Dead geese found in flight control and debris field of medical helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing 3
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the remains of a dead goose was found "embedded" in the flight control system of a helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing three.www.cbsnews.com
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening? I'm assuming medical ops don't use NVG?
Why would you make that assumption?Dead geese found in flight control and debris field of medical helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing 3
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the remains of a dead goose was found "embedded" in the flight control system of a helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing three.www.cbsnews.com
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening? I'm assuming medical ops don't use NVG?
My thought was cost of equipment and training - but really I was putting it out there as a question.Why would you make that assumption?
Dead geese found in flight control and debris field of medical helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing 3
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the remains of a dead goose was found "embedded" in the flight control system of a helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing three.www.cbsnews.com
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening? I'm assuming medical ops don't use NVG?
FYI: there were over 16,000 aircraft bird strikes in 2022. Every now and then they hit in the wrong place.Any way to prevent this from happening?
It’s common for ems to use NVG. I worked for crop dusting outfits that had fixed wing and helicopter ops using NVG’s and we were very “cost” conscious. It’s an easy sell for ems. Actually fits that mission much better than ag.My thought was cost of equipment and training - but really I was putting it out there as a question.
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening?
Ask Sully.
Yes, they use NVGs. I’ve struck maybe a half a dozen birds at night including the one below. Never saw any of them. How to prevent it? Well a bird strike windscreen and avoid flying below 3,000 ft. Easier said than done in a part 27 helicopter.Dead geese found in flight control and debris field of medical helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing 3
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the remains of a dead goose was found "embedded" in the flight control system of a helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing three.www.cbsnews.com
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening? I'm assuming medical ops don't use NVG?
One method is population control. Don’t know what type of goose was involved in this accident but in the DC Metro area the Canada goose is ubiquitous and a nuisance. None of the localities in my area have the political will to perform effective wildlife control. Similar problem with white tailed deer, which fortunately fly only when struck by vehicle.Dead geese found in flight control and debris field of medical helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing 3
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the remains of a dead goose was found "embedded" in the flight control system of a helicopter that crashed in Oklahoma, killing three.www.cbsnews.com
"Dead geese found in flight control system"
Any way to prevent this from happening? I'm assuming medical ops don't use NVG?
Ask Sully what? So what insight could he provide on geese impacting the flight control system of a helicopter?
They got NVG certified.I was surprised when a very large gaggle of noisy geese flew overhead around 11pm
They found one bird went through the servo cowl and was “embedded” in the flight control servo(s) which in turn probably caused the upset and loss of the M/R.I doubt the geese damaged the flight controls.
FYI: from hawk impact to ground impact was 11 seconds. Of that time the pilots only had about 6 seconds worth to figure out what happened. Unfortunately, due to the throttles being knocked back to about 75%, the MR decayed to less than 90% in the first 5 seconds which was unrecoverable at that altitude. No bird remains made into the cockpit in this accident. The impact force jarred the controls aft.S-76C suffered a bird strike right at the top of the windhield,
Considering that Sully‘s plane took geese through both engines, you think that makes him the go to source of how to avoid hitting geese? In a helicopter?How to prevent a birdstrike. It starts with being able to see the bird. Hard enough in the day time, damn near impossible at night, even with NODs.
If you’re lucky enough to see a big ol’ hunk of butterball co-altitude, you get to decide which way to go lickety-split. Personally I’m a nose-high goes high, bank away from the threat guy, but night ops leaves me fat dumb and happy with the big sky theory re: bird strikes.
Sometimes, mother nature kicks you square in the crotch though.
I’ve noticed that light as your helos fly over, but I wonder. Just like deer whistles, do they really do anything?Kinda wonder if they had their little anti bird light retrofit. Then again, bird strikes went up with us so not totally sure of their effectiveness.
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Considering that Sully‘s plane took geese through both engines, you think that makes him the go to source of how to avoid hitting geese? In a helicopter?
Not sure. I think the stats say a 60 % reduction in strikes but after we equipped, strikes actually went up. Still need more time to assess their effectiveness.I’ve noticed that light as your helos fly over, but I wonder. Just like deer whistles, do they really do anything?
The latest systems the FAA is testing uses UV LEDs to deter birds. There is/was an FAA report out that used a crop duster as the test aircraft and if I recall correctly, the UV lights would chase birds out of a field where pulse lites would not. Seems birds "see" more in the UV spectrum.Not sure. I think the stats say a 60 % reduction in strikes but after we equipped, strikes actually went up. Still need more time to assess their effectiveness.
Yeah a saw an article on that the other day. Interesting to see how that plays out.The latest systems the FAA is testing uses UV LEDs to deter birds. There is/was an FAA report out that used a crop duster as the test aircraft and if I recall correctly, the UV lights would chase birds out of a field where pulse lites would not. Seems birds "see" more in the UV spectrum.