For some models there's nothing to "arrest" it except mother-earth. Looked like he did his pilot thing rather well. Too bad it wasn't to dry land.looks sort of like an un-arrested autorotation,
Looks like it to me also, although it's a bit hard to tell. Those blades seem to be coning upward considerably at the bottom before impact.Maybe RRPM got too low
My guess is that the pilot was flying low and fast along the coast, and when they had a problem, there wasn't sufficient time to lower the collective, pitch for proper autorotation airspeed, and then flare at the bottom. There's a concept in helicopter flying known as the "dead person's curve," where too little altitude, too much airspeed, etc., results in insufficient time/altitude to properly enter autorotation and successfully flare and land at the bottom. This incident may end up being a textbook example of that.
The HV chart is only applicable when power is being applied. In this case he was already in a glide and screwed up at the bottom which happens. We do autos in all types of flight profiles to include zero airspeed/OGE and low level.
Here is a video of some colleagues doing low level autos/ engine failure immediately after take off.
Certainly too much speed wouldn't be an issue, but a blessing.My guess is that the pilot was flying low and fast along the coast, and when they had a problem, there wasn't sufficient time to lower the collective, pitch for proper autorotation airspeed, and then flare at the bottom. There's a concept in helicopter flying known as the "dead person's curve," where too little altitude, too much airspeed, etc., results in insufficient time/altitude to properly enter autorotation and successfully flare and land at the bottom. This incident may end up being a textbook example of that.
Certainly too much speed wouldn't be an issue, but a blessing.
...low level high speed autos are not a problem…add NVG’s and you can call yourself an Army Aviator
Don’t forget crop dusters.
Or a Naval Aviator or perhaps a Coast Guard Aviator, or maybe a Marine Aviator (crayons or not.) A slim possibility, an Air Force pilot. Perhaps, more than likely an EMS or LEO helicopter pilot.
Don’t forget crop dusters.
Wonder what the correct procedure is. Seems like during high speed nap of the earth you’d bottom the collective and back on the cyclic to trade airspeed for altitude till at auto speed then forward to maintain that speed to the flare/full collective. Is that just dead man’s land?One of my close friends, with tens of thousands of helicopter hours, died while crop dusting when his engine failed. Almost no time to get the collective down, flair to bleed-off airspeed, and set it down.
Wonder what the correct procedure is. Seems like during high speed nap of the earth you’d bottom the collective and back on the cyclic to trade airspeed for altitude till at auto speed then forward to maintain that speed to the flare/full collective. Is that just dead man’s land?
Same thing happened to a home town fellow I knew. That's why I mentioned it. Hard way to make a living. Or try to.One of my close friends, with tens of thousands of helicopter hours, died while crop dusting when his engine failed. Almost no time to get the collective down, flare to bleed-off airspeed, and set it down.
Agreed. What do you see happening there? Panicked and forgot to put the collective down until late in the game? Other?That was a completely botched autorotation.
Don’t forget crop dusters.
Very hard to do when you're at a low altitude. Things happen really fast when you lose an engine at that speed, and that altitude.
Refer to the video I posted.
Trade airspeed for rotor RPM and flare.
Wonder what the correct procedure is. Seems like during high speed nap of the earth you’d bottom the collective and back on the cyclic to trade airspeed for altitude till at auto speed then forward to maintain that speed to the flare/full collective. Is that just dead man’s land?
Have you ever done an autorotation in a true engine-out emergency?
He’s cruising down the beach with passengers. Probably didn’t even realize he lost power for awhile. \
At the speeds and altitudes we spray if the engine quits it will not be much of an auto. Not enough time to do anything when the thing breaks at five feet.Wonder what the correct procedure is. Seems like during high speed nap of the earth you’d bottom the collective and back on the cyclic to trade airspeed for altitude till at auto speed then forward to maintain that speed to the flare/full collective. Is that just dead man’s land?
Wonder what the correct procedure is. Seems like during high speed nap of the earth you’d bottom the collective and back on the cyclic to trade airspeed for altitude till at auto speed then forward to maintain that speed to the flare/full collective. Is that just dead man’s land?
Yes. Three (in three different types of single engine helicopters) of them to the ground. One was at night. That landing left skid marks on the road where I landed and also in some clothing. I have also done thousands of them as an instructor which is what saved my butt when the reals ones happened.
Not a lot of time to do much of anything from this altitude other that a quick “awe f**k”
I'm not sure where you are trying to go here... There are always human factors involved. There is also the "oh crap" factor that goes with it. Maybe I'm missing something.
The point you’re missing is that the video you posted shows a planned autorotation with a planned throttle chop. Much, much different than a real world engine failure at low altitude, with the natural/normal human factors, much like the difference between the NTSB simulations compared to the real world reactions, as depicted in the clip from “Sully.”
In post #6 you said your guess was that "there wasn't sufficient time to lower the collective, pitch for proper autorotation airspeed, and then flare at the bottom."
There was in fact enough time. The video was just an example that showed you can train for and successfully execute a low level auto rotation. This pilot had plenty of time but screwed up with little to no flare. This type of screwup has happened before and will happen again.
For the record, at the training level the video depicts, most of the time the only person who knows when the "emergency" will occur is the instructor. Correlation level learning...
My assertion is qualified based upon both my professional experience as an instructor pilot and from my own personal experiences with three engine failures in helicopters.