Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
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Kenny Phillips
So similar to retreating blade stall in a powered rotor. Those things have a rotor tach, and certain procedures are pounded into your head in training (such as stick position.)From another forum, from the N number it appears to be an Autogyro Cavalon with a Rotax 915. That’s a lot of engine for a gyro that size and my guess is what happens most commonly: a blade flap, where the gyro is going forward too fast for the rotor RPM, which causes the advancing (right) side to get substantially more lift than the retreating (left) side. That’s caused most typically by not having and keeping the stick all the way back on takeoff. Because of the 915’s power, it’s easier to get into that situation, especially if someone is rushed.
Pure speculation at this point but that’s hands down the most common cause for this scenario. And the pusher prop can get hit by the rotor, breaking it off.
It’s definitely possible to hit the prop with the rotor on the ground. I’d even say “common”, in retreating blade stalls, since the spinning rotor hits its teeter stops vertically and the blade flexes up and down a LOT because the rotor is spinning too slowly to keep its rigidity under the circumstances.So similar to retreating blade stall in a powered rotor. Those things have a rotor tach, and certain procedures are pounded into your head in training (such as stick position.)
I don't think it's easy or even possible to strike the pusher prop on the ground, I'll have to look, could be a rotor strike, or worse, as someone has speculated. I looked long and hard at one of these, but couldn't justify it even with my wildest rationalizations.
Sadly, too many gyro pilots, non-pilots, and FW pilots have that image of gyros. For consistency, what if this was the “common understanding” of FW pilots?Pretty neat but not for me. Here's a guy that's either really talented or got a few fries missing ...
Sadly, too many gyro pilots, non-pilots, and FW pilots have that image of gyros. For consistency, what if this was the “common understanding” of FW pilots?
Flown intelligently, both gyros and FWs are safe - and both have risks.
BTW: the gyro in the video you shared is NOT a “modern” type with the risks engineered out.
But they’re a lot of fun. Like a motorcycle in the air (the open gyros) - and I wouldn’t dare ride a motorcycle!
I live near a lake and one of the most fun things to do is cruise along above the water at about 10 feet. There are a few Icons and a floatplane or two around, so I need to keep my head on a swivel! I always wear an inflatable life vest when I do so and have extensively studied the area for wires, etc. Even my wife, who doesn’t really enjoy going in the gyro, enjoys that.Gyroplane and Seaplane flights were the most fun I’ve had in aircraft. Not that they’re similar, just that they’re both a ton of fun.
I live near a lake and one of the most fun things to do is cruise along above the water at about 10 feet. There are a few Icons and a floatplane or two around, so I need to keep my head on a swivel! I always wear an inflatable life vest when I do so and have extensively studied the area for wires, etc. Even my wife, who doesn’t really enjoy going in the gyro, enjoys that.
“Complete disregard” is a bit harsh IMHO and, I’d say, rare. At least to me, that implies an intentional act of not following procedures.I cannot understand how people have rotor blade flaps on takeoffs (retreating blade stall by outrunning the rotor or too little rotor RPM for the acceleration or wind coming through the disc). It would have to be a complete disregard of any sequence in procedure or by keeping stick position forward instead of pulling back. You simply will have an extremely difficult time getting a rotor to flap if you did not do something that drastically wrong. Yet people do it.
I can't imagine becoming "distracted" or "forgetting" to follow a takeoff procedure when the penalty of doing so is serious injury or death.“Complete disregard” is a bit harsh IMHO and, I’d say, rare. At least to me, that implies an intentional act of not following procedures.
By contrast, I think it’s much more common for gyro pilots to become distracted at a critical time and accidentally not follow procedures they unquestionably know they should.
This is a big reason I prefer the Magni, with its flex cable for prerotation. I always prerotate before getting on the runway (typically in the runup area) and never get on the runway with less than a “safe” rotor RPM. I can keep the prerotator engaged for a LONG time and can move the stick anywhere I want while it’s engaged. By contrast, virtually every other brand has a rigid prerotator drive that requires the pilot to release it before pulling the stick back prior to takeoff roll. That means most pilots of that arrangement start prerotating on the runway - holding up the runway for 15-30 seconds or so. And then they need to remember to first release the drive and then pull the stick back and then throttle up. If there’s other traffic in the pattern or a tower controller who gets antsy or some other distraction, the risk of the pilot failing to pull back before starting the roll goes up considerably - as does the risk of a blade flap.
Did the pilot make a mistake and break procedure? Absolutely. But the design of the gyro upped the risk for that.
This isn’t some esoteric risk: regrettably, it’s way more common than it should - could - be.
And yet it happens, especially in gyros. Same for the “impossible turn”, if one thinks about it.I can't imagine becoming "distracted" or "forgetting" to follow a takeoff procedure when the penalty of doing so is serious injury or death.