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View Full Version : Compulsory helmets/flight suits: merged threads


thecontroller
31st Jul 2006, 16:56
Robinson Helicopter Company releases Safety Notice SN-40
Monday, July 31, 2006 - Robinson Helicopter Company

Safety Notice SN-40
Issued: Jul 2006
POSTCRASH FIRES

There have been a number of cases where helicopter or light plane occupants
have survived an accident only to be severely burned by fire following the
accident. To reduce the risk of injury in a postcrash fire, it
is strongly recommended that a fire-retardant Nomex flight suit, gloves, and
hood or helmet be worn by all occupants.

helicopter-redeye
31st Jul 2006, 17:49
"Especially when attending a horse racing event like Royal Ascot.."

h-r:} :p ;)

NickLappos
31st Jul 2006, 17:54
You can almost hear the insurance lawyer's breath on the neck of the letter writer. Now, in court, the defense attorney can ask the Robinson executive, "So, did you ever warn operators about post-crash fires and the way to help survive them?" And the Exec will answer, "Yes, in fact I have a copy right here....."

TiPwEiGhT
31st Jul 2006, 18:10
I always wear a nomex flight suit but, would always wear a helmet if I could. The school and operator in that I work for won't let us wear helmets, purely because "the passengers will want one and prices will go up, etc". There doesn't seem to be much of a culture in the UK of wearing helmets (except HEMS, Police) in comparison to places like NZ, Aus, etc.

TiP:ugh:

ShyTorque
31st Jul 2006, 18:29
Personally, I would prefer to wear a helmet and some decent protective clothing but it's not seen as the normal thing to do in my present employment. :hmm:

rudestuff
31st Jul 2006, 21:59
Isn't there anyone else out there who flies in speedos?!

Dis-Mystery of Lift
31st Jul 2006, 22:51
I prefer just a G-String on backwards.....then i just have to decide left or right balance ball:ok:

Encyclo
31st Jul 2006, 23:21
"Hey honey, look what i bought!" says the nouveau rich wife (not sexist...the wife is flying here:} ). "Now lets go shopping for a pair of fireproof flight suits and CRASH helmets:eek: :eek: :eek: ". I know these are required for working folks, doing critical manoeuvers all day long...but for the couple going to their cottage on the weekend:confused:
I know you never choose when an incident/accident will happen, but this apparel will probably have an effect on the perceived safety of these fine helicopters.

HillerBee
31st Jul 2006, 23:44
That's exactly the point. They are not safe.

heliduck
1st Aug 2006, 00:48
A few serious points -
In quite a few years as a mustering pilot as well as aircraft recovery for a dealer I have only seen 1 crashed Robinson which burnt(maybe they all ran out of fuel?!?!). Robinsons don't have a lot of frontal impact protection (hollow-point fibreglass projectile!!) but the fuel tanks rarely rupture. I am relatively inexperienced on the B47 but when I did my Ag rating in a Hiller 12E the instructing pilot told me that he refused to get in a B47 due to the fire risk if they crash!

A not so serious point -
The idea of fire retardent clothing is great so that if you manage to crawl from the wreckage you won't get burnt as you light the wreckage with your cigarette lighter. Not worth claiming pro-rata insurance to rebuild it!

nigelh
1st Aug 2006, 12:18
|Bell 47 ,s have fuel tanks that self seal and are designed to break away on impact so they dont generally burn. I know as 5 were written off in so many months crop spraying and none of them burnt !!:O

KNIEVEL77
2nd Jan 2009, 10:33
Sorry to bring this subject up yet again but having notified my Insurers about my PPL(H) training, I have just received a letter back from them stating that during my training and for my Personal Accident Insurance Cover to stay valid, they require me to be wearing flame retardant clothing at all times and a helmet when flying solo.

Having just read the recent post on here and looked at the video of the crash scene of the R44 in America that was completely destroyed (with one fatality due to burns) I suppose it makes sense.

