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The Helicopter Pilot's Companion is essential reading for those who are considering training to be a helicopter pilot, those currently undertaking training and those who have recently gained their Private Pilot's Licence for helicopters. Written in a clear, no-nonsense style, it covers a whole range of subjects concerning rotary aviation including common myths about flying helicopters, choosing a flying school and an instructor, the basics of rotary aerodynamics, and all practical aspects of learning to fly helicopters. Issues are examined that are important when the new helicopter pilot has gained his, or her, licence and is able to fly alone, including flying with passengers, coping with challenging weather and dealing with emergencies. In addition, the author provides useful advice to those readers who are considering becoming professional helicopter pilots. Illustrated with 28 colour photographs.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2014
The Helicopter Pilot’s Companion
A MANUAL FOR HELICOPTER ENTHUSIASTS
Helen Krasner
First published in 2008 by Airlife Publishing, an imprint of The Crowood Press Ltd Ramsbury, Marlborough Wiltshire SN8 2HR
www.crowood.com
This e-book first published in 2014
© Helen Krasner 2008
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978 1 84797 922 3
Photographs by the author unless otherwise stated.
Frontispiece: The author with a Robinson R22 helicopter.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 SO YOU WANT TO FLY A HELICOPTER?
Helicopter Myths
Making the Most of the Trial Lesson
What Flying School; Which Instructor?
2 PRINCIPLES OF FLIGHT MADE SIMPLE
How Do Helicopters Fly?
More About How Helicopters Fly
Limits to High-Speed Flight
3 LEARNING TO FLY
Basic Rotary Flight Manoeuvres
Why is Hovering So Difficult?
Autorotations
Vortex Ring State
Low-Level Manoeuvring
Avoiding Dynamic Rollover
Helicopter Navigation
Off-Airfield Landings
Operating Out-of-Wind
Instrument Flying
Helicopter Performance and Limited-Power Operations
Airmanship
4 BEYOND THE PPL(H)
Flying in Stronger Winds
Helicopters and Marginal Weather
Winter Flying
Flying with Passengers
Flying Different Aircraft Types
Dealing with Emergencies
Mountain Flying
Dangerous Manoeuvres
5 GOING COMMERCIAL
Becoming a Professional Helicopter Pilot
The Helicopter Instructor
Hour-Building Ideas
Rotary vs Fixed-Wing: Which Way?
Glossary
Index
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
No one becomes a helicopter pilot and aviation writer without the help of a large number of people, and I would like to thank the following:
Dave and Ben, my instructors at Tiger Helicopters, for teaching me to fly helicopters – I know it wasn’t always easy.
Jon and Steve of Heliflight, for their hard work, which enabled me to fly well enough to get a CPL(H).
Alex and the staff at Bristol Ground School, for their patience in teaching me the theory for the CPL ground exams.
Kevin, Tim and Philippe in the USA, plus Victor and Sasha in Russia, for providing me with aviation experiences that I could never have obtained anywhere else.
Mike of Fast Helicopters, for turning me into an instructor.
Bob of Hields Aviation, for giving me my first instructing job.
Jeremy of Alpha Helicopters, and Andy of Staffordshire Helicopters, for employing me, and thereby providing me with experience and much of the material for this book.
The editors of the Daily Telegraph, the Croydon Advertiser, She, Mensa Magazine, Outdoor Action, Cheshire Life, and a number of other publications, for publishing my articles over the years, and thus convincing me that I was good enough to keep writing.
Mike, Fidel and Dan of Insight Research, for giving me work as a researcher and writer, and putting up with me disappearing for long periods to go and fly helicopters!
The editors of Pilot, Today’s Pilot and Flight Training News, for publishing my aviation-related ramblings.
And finally, my late mother and father, without whom none of this would have been possible in the first place.
INTRODUCTION
Helicopters fascinate people. Most individuals find these unique aircraft, which appear to be able to go almost anywhere and do practically anything, totally intriguing. This applies whether the people concerned are pilots, would like to learn to fly, or have no real intention of ever setting foot in a helicopter cockpit.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for the majority of books about helicopters. This is particularly true of those books designed for the fairly new helicopter pilot or student. Indeed, many of these publications can be difficult to understand and hard work to read, even for the committed helicopter enthusiast. I suspect that a substantial number of them spend far more time sitting on their owners’ bookshelves than they do actually being read. In extreme cases their greatest advantage is that they provide an excellent cure for insomnia!
