VC: I think he was talking wind speed..
VC: I think he was talking wind speed..
What I was going for is 20knt "measured" at presumably the local airport could mean back eddy's, up and down drafts and funnels that turn 20knt into 40-60knt in places.
presumably 20knt would be no problem at all over the likes of the outback of Australia(dust discounted) vs the mountains of NZ ?
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
Yup. You're onto it.
If the machine weather cocks when in balance, it is too windy to be in the mountains imo.
A 20+ knt S easterly or Northerly was unpleasant to fly in when up some major South Westland valleys in a 22 or 44.
We never hunted in anything like that as the animals were not about either.
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Do what ya want! Ya will anyway.
Mast Bumping: Has New Zealand Pilot Culture Cost Lives? - Heliweb Magazine Some might find it interesting.
I've got/had a pretty awesome photo of Wayne using his Robbi to herd a big red stag towards my brother on the ground in Argentina.
Tell me you guys who travel the world flying helicopters, is there a problem with "mast bumping" with 22 and 44 Robbies elsewhere.
If you read the article posted above by Snowgrass it seems NZ has a very high rate compared to US.
Shut up, get out & start pushing!
We do have a high rate but the majority of our country is mountainous with a different climate compared to the US.
The Yanks are right. If the machine is flown as per the manual when in turbulent conditions the machine will perform fine.
I personally think there should be a max wind strength restriction placed on them in NZ.
Sometimes you cant help or predict the wind strength on your flight route.
But limiting the chances will reduce the events aside from poor handling.
Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
Do what ya want! Ya will anyway.
Interesting that the two non fatal must bump episodes that have happened in NZ, they didn't follow Robinsons procedure (for various reasons) & survived by doing something different, one of which is a technique advocated by Simon Spencer-Bower who is probably the most experienced Robbie instructor in the world.
Shut up, get out & start pushing!
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