My main question is that in the Robinson R22 Pilot's Operating Handbook, their Safety Notice SN-40 states "It is strongly recommended that a fire-retardant Nomex flight suit and helmet to be worn by all occupants". So why is this not adhered to more than it is?
Now I realise that the opinion is usually split on wearing such safety equipment and some may even chuckle seeing an R22 pilot dressed so but surely it makes sense, so I was just wondering how come the relevant Aviation bodies have not yet made it compulsary given how many lives it could save. After all, it's illegal to ride a motorcycle without a helmet!

I shall probably get laughed at turning up at my flying school in flame retardant clothing but if it is the only way to satisfy my insurance company then so be it, you never know, it might be me who has the last laugh!

Whirlygig
2nd Jan 2009, 10:44
What a bizarre requirement from your insurance company; never heard that before - maybe you should try another insurance company.

As regards the R22 accident, maybe a compulsory licence might have helped :=

Cheers

Whirls

KNIEVEL77
2nd Jan 2009, 14:04
Hi Whirls,

I took out my Accident and Sickness cover when I went Freelance in 1991, it is an income replacement policy should I not be able to work for any reason other than unemployment.

I used to work offshore for which they excluded from my policy.

They will not let me engage in any dangerous sports, so I suppose I should be happy they are prepared to cover me at all while flying!

I suppose they are just covering their ass!

I visit the Middle East on a regular basis, that is another exclusion from their policy now.......and so it goes on!!!!!

K77.

Lt.Fubar
2nd Jan 2009, 14:15
I was just wondering how come the relevant Aviation bodies have not yet made it compulsary given how many lives it could save.Because the rules are made by plank drivers ? And flight suit there screams "military" which is a sworn enemy ? ;)

Seriously though, I see this as improvement, that the insurance company is the one to require protective clothing, and I don't really see the downside - anyone want to enlighten me ?

rick1128
2nd Jan 2009, 15:06
After seeing what some people wear while flying, it makes sense. Sandals, flip-flops, polyester shorts, nylon t-shirts, etc. One does need to dress properly when engaging in these type activities.

Old Skool
2nd Jan 2009, 15:15
you can get normal looking clothes in Nomex material, a previous thread has covered this subject. That should stop you looking a complete berk...although drain pipes and a shirt with a skid lid will most likely look funnier still...but who cares...

rotorfossil
2nd Jan 2009, 15:36
Perhaps one obvious point is being missed. If you are anything on the tall side, there isn't headroom to wear a brain bucket in an R22.

Gordy
2nd Jan 2009, 16:16
Just as a side note---I am guessing this is a "life insurance" policy---not an aviation policy.

And yes we are back to the same argument again. Maybe we should wear nomex helmets while driving our motor vehicles. Think how safe you would be when someone slams into you.

Rick1128

Yep---I am one who wore flip-flops, shorts and aloha shirt while flying in Hawaii for 7 years. (I would actually fly bare foot--the flip-flops got in the way and really just protected my feet from the hot tarmac). Feel free to do an NTSB search of ALL Hawaii helicopter deaths and tell me if ANY of them could have been saved by nomex and helmets........

Again, it comes down to personal preference. Flying fires now, I wear them both.

Lt.Fubar
2nd Jan 2009, 17:32
You do realize, the motor industry is improving safety constantly, every year there comes another model with something improved, that is throughly tested. You have X generation seat belts, specially designed seats, XXX number of airbags etc. etc. When was the last revision of R22 airframe ? How many crash tests were conducted on it ? And lastly, how many % of car accidents result in fire ? That is a very small % compared to helicopters.

Lets face it, aircraft industry is painfully slow. How old are those Bell 47 that people still train in ? And still are considered useful, while that old cars in most western world can't be registered as easy as today's Mondeo as they're considerate dangerous!

Another question, how many training... actualy, any small helicopters can pass newest revision of FAA FAR part 27 ?

Unfortunatly, with ecception of KNIEVEL77 case, It's mostly all personal risk assesment - to wear nomex and helmet, or not.

zorab64
2nd Jan 2009, 18:43
Having worn a flight suit & helmet on almost every flight of my last 4500helicopter hours, on those occasions when I didn't, I always felt a little naked!

That said, flying around the Gulf of Oman, with RH of 98% and OAT of 46 C, tended to cause more than a little perspiration - & it wouldn't have made any difference if I'd been wearing a thong & lightweight headset, I'd just have felt even more uncomfortable in the event of an emergency!

I've not had any sort of incident involving fire, either in the air or driving a car - but my personal risk assessment says the result in one is likely to be more drastic than the other, especially given the differences in crash protection afforded by the two different vehicles. I'll therefore continue to "dress to survive", while flying, to give my self the best chance if the toast does fall butter side down!

It doesn't happen often, but the accident reports can make grimmer reading when such precautions have not been taken. :\

KNIEVEL77
2nd Jan 2009, 18:46
Zorab64,

Good post, food for thought indeed!

K77.

DennisK
2nd Jan 2009, 19:44
Ah the old chesnut back again.

After some forty years thinking about the problem .. I still don't have an answer.

A few years back I was asked to give evidence in the Glascow B206 accident where a colleague suffered head injuries and the police passenger was killed. The deceased estate's claim was that had the passenger been supplied with a bone dome .. he would probably have survived.

I took the view that utility flying needed fire suits and protective head gear, BUT and its a big but, we are in a commercial environment, and I'm not sure airline passengers would be too happy to see their pilots climb aboard in flame proof suits and crash helmets! And what about the flight attendants!

I know I wouldn't be happy giving a trial lesson, (where the object is to pull in the training business) wearing full protective gear. But on the other side of that coin .. guess who I'd blame when I'm cabbaged due to a head injury following an accident?

Its already been said here. The matter becomes a personal decision, perhaps akin to flight in the H/V avoid area. The ace in the hole the versatile helicopter enjoys is its ability to climb out from a landing site vertically. During my thirty-six years in helicopter operations, I haven't been prepared to abandon such revenue earning sites and I AM prepared to fly inside the H/V so called 'avoid area' for a few seconds of increased risk when considered against the minor risk of an actual engine failure ... which in my case is nil in a little under 14,000 hours airborne. I have always referred to the 'avoid' area as the 'area of extra caution' which I believe puts that situation into its proper perspective.

I accept that public transport flying is a different ball game and commercial pilots are obliged to minmise any increased risk, but I don't see the sense of treating non commercial pilots like F1 racing drivers. So until 'elf n safety' rules require me to dress up, I plan to continue in a smart white shirt, black tie with wings and rings. I wonder what that COF Chief Pilot of the 1970s Ferranti Helicopters would have said. Colonel Bob Smith required his pilots to always wear white gloves when carrying fare paying passengers and with a clean new pair worn every day!

Now lets have the opposite views.

Dennis K

KNIEVEL77
2nd Jan 2009, 19:59
Working for the BBC, i've done quite a bit of flying in Sea Kings over the years and the RAF kit you out with absolutely everything imaginable before you set foot in their helicopters including a substantial pre flight training course on emergency procedures..........so I suppose maybe one should at least take some of their vast experience on board.......now, where's that Nomex flight suit and helmet????? :)

Troglodita
2nd Jan 2009, 20:13
Dennis,

I always thought you to be the epitome of elegance when you carried out our OPC's at Lakeside in Aberdeen many years ago.

Engine failures from well within the "avoid curves" on the 300C and 206B taught me things that my previous 10,000 plus hours (in those days) on Hiller 12's, Whirlind 7's, Sea Kings, S61's, S76's, Bell 206 7 212's had not prepared me for!

Little did I know just how much safety equipment you were concealing beneath your everyday Clark Kent apparel when you were scaring the beejasus out of me dressed in my everyday Levis & M & S shirt!

Please p.m. me with the address of your tailor.

Trog

Retro Coupe
3rd Jan 2009, 22:48
I currently fly for a Police Air Support Unit, where the dress code whilst flying is Nomex flying suit ,bone dome, leather gloves and boots. I'd much rather wear white shirt, dark trousers, headset and comfortable shoes (!) and NATO sweater in the winter. Rumour has it that the most dangerous phases of a helicopter flight are the take off and landing. I did far more ad- hoc landings/takeoffs doing public transport/corporate flights than I do now. If I were dressed then as I'm expected to dress now, half my passengers would have elected to go by road.
Personally, I think the main benefit of wearing all the kit that I'm expected to wear in my current job, is to make identification of the remains easier if I'm involved in something unpleasant.

