ozziecat35
4 out of 5 great lakes prefer Michigan.
Perhaps the rotor heads can elaborate more on what exactly happened...regardless, still seems like some excellent airmanship.
Pff - we tricycle geared, fixed wing pilots don't even touch our pedals the first 50 hours.
Ouch, that's Jack's third issue in a year. First the fatality, then 2 maintenance issues.....not looking well for the Denver crowd.
I would have done an auto, just remove the torque and do the full down. Was probably a below CFI rating level pilot who has no experience with full downs. Good example why we should be doing full downs sooner in training.
That's as silly teaching full stalls and spins to private pilot students.
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LOL, I see what you did there.......
Incidentally, when I first started to fly, they WERE teaching full stalls and spins to private students.
Man, I'm old.
I would have done an auto, just remove the torque and do the full down. Was probably a below CFI rating level pilot who has no experience with full downs. Good example why we should be doing full downs sooner in training.
The procedure in the 58 was a run-on. I did wonder whether this pilot was trying a run-in, but just got too slow. Those are really little vertical stabs.
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No kidding.
With autos, the last 10 ft are the hardest to not screw up. Losing directional control in the touchdown, hit one skid first, bleed off too much rotor RPM (no bueno in a Robbie), there are so many way to ball-up the ship and kill yourself in those last seconds.
You have to flare and pull pitch at some point. With no pedal control, you're not going to have a good day, end game. Better off with a shallow approach to a slide-on, I'd think. With a good landing direction, winds favoring the anti-torque side, shouldn't be too bad even though it could be dicey. May take an approach or two to get it right prior to touchdown.
You know what, you're right. I stand corrected I would need the pedals in the touch down. Wouldn't a concern with the Enstrom is, like the Schweitzer, be ground resonance as well?
That's the beauty of the helos with a manual throttle you can roll on, off or anywhere inbetween. Vice some modern FADEC birds which have just idle and fly, forcing you to have to finesse the speed reduction and the collective motion timing just right to have them all match at instant of touchdown, before loss of directional control.
You know what, you're right. I stand corrected I would need the pedals in the touch down. Wouldn't a concern with the Enstrom is, like the Schweitzer, be ground resonance as well?
We just finished up 4 hours EP's in the sim just the other week.
Fun isn't the right word, but being able to see and try your best not to crash during a stuck peddle was interesting.
Also thrown into other EP's, (like Left rotation) I've learned to pretty much find the softest spot to crash.
Kudos to this guy, for being able to use the airframe again.