Doing stupid things like this helicopter pilot does in this video is exactly how accidents happen.
Thats true, I thought about that. Still, looks like an accident waiting to happen to me.Pretty cool video though. Some of the camera angels may make the helicopter seem closer to the terrain/power lines than it really was.
Any FARs broken?
Supposed to stay 500' above cars, people, boats and structures in non-city areas (like this) unless landing or taking off.
No.Supposed to stay 500' above cars, people, boats and structures in non-city areas (like this) unless landing or taking off.
What gives GA a bad rap is when someone kills someone on the ground, like the forced landing last week that killed a motorist. People will give you a wide latitude to do goofy stuff, as long as it doesn't affect them. However, if crash into a house or a car and kill someone who is not involved in GA, that's not going to be tolerated for long.
So...not being a helicopter guy...where is the "route(s) or altitude(s) specifically prescribed for helicopters" that applies here?No.
91.119(d)(1).
What gives GA a bad rap is how the media portrays it as a whole. SnF was good and it was a safe week for GA. A lot of people flying and enjoying themselves yet people die every 15 mins in a car accident.
So...not being a helicopter guy...where is the "route(s) or altitude(s) specifically prescribed for helicopters" that applies here?
Doing stupid things like this helicopter pilot does in this video is exactly how accidents happen.
Not just that, but it is Mulholland Drive. Probably not the best place to be doing low level in a helo.Tail number easily read, open road and public area. Hello, FizDo.
An example would be helicopter routes, which can be found on helicopter route charts. https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/fli...foSheets/PISheets/Helicopter-Route-Charts.pdf
...and I'm guessing that he wasn't following a prescribed helicopter route, either...Not just that, but it is Mulholland Drive. Probably not the best place to be doing low level in a helo.
No.
91.119(d)(1).
People will tolerate auto fatalities because almost everyone in this country rides in a car at some point. Most people don't fly GA, for them it's a risk without a reward. We all assume the risk, we need to make sure we don't lay some of it on those who didn't sign up for it.
So is this a route or altitude prescribed for helicopters by the FAA?
...and I'm guessing that he wasn't following a prescribed helicopter route, either...
So what are the minimum altitudes for a helicopter if 91.119(d) doesn't apply?He doesn't have to be to fly below the typical minimum altitudes.
Excerpt from recent FAA Interpretation to Mr. Noah Haydn-Myer (July 16, 2014)(d) Helicopters, powered parachutes, and weight-shift-control aircraft. If the operation is conducted without hazard to persons or property on the surface—
(1) A helicopter may be operated at less than the minimums prescribed in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, provided each person operating the helicopter complies with any routes or altitudes specifically prescribed for helicopters by the FAA;
You quote the regulation without the body which I have done now. So is this a route or altitude prescribed for helicopters by the FAA?
Is there a regulatory reference in there, or is he just making it up as he goes?Excerpt from recent FAA Interpretation to Mr. Noah Haydn-Myer (July 16, 2014)
Your letter poses three questions. Your first question is whether the pilot must comply with any routes or altitudes specifically prescribed for helicopters by the FAA when conducting aerial filming or photography. If the FAA has prescribed any helicopter routes, or altitude restrictions, then the helicopter operator must comply with those routes or altitude restrictions for that particular area, regardless of the nature or purpose of the operation. If no routes or altitude restrictions have been prescribed for a particular area, then the helicopter operator may operate below the 500 foot minimum, provided that the operation can be conducted without hazard to persons or property on the surface.
Supposed to stay 500' above cars, people, boats and structures in non-city areas (like this) unless landing or taking off.
He refers to 91.119 (d). I didn't post the entire letter to keep from using so much space. I think the wording in the reg is not as clear as it could be, but as a retired helicopter pilot, I understood the meaning. If helicopters were limited to flying just those specific routes, most operations being flown would be illegal. It would make their utility almost pointless.Is there a regulatory reference in there, or is he just making it up as he goes?
It isn't. That's a very expensive neighborhood in the middle of Los Angeles. That particular site appears to be south of Burbank, not far from the Hollywood Bowl.The helicopter part has been covered but just to add clarification, it's 500' FROM, not 500' above in this example, which looks(to me anyways) to be sparsely populated.
EXACTLY! It is a major scenic drive in the north LA area. Not a seldom travelled country road. And what you don't see in the photos are the celebrity homes all along there.It isn't. That's a very expensive neighborhood in the middle of Los Angeles. That particular site appears to be south of Burbank, not far from the Hollywood Bowl.