RC

Windy Pants
4th Jan 2009, 01:18
...as they say the only time you have too much fuel is when you crash!:uhoh:

mickjoebill
4th Jan 2009, 01:33
Auto makers are well ahead of aviation industry.
NASA have released a report into the crew saftey at the time of the Challenger accident. It is clear that the challenger accident was not a survivable event but it beggars belief that given the flight profile on re-entry the following list is standard procedure....

Crew were not wearing all seat belts available (some had just lap belt)
Visors were up
Suits not pressurised
Gloves not worn
Helments were not close fitting (head made contact with inside of helmet)
Parachutes did not have auto deployment
Pressure suites had no auto mode

News report
NASA report details last moments of Columbia crew - Los Angeles Times (http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-sci-columbia31-2008dec31,1,3395284.story)

Link to report
NASA - Most Recent NASA Reports (http://www.nasa.gov/reports)

NASA are planning to rectify all of the above.



Mickjoebill

albatross
4th Jan 2009, 03:35
I used a helmet (SPH-4) for 12000 hrs but the neck pain finally got to me.
I always prefer a flight suit but sometimes the company insisted on the "bus driver's uniform".
I will not for any reason wear shorts while flying - I have seen the results of that - also if no flight suit is "available’ I wear cotton pants. I buy my own if the Company supplied items have synthetics.

I oft times wonder about cabin crew on Airlines in the event of a fire - skirts and nylons - that's going to work - not!!

GeorgeMandes
4th Jan 2009, 03:48
Perhaps different than those of you flying in urban areas, but being based in Alaska, there are different considerations. "Surviving the crash" is a two part deal -- after you reach the ground, and survive the crash, you may need to survive until help arrives. That means wearing clothing that not only won't burn, but will allow you to not freeze to death after the fire is out. Clothing and equipment worn on your person is survival gear, while clothing and gear carried in the ship should be considered camping gear, since it may or may not be available after a crash.

While I am in the lower 48 now, it was -38 F today, mid-day, at Port Alsworth, Alaska, near where I did a lot of flying over the last year.

albatross
4th Jan 2009, 04:12
I was brought up in the "bush flying" environment in Northern Quebec in the
50’s and 60's and was always told to dress (and have your customers dress) as to be able to: "stand around looking stupid for 24 hours" in case the damned thing burned with all the survival equipment aboard. A knife, Zippo Lighter, compass, ect were also recommended.

I once had 3 customers show up for a trip to the "outreaches" to view a mining prospect get off an executive jet dressed in suits and ties - in November in Northern Canada no less - I refused to depart with them and after a brief discussion where the words "I'll have your job" were used. I asked them to stand on the ramp for 10 minutes - after about 5 we made a trip to a local store and bought appropriate clothing for all.

I have found it to be a very good concept

KNIEVEL77
4th Jan 2009, 10:55
I hear the suggestion that what would passengers think if the pilot turned up in a flight suit and helmet........'very professional' would be my thinking and more so if he offered the passengers flight suits and helmets too, after all that's what the RAF offered me as did a couple of the 'taxi' companies when we used to film offshore.......and I was over the moon that they thought my safety was paramount!

helimutt
4th Jan 2009, 11:27
That may be fine for HM forces K77, do you know the cost of a helmet, made to measure, and the cost of those flight suits they wear? Now to find one to fit so many different sized heads and bodies etc, Not really economical. An ill fitting helmet is probably going to more problems than not wearing one at all I would guess. In the offshore industry, they don't supply us with them and even then, we only get one cheapo flight suit supplied to us. Bit of a joke really.
I rang a company to have a decent quality made-to-measure flight suit made up for me. Over £300 and my employer won't pay for it. :eek:

It's easy to say 'here, everyone have helmets and suits." Not so easy to have them paid for.

