Stingerhawk
Member
I stand by my statement that nowhere else in your flying career do you gain that level of confidence in being able to accomplish a full auto if you had to. As far as the 57's rotor head not being congruent with auto characteristics of today's fleet aircraft, easily overcome with a modern training helicopter and instantly regain the building block approach and the primacy of learning to fly a helicopter.Hi. Former CAT I stan here.
Studs fly in the 57B for 3 weeks - and that first week, the vast, vast majority of them do not even think about autos beyond "holy shit that is crazy why did I become a helicopter pilot."
After that, they don't perform full autos anymore.
Furthermore, as you pointed out, there are big instructional costs associated with overcoming the primacy of auto techniques necessary for the high-inertia head in the 57.
In the end, it comes down to what works for the fleet - and the cost/benefit analysis for full autos in HTs just doesn't convince me they're required.
Last edited: