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Video of crash 206



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 28th 03, 01:08 AM
gaylon9
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Default Video of crash 206

http://www.turnto10.com/news/2667645/detail.html


  #2  
Old November 28th 03, 03:16 AM
Micbloo
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Subject: Video of crash 206

Just saw it. New ENG 206 up in Rhode Island. Thankfully no serious
injuries.
  #4  
Old November 30th 03, 04:43 AM
Sage
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It looks like it may have been a failure of the tail rotor drive
or controls. The tail rotor itself appears to be intact.


On 28 Nov 2003, Micbloo wrote:

Subject: Video of crash 206


Just saw it. New ENG 206 up in Rhode Island. Thankfully no serious
injuries.


  #5  
Old November 30th 03, 11:17 PM
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It sounded like engine failure to me, however if that was it, the
pilot should have been able to manage it better than that. Does that
heli have hydraulic controls? What happens to the hydraulic controls
if the engine fails? On a car, you still have steering, however, its
a lot harder to work whe the engine quits turning the hydraulic pump.
Is it the same way on a heli? If it is, then maybe the loss of
control was the pilot trying to force the controls.

Dennis.

Sage wrote:


It looks like it may have been a failure of the tail rotor drive
or controls. The tail rotor itself appears to be intact.


Dennis Hawkins
n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do)

"A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work.
A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work.
A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work."
To find out what an H-1B is and how they are putting
Americans out of work, visit the following web site
and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video:
http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm

  #6  
Old December 1st 03, 12:04 AM
Jim Carriere
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wrote in message
...
It sounded like engine failure to me, however if that was it, the
pilot should have been able to manage it better than that. Does that
heli have hydraulic controls? What happens to the hydraulic controls
if the engine fails? On a car, you still have steering, however, its
a lot harder to work whe the engine quits turning the hydraulic pump.
Is it the same way on a heli? If it is, then maybe the loss of
control was the pilot trying to force the controls.


The 206 has hydraulic controls. The pump is driven by the transmission, so
if the rotor is turning then the controls are powered. If the hydraulics
fail, the aircraft is still flyable with a little difficulty; the pilot will
have increased control loads.

Also, early versions controlled the tail pitch hydraulically, most have all
mechanical tail rotor pitch control.


  #9  
Old December 2nd 03, 06:33 AM
Jim Burt
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The pilot made an excessively hot approach, and when he pulled pitch at the
bottom, consumed so much power that the engine simply had an insufficient
amount left to deliver to the tail rotor. The majority of incidents
characterized as "loss of tailrotor effectiveness" actually occur under
similar circumstances to this. It's really just a failure to maintain
coordinated flight. The problem with the 206 in this context is not a lack
of tailrotor thrust, but a lack of surplus power at high gross weights or
high DAs.

"gaylon9" wrote in message
news:vexxb.16395$Gj2.4984@okepread01...
http://www.turnto10.com/news/2667645/detail.html




  #10  
Old December 2nd 03, 04:53 PM
Greg Whyte
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Pretty much seemed like classic LTE to me, "highish" power setting,
low forward airspeed and pilot may have been concentrating on the
target of the camera shoot. It would be interesting to know the angle
of the wind.

They were fortunate to be so low, a similar incident in Melbourne
Australia several years ago (Bell 206 filming) happened from just
under 1000' and the injuries were severe - there's video footage of
that somewhere, filmed from ON BOARD the helicopter: very scary stuff!

And, of course, some prime examples in my book "Fatal Traps For
Helicopter Pilots" (see http://www.fataltraps.com ) - I'd be silly not
to mention that of course!

Compliments of the Festive Season everyone,

Greg Whyte
 




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