You'd be better off taking the £1500 or whatever it'll cost for the outfit to be made up and pay for a years insurance cover for flying without it. Bet you still get change from £500.


As for your safety being paramount? Call me cynical but maybe the lawsuit was where they were thinking.

KNIEVEL77
4th Jan 2009, 11:40
Helimutt,

Yes, some good points there.

Funnily enough after getting the letter from my Insurance Company I did a bit of reasearch........Robinson themselves do their own Nomex flight suit for around $200 and HTS will 'make' you a refurbished helmet to your requirements for around £500.

You are right though it would be incredibly expensive to supply suits and helmets to everyone, especially to have all sizes available.

I have to say that I didn't realise that you can but specialist Aviation insurance, separate to my Personal Insurance........I will search Google now!

One thing I still can't understand though is that after reading through past threads on the subject of safety why anyone would see fit to 'laugh' at anyone turning up in safety gear, we don't laugh at motorcyclists turning up in leather protective suits and helmets so why helicopter pilots, especially trainee pilots where surely the greatest risk of accidents prevail?

Some great posts though, the advice and opinions is always appreciated.

K77.

Lt.Fubar
4th Jan 2009, 12:02
Military provides Flight Suits, Helmets, and Poppy suits, because the have them, many, in different sizes, mainly for their own use. Civilian company won't stockpile those because its statistically less probable for having an incident. For a passenger, being involved in helicopter incident is what ? 1 in 7.7million ? Unfortunately for the pilots it's 1 in 8800.

For passengers it's very bad luck. For crew, its occupation hazard.

R44-pilot
4th Jan 2009, 12:08
Well for the people who want to wear nomex but have employers who dont want you to wear it......

Nomex Anti-Flame: UK (http://www.specialistworkwear.co.uk/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=3_7&gclid=CMK0uaP89JcCFQsh3godjQW4DA)

My instructor always had combats on, but on this website theres some trousers that wouldnt look out of place with a white shirt.... and a jacket which looks casual enough...

Not bad prices either, just a thought. :confused:

GeorgeMandes
4th Jan 2009, 12:55
Here is another option:

Massif Mountain Gear Company (http://www.massif.com/)

They make nomex mountaineering clothing.

500e
4th Jan 2009, 15:54
Never given the Anti static quality of Nomex a thought either.
Nomex is not the only fire fabric out there

http://www.carbonx.com/images/headers/heat.jpg

Besides protection from direct flame, CarbonX® withstands heat extremely well. For example, at approximately 600° f., the leading FR fabrics burn, begin to shrink while charring, then crack and decompose. This is all in about 10 seconds. Under the same conditions, CarbonX is not affected in any way. It even disburses the heat energy and will take about 60 seconds before the heat will start penetrating the next layer of fabric.

DennisK
4th Jan 2009, 21:06
Hi Trog ... My tailor ... Nothing less than Saville Row of course.

PS. Were we really doing B206 EOLs from within the H/V curve! Why didn't you slap my wrist.

Sometime try the Bell factory course. 175 ft and zero forward speed demo'd routinely. Ditto from 50 ft.

Back on topic. We do need to draw a distinct line between Utility and Pax Ops. I can't see protective gear ever becoming standard fit in pax carrying, certainly never on the airlines. Similarly I can't see any case for not wearing the full gear on the rest.

Dennis Kenyon.

KNIEVEL77
5th Jan 2009, 11:21
I still can't understand why safety equipment is not compulsary if even just for helicopter pilots......surely it would make sense!

KNIEVEL77
5th Jan 2009, 16:06
I have just read the reports into the PSI S76 Helicopter crash yesterday in the USA........ it uses the words 'perished' and 'head trauma', I think i'm going to shelve out some money without doubt now on a suit and helmet.

My thoughts go out to the deceased families.

helimutt
5th Jan 2009, 18:10
just remember that an accident in a helicopter, which goes wrong to the point of a substantial impact, will most likely give you blunt trauma injuries no matter what you're wearing. The human body can cope with quite high g loading really but only to a point, helmet or no helmet.