Of course, helicopter flying is not easy, and any helicopter pilot needs to absorb and learn a huge amount of information if he is to fly safely. So most helicopter textbooks set out primarily to inform rather than to entertain, and perhaps this is as it should be. Yet do these books need to be quite so dry, or their explanations quite so hard to comprehend? Surely there should be a way to improve things. It must be possible to enthral the reader as well as to inform him.
This was my chief aim a few years ago, when I began writing regular articles on rotary flying for the general aviation magazines. I wanted to grab my readers’ attention and gain their interest immediately; I planned to write something that they would enjoy reading, rather than just provide them with information. For magazine articles this was in any case a necessity. After all, reading a magazine is a leisure activity, so my articles were intended to be light-hearted, chatty, and based on personal experience – although providing useful information was obviously very important too. I wanted my articles to be informative, but also fun!
The feedback I received from readers over the years suggested that I had succeeded in doing what I intended. Everyone, from pilots to students to non-flying rotary enthusiasts, told me not only how much they learned from my articles, but also how much they enjoyed them. It was clear that I had been right in my belief that even complicated subjects could be written about in a way that was accessible to the non-technical reader.
When the idea for this book came up, I decided that it would be based on the articles that I had been writing for several years, and written in a similar style. It would try to cover as broad an area of rotary aviation as possible, from how to go about starting to learn to fly helicopters, to most of the topics needed for the Private Pilot’s Licence. It would also include useful information for the more experienced helicopter pilot, plus a section for those pilots who were considering continuing on to do a commercial flying course. In addition there would be a fairly simple explanation of principles of rotary flight, a subject that many students find almost completely incomprehensible. It seemed to me that this was crucial, particularly after one friend, a helicopter private pilot and also a Mensa member, said to me, ‘I‘m supposed to be intelligent, and I can’t understand this stuff. Please, please can you explain it in such a way that it makes sense. It must be possible.’ That is what I have done … at least, I hope I have.
This book is not intended to be a textbook for the PPL(H), or to cover every aspect of rotary flying. Also, it should in no way be considered as a substitute for a structured course and flying experience. It aims merely to complement the Private Pilot’s course, and to be more interesting than those dry-as-dust textbooks that no one actually wants to read. To this end, I have tried to provide information in an interesting and entertaining fashion, always related to my own real-life flying, and have frequently included anecdotes and examples from my own experience. I want it to be a book to be dipped into over a cup of coffee, to be read because you enjoy it and are reluctant to put it down, rather than because you feel you ought to read it. With this in mind, I have tried to explain technical concepts fairly simply, and to make the book a relatively easy read even when the subject matter is quite complex. Therefore I hope the book will also be as accessible to non-flying enthusiasts and fixed-wing pilots as to those who actually fly helicopters.
In summary, I optimistically anticipate that this book will be welcomed by anyone and everyone who has an interest in helicopter flying. So, please, read and enjoy!
1 SO YOU WANT TO FLY A HELICOPTER?
HELICOPTER MYTHS
‘I wouldn’t fly a helicopter, ever. For a start, I’d never manage it; they’re really, really difficult to fly. And they’re incredibly expensive. Besides, the small ones aren’t any good in strong winds; they’re too fragile. And helicopters are dangerous, you only have to look at the accident rates to realize that – they’re far higher than for other types of aircraft.’
While I have never actually heard quite so many mistaken assumptions about helicopters stated in so few words by one person, I might well have done. Despite the fact that many people find helicopters intriguing, they also have some pretty strange ideas about them. This applies even to some fixed-wing pilots (who, I always think, ought to know better). It seems to be the case that these ‘helicopter myths’ are repeated so often that people come to believe that they must be true. So let’s take a look at each of these ideas in turn.
Myth Number One: helicopters are really difficult to fly. No, actually, they are not. You will probably be pleased to hear that most people can learn to fly a helicopter. If you can drive a car, ride a bike, or do anything else requiring a fair degree of co-ordination, then you could probably learn to fly a rotary aircraft. PPL(H) students take about the same amount of time to get their licences as their fixed-wing counterparts. The national average is around sixty to seventy hours, although a few real ‘naturals’ manage to qualify in the legal minimum of forty-five flying hours.
