I've heard that's because the Huey head is semi-rigid...and the 60 head is fully articulating. What the hell does that mean anyway???
I've heard that's because the Huey head is semi-rigid...and the 60 head is fully articulating. What the hell does that mean anyway???
if there are no Gs on the aircraft, the helo is basically floating under the rotor, and the mast can contact, or "bump," the stops underneath the blades, and VERY bad things, up to and including the rotors falling off, can happen.
I know nothing about RW aero so please excuse my ignorance, but how does that typically happen? Chopping the collective?
I know nothing about RW aero so please excuse my ignorance, but how does that typically happen? Chopping the collective?
I know nothing about RW aero so please excuse my ignorance, but how does that typically happen? Chopping the collective?
I know nothing about RW aero so please excuse my ignorance, but how does that typically happen? Chopping the collective?
Semi-rigid is what 2-bladed helos are. The two blades are fastened together and teeter over the mast. That teetering motion allows the rotor disc to be aerodynamically balanced. On the minus side, if there are no Gs on the aircraft, the helo is basically floating under the rotor, and the mast can contact, or "bump," the stops underneath the blades, and VERY bad things, up to and including the rotors falling off, can happen.
When you get to 0g's, the attitude of the helo and rotor are no longer coupled. The fuselage will experience a right rolling tendency because of the tail rotor. A natural pilot reaction of left cyclic to counter the roll will cause the rotor to roll until the droop stops start hitting the mast.
The same way it does in FW - excessive forward stick/cyclic. One way it happens is entering a steep dive; to follow a sharp cliff dropoff, for example.
I've heard that's because the Huey head is semi-rigid...and the 60 head is fully articulating. What the hell does that mean anyway???
yep..."bunting" is a SWTI term for terrain masking down the back side of a cliff/mountain. We encountered that from time to time. It can also happen if pilots input too much forward stick after an aggressive cyclic climb...(also characterized by crewman in gunner's belt bouncing off cabin overhead)