Your internal organs will come loose inside you, or if you're lucky, a quick death will ensue with a torn aorta. Not fun reading but a couple of the crashes i'm familiar with, no matter what safety gear they had been wearing would have given them any protection. It's all down to personal choice and weighing up your own sense of risk.

Aucky
6th Jan 2009, 08:44
back when i did my initial training in south africa all the pilots/instructors wore flight suits, whether flying their pumas to do relief work or their 22's doing photo shoots, and everything in between. everyone thought they always looked very professional and, perfectly suited to the job (excuse the pun), i agree, they looked much more professional than some people i have seen flying in the uk with aweful cheap looking, badly fitting, black trouser/white shirt combo, (although i have also seen suited pilots looking very smart). i'm all for the flight suit, especially for the added safety :ok:

Madbob
6th Jan 2009, 09:27
One of my main reasons for preferring a flying suit is that IMHO it helps reduce the hazard of loose articles in the cockpit. It has loads of pockets with zips which are mainly in the right places and accessable even when wearing a harness.

This may be a residual habit from the RAF but loose coins, sunglasses case, pens etc. can be a real danger....

Another benefit is that it could reduce burn injuries in the event of an accident but I value its practical features more. It also keeps my civvies clean when doing a walk-round when oil, fuel, dust and dirt can spoil what you are wearing:ok:. The only pain is having to empty all those pockets when its time to throw it in the wash.

MB

helimutt
6th Jan 2009, 11:05
yes but some of us work for companies who will supply you with a flight suit (one!) even though you will fly in it every day you're at work when not wearing a rubber goon suit, and this has to be kept clean. The suits come in fixed sizes so if you don't exactly match the suit size, then it's uncomfortable to wear and you can end up looking a mess.

If we had made to measure flight suits, as some companies supply, then great. Helmets? :hmm:

I think we recently had a memo saying we shouldn't turn up for work wearing denim jeans, but it's okay to wear a slightly ill fitting flight suit though. :E

Makiwa
6th Jan 2009, 20:49
Don't forget boys and girls, your expensive NOMEX suit is no longer fire retardant and therefore an utter waste of time as such, if you don't launder it correctly.

If you wash your NOMEX suit in a machine with all your other laundry, made up of the usual garments made from cotton, wool and other various man-made fibers, the fibers from those clothes will entwine themselves amongst the cloth of the NOMEX suit, thereby reducing it's fire retardant qualities substantially. It is even worse if you've put the flight suit in a tumble dryer with the same other items of clothing mentioned.

When I was in the Air Force (guess which one?) Safety Equipment Section was responsible for laundering our issued flight suits. We were not supposed to launder them ourselves - ever. The washing machines Safety Equipment used had only ever had NOMEX type material in them, and a specific flame retardant detergent was used.

Away from the training base though, it was a different story...

Besides, a properly laundered NOMEX Suit is only good for protection from a flash fire. A fully established post crash fuel fire and you're probably a crispy critter anyway.

However, given a choice, I'd rather wear a flight suit over the faggy looking blank pants/white shirt and airline-wanna-be-captain-bars-moneky-suit, so many companies insist we wear. Just a personal thing. To each their own I guess...

For example, there's nothing like the red grease from a Bell preflight on your spiffy looking white shirt to make you look - well nasty and unprofessional. On a flight suit, chances are it can be a bit less conspicuous.

Maybe that's why there are several companies out there, that seem to insist that the pilot preflight of a helicopter is, merely a "walk around", with no getting up there and into it with the cowlings open - to really look it over.

Besides all that "personal preference" regarding uniforms goes though, the main thing I'd like to point out is that I have several personal mates, several acquaintances and even more "anecdotal colleagues" who are alive today, due to the fact they were wearing a helmet when things got nasty.

Which is why I insist on wearing one myself - always.

In fact the last 3 jobs I've had, I have asked during the interview process if there was any issue with my doing so. Luckily, I was told, "No, that would be my personal choice." When asked why I had asked, I said that if the answer had been "No", I would have had to pass on the job.