It is true that some helicopter manoeuvres are quite difficult. Hovering takes many students quite a while to master and, as it is such a central part of helicopter flying, this often means they cannot move on until they have managed it. But the same type of thing applies during fixed-wing training. Many students struggle when it comes to learning to land a fixed-wing aircraft; in contrast, the approach and landing in a helicopter is comparatively easy. In company with many other helicopter pilots, I’ve always preferred being able to slow down before I land, rather than the other way round.
I’ve always preferred being able to slow down before I land.
Admittedly, navigation is more difficult in a small helicopter as you need to keep your hands on the controls all the time – you can’t trim the aircraft and then concentrate on studying your map, as you can in a small aeroplane. But this whole issue comes down to cockpit organization rather than anything else. In addition, a helicopter’s ability to slow down as much as the pilot wants it to without stalling means that you can always reduce the speed to give yourself time to think, to work out where you are, or to decide what to do. This is particularly useful when approaching an unfamiliar airfield, for example. So it is swings and roundabouts really, in respect of the relative difficulties associated with each type of flying machine. Some helicopter pilots would like everyone to think that they are quite unlike the rest of the human race, but that’s not really the case.
Myth Number Two: helicopters are incredibly expensive. It is indeed true that the training costs are about double those for fixed-wing flying, and the same is true of self-fly hire charges once you’ve got a PPL(H). Also, buying a helicopter is far more expensive than buying an aeroplane at the cheaper end of the scale. But this is by no means the whole story. In a helicopter, a lot less time is wasted. By that I mean that you can start up, take off into wind, go to your destination and land, without spending expensive time in a queue for the departure runway or doing an overhead join at your destination airfield. A few years ago, I was trying to leave a fly-in at about the same time as around a dozen other aircraft. I’ll never forget the envious glances as I called up on the radio and asked to depart directly into wind, effectively avoiding about ten minutes of queuing time … and money-burning time.
If you have a specific destination that is off-airfield, a helicopter can act as door-to-door transport, since it does not need a runway. This can save on taxi fares and, of course, is far more convenient. And if you’re just wanting to get airborne and ‘play’ rather than actually go anywhere for a reason, there’s so much more you can do in a helicopter. A flight doesn’t have to be to another airfield, and the nearest one could be maybe an hour away. Instead, you can visit friends and land in their gardens, or simply hover and have fun at low level. The feeling of boredom and sameness about local flying that can often set in after someone has had a PPL (A) for a year or so, necessitating longer and more expensive flights, doesn’t tend to happen with a helicopter licence because there is such a variety of things that you can try. It is more expensive to fly helicopters, but, once everything is taken into account, the difference is not as great as it might first appear.
Myth Number Three: small helicopters are fragile and can’t cope with strong winds. Well, it is true that helicopters do vibrate quite a lot, but they cope with weather conditions at least as well as, and often better than, fixed-wing aircraft of an equivalent size. After all, wind strength as such is rarely a problem in any aircraft, unless it gets to a point at which the machine is about to be blown apart. It is more usually the case that either the wind makes things uncomfortable for the passengers, or it makes it difficult for the pilot to fly. When it comes to passenger comfort, small helicopters actually ride the wind surprisingly well. Students in a trial lesson are often surprised at how stable a helicopter can feel in a fairly strong wind. The type of turbulence that affects the wings of an aeroplane and leads to the feeling of being flung around the sky may affect the helicopter’s rotors in a similar fashion, but this is often not transmitted to the fuselage below. When it comes to pilot handling, in many respects helicopters are easier to manage in windy conditions than aeroplanes. There is no equivalent to the fixed-wing crosswind landing, in terms of difficulty for the pilot. In a helicopter, you simply land into wind, or, if absolutely compelled to use a runway, you turn into wind at the last moment as you come to a hover. Hovering in a strong wind may be quite challenging, but, again, you can turn into wind and hover-taxi sideways if conditions warrant it.
