The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has ordered operators of Leonardo AW169 and AW189 helicopters to conduct another round of safety checks, as investigators of the fatal crash of an AW169 in Leicester, England, have pinpointed the accident aircraft’s loss of control on a mechanical issue with its tail rotor control system. [AAIB attributed the crash to a loss of yaw control owing to a failure of the tail rotor control linkage]
In emergency alert service bulletins (169-126 and 189-217) issued on Nov. 30, Leonardo introduced repetitive inspections of the castellated nut that secures the tail rotor actuator control shaft to the actuator lever mechanism, and the tail rotor duplex bearing (every 10 and 30 flight hours, respectively) in the AW169 and AW189. EASA mandated these inspections in an emergency airworthiness directive (AD) issued the same day.
And this?
Why would ANY sane person get into something with a thing called a Jesus Nut?
high speed shaft failure from engine to drive shaft. Instant loss of power, but the engine Ng making a runaway to high side limit, which you can hear (as opposed to an engine failure). Pilot was in a bad area for autorotation....slow, low, and essentially almost a high hovering auto. Just not much residual rotor speed left in the rotor system to autorotate with as it decays very rapidly in this particular flight regime.
So..... nothing the pilot could have done? (I assume he was in that position because he was coming in for a landing).
http://www.check-six.com/Crash_Sites/Hogg-N101DN.htm said:In the late 1960s, and after the birth of his last child, Hogg decided to begin to save some money, and buy a helicopter. The final fiscal touch came after Hogg received some settlement money from a work related accident
In 1987 – twenty years after the start of his dream – Hogg purchased his dream helicopter, a Hughes 269B, for $26,000. Registered as N101DN, and powered by a 190 horsepower Lycoming HIO-360-A1A engine, the helicopter featured a three seat cockpit and flight controls that are directly linked to the control surfaces, eliminating any need for hydraulics.
Hogg had earned his private pilot’s certificate for fixed-wing aircraft, and had flown over 500 hours. The addition of a rotorcraft rating seemed to be a simple, yet challenging, proposition to the 58-year-old.
Can we take a moment to acknowledge the guy on the ramp that thought "This isn't going well, I better start walking away." then looks over their shoulder and "Yup, that's going very poorly, better pick up my pace.... run!".
Every once in a while I think I want to get a whirlybird rating and then I read something like thisOne has to remember that a tail rotor is highly worked in countering the torque of the main rotor when below about 25 knots, the slower, the more work; it’s most work being done in a hover. Hence why hovering should be kept to a minimum as-needed. Also why many logging and firefighting helicopters have tail rotor failure related crashes, because they’re hauling long-line cargo or fire buckets on a long line, and constantly slow or hovering to fill, to dump, etc. Eventually, that tail gear box gives way and says it’s had enough.
Shameless plug: This wouldn’t happen with a NOTAR......(or a counter-rotating for that matter)
Every once in a while I think I want to get a whirlybird rating and then I read something like this![]()
A point, I suppose. It does vaguely ring a bell, but I can't put my finger on the specific accident.You’ve seen the footage of that Philippine EMS KA 350 that got its wings yanked off, right? Both airplanes and helicopters are fine...until they’re not.