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Old 11th Jul 2010, 20:44
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gulliBell
 
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Extracts from the South China Morning Post...


Copter pilot tells how instinct saved the day

Just don't call me a hero, says veteran aviator


Niall Fraser
Jul 11, 2010

Helicopter pilot Richard Moffatt is no fan of what he calls the "H" word, but few would argue that he is a bona fide hero. If it hadn't been for his lightning-sharp reactions, years of training and wealth of flying experience, Hong Kong could have been mourning one of its worst-ever air disasters.

The self-effacing Moffatt was at the controls of a Macau-bound AgustaWestland AW139 helicopter with 13 passengers and crew on board when it suffered a massive failure in its tail seconds after take-off from the Shun Tak Centre helipad in Sheung Wan last Saturday morning.
At that moment, father-of-three Moffat, 45, his Macanese first officer, Fernando Sun Keng-pong, and the men and women passengers heading for a relaxing weekend in Asia's gaming capital were plunged into a nightmare scenario.
The English and naturalised Australian pilot from Sky Shuttle has revealed how, after what is acknowledged as a brilliant piece of flying to get the helicopter safely onto the water, he dived into Victoria Harbour twice from the stricken aircraft to help distressed passengers cast adrift in the choppy swell of one of the world's busiest waterways. He has also told how, a week after the ordeal, he awakes in the middle of the night, replaying the incident in his head and wondering: "Could I have done more?''
Amazingly, just five days after what could easily have been a tragedy, Moffatt was back in the pilot's seat. It would have been sooner, was it not for the fact that his licence remains at the bottom of the harbour.
"I got my [new] pilot's licence on Thursday lunchtime and immediately went to the heliport and put myself on a flight," he said. "It was surprisingly fine. I didn't know how I was going to react once I sat in the aircraft, but I got in with a training captain and it was okay. If anything, this incident has increased my confidence in this aircraft and in myself. I wanted to do a flight as quickly as I could, before I could change my mind. It was the same for Fernando, he just got his licence back on Friday and got straight back in."
However, listening to a man who said he wanted to be a pilot from the tender age of four recount the dramatic circumstances of his first real-life in-flight emergency, it was easy to understand if he never wanted to see the inside of a helicopter again.
Moffatt recalled how, despite the speed and severity of the situation, his training took over.
"We took off towards Stonecutters Island into the wind. It was an absolutely standard departure," he said. "But as we were passing about 300 feet, literally five seconds after we completed the take-off checks, we heard a big bang at the rear of the aircraft. The whole airframe started to swerve to the right and there was a very severe vibration. The vibration was most notable through the pedals which control the yaw (swerve) of the aircraft, so I diagnosed there was a problem with the tail rotor. It was fairly clear to me that we had a tail rotor failure.
"The only way to resolve that was to enter into auto-rotation. This basically means taking all power off the main rotors which takes the torque out of the system. I then asked Fernando to switch the engines to `Off' and we auto-rotated to within about 100 feet of the water."
The veteran pilot, who has 18 years of offshore flying experience in the United States, Thailand, Myanmar and West Africa, compared the descent of 10 to 15 seconds towards the water as "like a sycamore leaf falling from a tree". Quite a metaphor, especially as he was talking about hundreds of tonnes of helicopter falling out of the sky at 1,500 to 2,000 feet a minute.
"At about 30 to 50 feet, I levelled the aircraft and that cushioned us onto the water," he said, before adding with heavy understatement: "It was largely an uneventful landing - apart from the fact that it was on water. It was a one-way ticket down but my training just clicked in. From the start of the event until we hit the water, I had no idea how the passengers were reacting. Both myself and Fernando were kind of busy!"
Neither did the pair have time to reflect on the highly skilled yet instinctive emergency landing - behind them were 13 terrified people in a chaotic cabin taking in water. "As soon as we hit the water, the floats activated automatically and our job was to get everyone out. The passengers were surprisingly well behaved. They took my directions. It maybe took 10 to 15 seconds from the event happening to us touching the water. I don't think there was time for panic."
Moffatt said most of the passengers got out with their life jackets on, but in the confusion some left the helicopter without. "There was one passenger who went out with his friend and didn't have a life jacket, so I went into the water to make sure he was okay."
The plucky pilot then swam back to the chopper to help two people who could not find life jackets. "They were still there under the seats, but at that point there was some confusion so I persuaded both of them to leave the aircraft with seat cushions, which are designed as buoyancy aids."
Prior to that he had gone to the aid of a distressed woman in her mid-20s who had a life jacket round her neck but had not tied it on. "While all this happened Fernando was right beside the aircraft, he was doing a wonderful job. English wasn't the first language of the majority of the passengers, so he was giving instructions in Cantonese and Mandarin."
By the time the pilots got the last two passengers into the water, three fishing boats were already there and had picked up some of them.
"Police launches were on the scene very quickly and they did the headcount. Once I was certain we had the 13 people out of the water, I was able to relax a little," Moffatt said.
"It wasn't until Fernando and I were on the ferry back to Macau a few hours later that evening and there was no one else around that what had happened hit home.
"There was the realisation of what could have happened and there was also self-doubt - did I do the right thing? Did I do the best I could? Was there something else I could have done to not have gone into the water?
"You read about pilots in emergency situations and you think, `If that had been me, would I have been able to pull that off?' It's nice to know that 18 years of flying have paid off.
"I don't want to sound like some sort of super-pilot because I am not; it is instinct, the training is there to make this reaction second nature. I just hope this is a once-in-a-career event.
...hundreds of tonnes of helicopter falling out of the sky... I didn't realize they were that heavy no wonder it fell out of the sky

Last edited by gulliBell; 11th Jul 2010 at 20:59.
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