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Velocity173
Rumor is Hog found a job with in the Taliban AF as a civilian contractor and “just ate the big one.”
Yeah no kidding. Lots of sick minded individuals - to put it nicely .Says a lot about that part of the world that they just laugh at it.
He’s gonna need a good body guy. Hope he was insured…
Says a lot about that part of the world that they just laugh at it.
I'll bet the preflight must have been great.
"Ahmed, go fly the helicopter."
"Brother, I do not know how to fly."
"Brother, Allah will help you fly."
"OK, Allahu Akbar!"
The crowd seemed amused
I did help pay for it, and I’m still OK with how it ended.If you did not pay for it, Its just a toy and its OK.
All of that probably doesn't translate very well. After all, the notion of flight didn't originate from that sector of the world, did it?If he was US trained, he must have been sleeping during the aerodynamics for dummies class. Specifically the transient increase in torque in a left turn and more importantly, percent increase in torque vs angle of bank.
We don't know anything about the guys watching, but they were involved in a vicious guerrilla action that ran, off and on, for about forty years. I would presume they've seen death before, and have a pretty callous attitude to it.Says a lot about that part of the world that they just laugh at it.
Looks like both pilots survived......Rumor is Hog found a job with in the Taliban AF as a civilian contractor and “just ate the big one.”
Looks like both pilots survived......
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/273795
Looks like both pilots survived......
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/273795
If he was US trained, he must have been sleeping during the aerodynamics for dummies class.
Yes, if I recall correctly. Same structural airframe.Wonder if some of that translates into the MD530.
In talking to some of my friends that were over there doing the teaching, it was very tough. I was told the average male Afghan has the equivalent of a 1st grade American education.
"Crashed apparently due to a technical malfunction.Looks like both pilots survived......
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/273795
FYI: if one were to survive it would be in one of these airframes due to its design. Been keeping bodies whole and vertical since the late 60s. Has quoted by some as bullet proof. Very few other types compare.I'd be way more than surprised if anything was left but mush.
That would be amazing; I've seen the aftermath of two helicopters (and a dozen planes) where the occupants clearly were compromised with extreme prejudice.FYI: if one were to survive it would be in one of these airframes due to its design. Been keeping bodies whole and vertical since the late 60s. Has quoted by some as bullet proof. Very few other types compare.
The pictures and 1st person stories I've heard on survivability of the OH-6/500 series are amazing. If I had to be in a helicopter wreck it would be in this airframe as its one of the few models that covers the crew/cabin with primary structure vs simple S/M or "tupperware." The last one you want to be in is the AS350/H125 series or a Robbie in my experience.That would be amazing;
Another one is Loach: the Story of the OH-6/500excellent book
Makes me wanna order an MD530. Except for the price and operating costs, of course.The pictures and 1st person stories I've heard on survivability of the OH-6/500 series are amazing. If I had to be in a helicopter wreck it would be in this airframe as its one of the few models that covers the crew/cabin with primary structure vs simple S/M or "tupperware." The last one you want to be in is the AS350/H125 series or a Robbie in my experience.