Myth Number Four: helicopters are dangerous, and you only have to look at the accident records to prove it. Actually, if you do take a look at the accident reports you will find that very few helicopter accidents are caused by engine failure, other mechanical failure, or anything else to do with the actual machine. The primary reasons for accidents are the same as for fixed-wing aircraft. Controlled flight into terrain generally tops the list, as do other factors associated with flying in bad weather. Wire strikes figure quite frequently, since so many helicopter landings are off-airfield, and wires are a common hazard. Most other causes also seem to be associated with human error rather than anything else. When failures do happen, they are, again, similar to those in aeroplanes; for example, carburettor icing is the most common cause of engine failure. Other emergencies, such as engine fires, electrical fires, unexplained vibrations, and so on, are very rare. When they do happen, the helicopter pilot has one big advantage in that he can simply make a precautionary landing on any flat area available – and that flat area does not need to be very big. The fixed-wing pilot would probably have to divert to the nearest airfield, or at least look for a very large, flat field … from which he’d probably have great difficulty in departing again, should the aircraft turn out to be flyable after all.
I hope I’ve now proved to you that helicopters are not as difficult, expensive, impractical and dangerous as they are often portrayed, and that flying them is relatively easy, not outrageously expensive, and fairly comfortable and safe. In fact, piloting a helicopter is probably within the reach of most people, if they really want to try it.
However, before you go out and book a rotary trial lesson, I should offer a word of warning. There is a fifth helicopter myth – that rotary flying is hopelessly addictive, and that having a go just once is never enough. In this case, the ‘myth’ is true. Once you’ve tried flying a helicopter – particularly when you’ve mastered hovering, even if only for a few seconds – you probably won’t be able to stop. You will want to do more, and more, and more. Most of us did not set out to be helicopter pilots. We planned just to try it, but somehow we kept going back. The same could happen to you. You have been warned!
MAKING THE MOST OF THE TRIAL LESSON
So you’ve now decided to give it a go! You really want to fly a helicopter, and you’re ready to book a taster flight, or what is generally known as a trial lesson/air experience flight. Virtually all helicopter training schools can offer these. Most of them also sell trial lesson gift vouchers, so you might be able to persuade someone to buy you the best birthday or Christmas present you’ll probably ever have.
First, though, especially if you might be considering a gift voucher, let me offer a word of warning. You can also buy trial lesson vouchers from various organizations which act as middlemen; they are not flying schools themselves, but a large number of flying schools are affiliated to them. The advantage of this is that they sell vouchers that can be used at many different helicopter schools. Now, this may be a useful way for your aunt who lives at the other end of the country to buy you a trial lesson which you can then use in your home area. The major disadvantage is that the middlemen naturally need to make a profit, so this is a very expensive way of doing things; and, as we know, helicopter flying is not cheap anyway. So you are really better off buying a voucher, or booking a trial lesson, from the helicopter school itself.
Which flying school should you go to for this first flight? At this point, it probably doesn’t matter all that much. Unless there are definite reasons against it, just go to the one closest to your home or most convenient for you. If and when you decide to take up helicopter flying seriously, then is the time to start comparing schools, and we’ll look at that later.
Most flying schools offer trial lessons of various lengths, typically half an hour and an hour, although some will have twenty-minute and forty-minute flights too. How long you need will depend largely on what you want to do. A twenty-minute trial lesson will provide a wonderful first experience of helicopter flying, but it won’t really give you an opportunity to have a go on the controls. If you have half an hour, you should get a chance to try flying the helicopter yourself, but you are unlikely to have the time to attempt hovering, which is undoubtedly the most fun thing you can do in a helicopter, and the manoeuvre that many people really want to try. If you can manage it, and especially if you are thinking of carrying on with helicopter training, book forty minutes or an hour. It is also important to make sure you have enough time if there are a number of things that you would definitely like to do. Don’t book a twenty-minute trial lesson, then say on the day that you’d first like to take photos of your house, which is thirty miles away, then have a go on the controls, and also try some hovering. It simply will not be possible to fit it in. If necessary, the instructor or operations manager can advise you as to how long you’ll need when you phone up to book your flight.
Having booked your trial lesson, you don’t have to do anything else, but you will get the most out of it if you know as much as possible about helicopters in advance. Read up about them – read this book, and any others you happen to have – and, if you have any questions, make a note of them so that you can ask your instructor on the day of your trial lesson. However, bear in mind that helicopter schools are often busy, especially at weekends, and your instructor might not have the time to tell you everything there is to know about different helicopter types, or to give you a comprehensive lecture on rotary aerodynamics!