Oops - I thought he'd recovered from it - until he lost the tail rotor...
He may also have had a bit of a problem registering his angle of attack and/or ground altitude with the snow around.
Oops - I thought he'd recovered from it - until he lost the tail rotor...
He may also have had a bit of a problem registering his angle of attack and/or ground altitude with the snow around.
Last edited by Gordo; 03-22-2012 at 09:20 AM.
I still say he had it judged well, for a lower altitude, there's just a lot less lift up at higher altitudes like that and you can see the helicopter just kind of sink a little extra right before it hits.
Don't worry people, only birgirpall trying to boop someone.
Did you see the guy that JUST got missed as the tail hits the ground?!!
Are you a helicopter pilot?
No, you can start 1/2 inch off the ground to do this maneuver, speed is the key. Also he was using using the anti torque pedal and probably pulling the guts out of the collective, he probably didn't have enough tail authority to bring it around any faster and make it look clean. It could have been a whole different scenario if he turned right and did a torque turn instead, he may even of had power to spare.
And of course he was high, that always makes mistakes costly.
Edit, also note the comment about the tail fin stabiliser. He's right, that is odd and shouldn't be like that as you can clearly see the pitch of the blades trying to pull the nose up but the stabiliser working against them just before impact. More to this story perhaps...
Last edited by canberraKarter; 03-23-2012 at 08:22 AM.
Well done spotting that - that'd have screwed him up big time for getting the nose up.
BTW, while there have been hundreds of tragic crashes, this one always makes me laugh - well deserving of any disciplinary action too!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFK12QZ5gSI
Yep that vids a classic!
Had many "Oh yee of little faith" jokes when doing low level flying training with my instructor![]()