badly.
In one of the most heavily radar covered airspaces in the US, it's an unfortunate and avoidable loss of life.
It depends on GWT and rotor design, but no. I would consider 2000 fpm slow. The UH-60 auto-rotational chart gives about 2000 fpm at the optimal (90 Kts ish) airspeed. Above or below that airspeed, rate of descent only goes up. In training I’ve done in excess of 3000-3500 fpm on initial entry.im a fixed wing guy so bear with me, is 2000fpm a normal autorotation rate, it seems a little fast to me......
It depends on GWT and rotor design, but no. I would consider 2000 fpm slow. The UH-60 auto-rotational chart gives about 2000 fpm at the optimal (90 Kts ish) airspeed. Above or below that airspeed, rate of descent only goes up. In training I’ve done in excess of 3000-3500 fpm on initial entry.
Adult bald eagle.
Oh, and small dogs shouldn't be left unattended in the yard..........
There are VFR flyways in and around the LA area, but in degrading weather TCAS will only help so much. At some point the pilot has to commit to IFR. VFR to IFR (IMC) kill many pilots. If you've never experienced it, you have no idea what an uncertain 60 seconds that can become. I've heard a report that the aircraft was descending at greater than 2000' per minute. Bottom line, the pilot lost his situational awareness and either pull so much power he drooped the rotor, or he reduce the power enough to enter an autorotational descent. Neither one of those implies good decision making. Bottom line, we'll probably find out he lost his situational awareness and became spatially disoriented. Quite possibly the most uncomfortable phenomenon you'll ever feel. Your body screams one thing, the instruments say the other. 99.99% of the time the instrument are right. If they are wrong, it's usually only one, and you have to fill in the gap with the information from the other. Now, the S-76 typically has some level of an autopilot. But if you put off your decision to land until you can't, then you try to commit to IFR and haven't trained the transition in a while, it can end badly.
In one of the most heavily radar covered airspaces in the US, it's an unfortunate and avoidable loss of life.
Well, when I flew Huey’s in flight school we did autorotations to the ground. So we touched down at rates of descent that were less than 500 FPM. In dual engine aircraft, specifically Apaches and Black Hawks, we train to terminate the maneuver to a hover. So we enter the auto, get into steady state conditions (2000 FPM ish), start a progressive decel descending below 200’ (the training manual says 125 but if you start a slow progressive decel going through 200 it’s a smooth termination) at 125 bleed off your forward airspeed and the trade off that airspeed for a reduced rate of descent... to less than 500 FPM.when you yank the collective and touchdown what’s your ROD?
You must know a Black Hawk pilot or two...Hey, is there a "helo crash discussion" thread? I just really don't want to scroll down expecting to see nice titties and instead see a sloppy pair of DirtyDanglers that make me throw up a little in my mouth.
Hey, is there a "helo crash discussion" thread? I just really don't want to scroll down expecting to see nice titties and instead see a sloppy pair of DirtyDanglers that make me throw up a little in my mouth.
I had heard the heli was bought used from State of IL..probably the stripped down low bid model without TCAS , ???The problem was the aircraft was not equipped with TCAS..... with his kind of money I find that hard to understand...
Yeah, I saw where the winning bid at auction was $500K..........I had heard the heli was bought used from State of IL..probably the stripped down low bid model without TCAS , ???
Actually, a professional corporate pilot with an ATP, CFI/CFII/MEI and over 6k hours so.... you guessed wrong. And TCAS won’t do anything for a CFIT accident. Just an FYI.Are you a pilot?......
I’m guessing no......
Agreed. Looks to be 3 years plus. The young ones have mottled coloring and don't get white heads/crowns until 2.5 or 3 years. 6 foot or so wingspans are pretty common. We have a shit ton of them around here where I live. In the spring, the all come down from the Skagit and chase Blackmouth and Dolly Varden. When the runs start moving upstream, they follow. April, May and early June are a lot of fun to watch them. I have a picture of (IIRC) 22 of them all lined up at waters edge, checking out the fishin'. I'll post it up if I can find it. Oh, and small dogs shouldn't be left unattended in the yard..........
I hope this chick didn't have the red chile/ jalapeno pinto beans with her smoked brisket last night for supper like I did.
Actually, a professional corporate pilot with an ATP, CFI/CFII/MEI and over 6k hours so.... you guessed wrong. And TCAS won’t do anything for a CFIT accident. Just an FYI.
TCAS is Traffic Collision Avoidance System.
EGPWS I believe is what y’all are thinking about Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System.
Hey, is there a "helo crash discussion" thread? I just really don't want to scroll down expecting to see nice titties and instead see a sloppy pair of DirtyDanglers that make me throw up a little in my mouth.
You do now!
who else noticed this was the vortex gym?