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- Jul 3, 2012
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Velocity173
Apparently the pilot decided it was easier to just land than fast rope the guys in.
Gravity. There's equations for it and everything.What happened aerodynamically or controlling of the aircraft? I saw the high nose up pitch to cut the forward momentum. But what happened to prevent maintaining altitude?
What happened aerodynamically or controlling of the aircraft? I saw the high nose up pitch to cut the forward momentum. But what happened to prevent maintaining altitude?
oh, is that what happened? I thought maybe his landing spot capsized due to the weight of the chopper. kinda like that congress critter who thunk that Guam would capsize if more troops were stationed there.Yes, very bad video. You never take video in portrait orientation. If you do start a video in portrait, you never ever switch to landscape while still filming...
Well when you flare that aggressive (quick stop), the rotor overspeeds and the engines disconnect from the xmsn through the freewheeling unit. The engine ECU/DEC schedule the fuel for an off loaded condition. Once the pilot pulls in a rapid collective to arrest the descent, the rotor decays rapidly, the slow spool up of the engines can’t meet the demand. The rotor drags the engines down, you get a low rotor rpm warning and the aircraft settles under its own power.
There are comments online that suggest vortex ring state (VRS) but I don’t see it. I see an aggressive maneuver in a heavy aircraft and the engines couldn’t meet the demand the pilot was placing on them.
Can't tell from the video, but possible he came in downwind?
Settling with power? Not a helo pilot, and didn't stay at a Holiday Inn last night.
Some of the passengers appeared a little wobbly on exit.Yes, very bad video. You never take video in portrait orientation. If you do start a video in portrait, you never ever switch to landscape while still filming.
Hopefully nobody was seriously injured.
@Velocity173 ... is that high pitch deceleration maneuver a common and frequently practiced one?
@Velocity173 ... is that high pitch deceleration maneuver a common and frequently practiced one?
@Velocity173 thanks for your insight into the rotary world. Very informative