Oh, and to add to @bubblehead et al... There's a glitch in the system, so the other thread is stuck behind the private forum area. I was going to combine the threads, but several mods have lost the ability to move it when attempted.
Basically your avatar...Spatial Disorientation > Unusual Attitudes > Improper Control Inputs > CFIT
I could see a scenario where pilot enters the goo, keeps outside scan, initiates a turn to get away from rising terrain, starts descending, loses SA/orientation, and starts over controlling with cyclic, resulting in opposing VSI/airspeed peaks as oscillations get worse.
I thought TAWS was for terrain (Terrain awareness and warning system)?Again, a radar doesn't do anything for you. It's for weather, not terrain.
I thought TAWS was for terrain (Terrain awareness and warning system)?
Yes, you certainly can slow down much slower than that. IIRC, for certification there is a minimum airspeed for IFR operations that is based on stability, controllability, flight control system characteristics (or something along these lines) and multiplied by some factor. In the Bell 206 this was 65 knots, and as you slowed down below about 50 knots and slower then the machine feels like it needs more of your attention to maintain basic airwork (heading, altitude, etc.). It's somewhat analogous to an airplane's Vref and the relationship with 1.3×Vso if that helps explain what it actually feels like in a stick and rudder sense.what i don't get is, being a helo, why did he have to keep up his speed? i saw somewhere that he was still going 180 kts or so.
in know what that feels like in a jet, but in a helo can't you just slow down and maybe stop before going into IMC?
Even if the S76 had a EPGWS and radar altimeter, the probing window doesn't encompass the sides and aft of the ship, correct?
But to answer your question, yes, you can slow down quite a bit, and you can also make extremely tight turns at low airspeed that aren't particularly demanding of the machine's aerodynamic margins- a 45-60° angle of bank turn at 60-80 knots is okay, notwithstanding the passengers' reactions or the pilot possibly giving himself spatial disorientation doing that right under a low ceiling.
for instance, flying into a box canyon with a low ceiling is often fatal in a fixed wing, but in a helo i would assume you can slow down and descend very low, and even land rather than fly into the soup - but maybe that is a bad assumption in this type of scenario
I'm still trying to understand what looks like a precipitous descent priot to impact. As some have suggested, perhaps an attempt to to a quick 180 and get out of the clouds, but it seems like a very aggressive move if you don't know what's below you or around you.
sidebar - this mentality is crap and needs to die. If you are IIMC and below MSA you are in an emergency right then and there. The turn and 30 second timer just makes it worse.it was pretty common to brief that if you went IIMC you would do a 180 and fly for 30 seconds,
i know absolutely nothing about helos (except something about a Jesus nut) . i was thinking that it is orders of magnitude easier to avoid IMC in a helo than in a fixed wing. for instance, flying into a box canyon with a low ceiling is often fatal in a fixed wing, but in a helo i would assume you can slow down and descend very low, and even land rather than fly into the soup - but maybe that is a bad assumption in this type of scenario
sidebar - this mentality is crap and needs to die. If you are IIMC and below MSA you are in an emergency right then and there. The turn and 30 second timer just makes it worse.
Is it really CFIT though if you've inadvertently induced an attitude/flight path that may be unrecoverable given the surrounding terrain? I may be splitting hairs, but if that is what happened, then I'd have a hard time calling that "controlled."Spatial Disorientation > Unusual Attitudes > Improper Control Inputs > CFIT
I could see a scenario where pilot enters the goo, keeps outside scan, initiates a turn to get away from rising terrain, starts descending, loses SA/orientation, and starts over controlling with cyclic, resulting in opposing VSI/airspeed peaks as oscillations get worse.