As someone previously said, it's often pretty hot in there anyway, even with just a lightweight headset. So the peace of mind the added protection gives is well worth it. The plus factor I find is the huge reduction in noise I have from the helmet I wear, and the added safety from the clear visor I always have down, no matter the weather or light conditions.

There'd be no worse of an irony I think, of being alive after the impact of the crash, but non-compus-mentus enough to fail to make it out of the wreckage due to the fact you were stunned from a head impact, and then end up burning or drowning after the fact. That would just seem dumb and futile to me...

So, at the end of the day, here's wishing you all safe flying, good luck and never the need to require the necessity of the safety equipment we are advised to use.

A safe and prosperous 2009 to you all! Take care...

KNIEVEL77
6th Jan 2009, 20:54
Makiwa,

Great post........more food for thought, thanks!

K77.

n5296s
7th Jan 2009, 00:26
There's been a lot of discussion elsewhere about the real value of a standard Nomex flight suit in terms of fire protection. But anyway I wear mine when flying the heli not so much for fire protection but because the preflight (R44) involves grovelling around on the ground, which I prefer not to do in my best clothes. I bought it for flying the Pitts, again not so much for fire protection (with the fuel tank right above your knees, in the front seat at least, I'm not sure really how much good it would do) but because of all the handy zip-up acro-proof pockets.

I'd feel a bit silly wearing it to go for a day out in the 182, although the pros (Police etc) wear the full gear including helmet even in a 182.

n5296s

500e
7th Jan 2009, 11:49
If your worry is fire Carbon X appears to offer a leap in protection especially if you wear cotton undergarments or the prescribed underwear for the product.
Nomex has a verrrry short safety span with single later.
Had no thought about the washing of same Makiwa is there any link regarding this I could access?

R44-pilot
7th Jan 2009, 12:20
Had no idea about washing Nomex either! Not got a suit but may one day get a job that requires it!

What do the UK Police and HEMS pilots do for washing there's then? take it they are Nomex?

Great post Makiwa! :ok:

Makiwa
8th Jan 2009, 08:37
I found these links that seem to infer that washing with other fabrics and with normal household detergents is satisfactory.

So there you have it...

Maybe the guys at the Safety Equipment Section were trying to ensure their job security, eh?

Anyway, here are 2 of the many links I found:

Landry Instructions for Nomex Workwear (http://www.automotiveworkwear.com/landryinfo_nomex.html)

Wash and Care - DuPont Personal Protection (http://www.dpp-europe.com/-Wash-and-Care-.html?lang=en)

There are many others there too. Just do a search with "Washing and Care of NOMEX" in your search engine and you'll come up with many links to sites.

merlinxx
9th Jul 2009, 22:22
You can ctc Martyn F. via [email protected] of PH +44(0)1279 680045 FX 680029.
If yer lucky he'll in the office:ok: He will ctc you if you mail him:ok:

Gordy
10th Jul 2009, 01:04
Makiwa

Post deleted after reading your second post which I somehow missed....

RedWhite&Blue
10th Jul 2009, 08:37
500e
I wear Carbon X under my nomex flight suit in the summer and under my goon suit in the winter. Have done for about two years.
It isn't cheap! and it wears thin around the knees and elbows if you fly as often as I do in the SNS.
I reckon it's still worth it though.

I always wondered what happens to the rubber neck and wrist seals on a goon suit, in a fire. Napalm neckless? :\

500e
10th Jul 2009, 09:08
Carbon X under the Nomex (single or 3 layer) you could combust from the inside out :uhoh:
You require a cool vest
Aero Supplies (http://www.pilotcooling.com/shop/index.php)
Please check W & B before flying
:ok:

RedWhite&Blue
10th Jul 2009, 11:52
500e
No need for cool vest when you are "Sub Zero" to start with.;)

mickjoebill
11th Jul 2009, 01:41
Unfortunately for the pilots it's 1 in 8800.


Does this statistic mean that for every 8800 helipilots one will perish in an accident during the entire span of their career? (lets say 1 per 8800 per 30 years?)

What is the total number of pilots flying helicopters worldwide?


Mickjoebill