Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
Only helicopter in the world that I know of being pressurized is what Clark made reference to; MI-24. It's pressurized for NBC ops though and not for high altitude, although I'm sure it would work at altitude.
In Afghanistan the highest we usually went was around 13,500-14,000 ft. If we went above that we could sign out the HEEDS bottles from the armory. Doesn't do much good if though if you're on HEEDS at say 16,000 ft and your pax are getting loopy in the back. Against regs as well.
You're right, so many accidents preventable. As I always say, it's understandable that a PIC will launch into weather conditions that they shouldn't because of the unexpected. A good PIC has the patience and skills that when they're thrown that curve ball after takeoff, they either find a way to avoid it all together, or they excecute an appropriate IIMC recovery. A good PIC can adapt to the unexpected. Unfortunately you can't teach that. It comes from years getting backed into a corner by weather and finding a solution out.
Well said. The desire to complete the mission is strong. The hardest part of medevac flying is knowing when to delay or cancel a flight.
Ok, I was wondering about pressurization because CAMTS requires medical transports to be pressurized, but the helicopters flying here are not. The airport is 6500 feet, and some routes need a minimum of over 10,00 for terrain clearance. I guess it would be hard to require a pressurized helicopter if there aren't any.