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Lesson 36 – 5th October 2009 – 1310 – 54 minutes – Total so far – 37 hours 22 mins

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Well, I’m used to seeing myself type “Great Lesson” a lot recently, but not today. No fault of Steve who did his utmost to boy me up. I just wasn’t in the zone.

It started off ok. I had worked out over the weekend how to record the full ATC communications and I brought that setup with me ready to rock’n'roll. It was the new aircraft today G-DOGI (Doggy). It is a beautiful machine. Metallic Blue and everything looks very fresh and new on it.

So, I checked her over. I spent 5-10 minutes setting up the camera and ATC recording unit and it all tested fine.

All good so far !!!

With only the final LOW RPM Horn to check, I waited on Steve. When Steve arrived, he plugged in his headset and then we realised it didn’t work with my headset. BUGGER !!!!!  So, with the rotors turning and everything setup to work with my headset, I made the snap decision to just swap mine out for the school headset, which means no video and no ATC :-( I was gutted.

The insides of the new helicopter are a little different. There’s more buttons on the cyclic for changing the frequency, swapping channels and it took me a few seconds to realise that to talk on the radio, there is a button where the fire button on a joystick would be ie a trigger button.

The aircraft felt different. It’s funny how accustomed to G-MAVI and G-BZBU I have become and how different a new machine can feel. But it was easy to get used to quickly.

Today, we did some advanced autorotation practice. We flew out north past Morpeth and did a variety of different types of autorotation……

Standard auto (60/5 knots)
180′ auto
Range
Max Range

and a new one……

Not sure what the name is but basically we reduced the speed in the auto to zero knots. So basically, we are in a rapidly descending hover, the idea being that we don’t need to move forward much to reach a field. When we are at about 400 feet, we bring the speed back in, so we have it for the final flare.

The last few autos we did at the plateau so we could do it all the way down to a 5 foot hover. There was virtually no wind today, which made the autos much harder for the final flare. Steve reckons we’d have rolled over on one of them. I reckoned we’d have done somersaults personally ;-) It wasn’t pretty, not enough speed shaved off and a messy flare and bit of pedal work.

But, I don’t think anything would have felt right today. I just wasn’t in the zone. After we’d done about 5 or 6 autos, we headed back to the airport. As we taxi’ed in, I was close to asking Steve to do the final landing next to the bowser, as my previous performance was so poor, but my gut told me to do it. And it went really well. One of my better landings (8/10), so was well happy with that for what had been a pretty dire lesson. Gutted there’s no footage and audio. But maybe next time.

I did take a photo of Doggy…..

Gdogi

And totally unrelated to helicopters, but I just LOVE this youtube video…….

Lesson 34 – 21st September 2009 – 1050 – 42 minutes – Total so far – 35 hours 28 mins

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Well, despite poor weather, we managed to get a lesson in, albeit a short one (40 minutes).

We concentrated on instrument flying, but managed some autos and a demo’ed auto with power termination in a field near Morpeth.

Order of the day….I booked out, and checked G-MAVI over. There was some confusion with our callsign. I’m sure I put Northumbria01 on the booking out sheet, but Tower queried our callsign, they were happy for us to assume the mantle Northumbria01 instead of ZERO TWO.

Steve came out for the last couple of checks and we were told to hold at Foxtrot. That was good, because I got chance to do a couple of landings/takeoffs as we waited for a plane to land and taxi off the active.

Once he’d gone, we were given the go. Once we’d climbed to about 1600 feet (we couldn’t have gone much higher because of the cloud base), Steve had me don the instrument goggles. Usual…

  • hold a heading
  • turn 90′ left
  • turn 90′ right
  • Descending 180′

They all went fine.

Steve then took control and adopted an unusual attitude in the plane and with the instrument goggles on,  I had to get us level again. I got it eventually, but it took me 5 seconds to realise power was low. Once I’d sussed that, it was sorted.

Once the instrument flying was done, I was a bit disoriented. I had no idea where we were, what direction we were facing. And I’m pleased about this, because it made me think about where the wind was coming from and that normally I don’t have to do that. It shows me I’m developing a constant awareness of the wind direction without realising it at the time.

We did some autos to a powered recovery at about 500 feet. I needed reminding about the throttle. We did a couple of max range ones where we reduce rotor rpm to 90/95% whilst maintaining 75kts.

By this stage, my concentration was going, and I wasn’t benefitting from the practice, so I asked Steve if he’d demo an auto to 5 feet above the ground. We had a nice field with the only downside being some sheep in one corner, but they were totally unphased by us even after we’d climbed away. They were a few hundred yards away.

It was interesting to watch an auto being done all the way to a low hover. It allowed me to analyse and think it through, plus Steve through in a commentary. His commentaries, because they are the same language each time DO help learning a lot. It’s a set of instructions that gradually sink in, so that when I do it, I’m hearing Steve saying things like……

  • Balance, check
  • Rotor RPM, check
  • Reduce Throttle, check
  • Speed, check
  • Cancel Carb Heat
  • Not yet, not yet, not yet
  • Flare
  • Level
  • POP (that’s his favourite)
  • Cushion

He says these exact things everytime, and the fact I can write them down, tells me they are sinking in. Of course, doing them is another thing, but I’m getting there.

We’d been out 25 minutes and I wasn’t in the zone today, so Steve (rightly) suggested we head back. He’d spotted a fast low-level helicopter on the way back. We kept a visual with it until it was in front of us.

Tower :- Report at Stannington, join right-base for 25. QFE 1010.

We did that, and Steve said to use the approach to practice the approach sight picture. The sight picture is how an approach should look. I need to start doing this on every final to the runway, because, as Steve said, you don’t often get a mile long runway to practice your “sight picture”. Good tip.

The final landing was a pleasing one. I’ve decided not to fart on any more. Scott was right, get yourself ready for a landing and barring any sideways/backwards movement, commit to getting it down. I did it today, and it worked. It wasn’t 10/10, but it was 9/10. I was happy.

No lesson until friday, because of kp stuff. There may be an opportunity of a cheap cross country to Blackpool. All day job for a heli to have a service. So, I hope that comes off, as I did all my light aircraft flying from Blackpool, so that will be a trip down memory lane. PLUS Steve said we may get the chance to look around the Oil Rig helicopters there. Fingers crossed for that one.