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B206 sideways into the salty stuff?

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B206 sideways into the salty stuff?

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Old 4th November 2003 | 16:20
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Senis Semper Fidelis
 
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From: Lancashire U K
B206 sideways into the salty stuff?

For us in the English TV area tonight (tuesday 4th Nov) there is one of those programmes that show people doing dangerous acts(channel 4) that come unstuck, the trailer of which shows a white B206 pulling a speedboat from the central lifting point, the rope breaks and the JR side slips loses height and enters the kingdom of Neptune, I have only seen possibly a 4 second screening of this event.

However what puzzels me is, if the JR was under power to tow the said boat, when the rope broke you would have expected the thing to leap higher into the air, but instead it very quickly, as most Heli pilots will know in the blink of an eye slipped sideways, lost height and crashed dramatically into the sea, WHY?
can any of you throw any light on this.
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Old 4th November 2003 | 20:48
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From: Denver, CO and the GOM
Not having seen the video, two thoughts come to mind.

First is that when the rope broke, the free end got into the rotor system, causing loss of control.

Second is that the rope got wrapped up in the helicopter, then broke.

Pure speculation on my part.
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Old 4th November 2003 | 21:55
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What sort of donkey would try towing a boat with a helicopter?? I've seen pictures of helicopters being used to tow water skiers, but why try to tow a boat.

Not seen the clip either, but will be glued to the telly tonight. (VFR...pb - we get Channel 4 in Scotland too!!!!).

Could the JR be deliberately flown out of balance so that the pilot could see the boat? If so, there will be sideways cyclic and a fair amount of pedal to counteract the resistance of the boat. If the rope snapped, it would take lightning reactions to get all the forces back into equilibrium with the rotor disk directly over the skids. Only a thought....
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Old 4th November 2003 | 21:58
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From: Propping up bars in the Lands of D H Lawrence and Bishop Bonner
Thinks it might be on channel 5 - I saw the trailer after the Ultimate Helicopter prog last night.

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Old 4th November 2003 | 23:27
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Not seen it but perhaps the engine failed first and the pilot operated the jettison handle?
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Old 5th November 2003 | 01:59
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From: Escrick York england
whirly gig whats the ultimate helicopter prog
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Old 5th November 2003 | 02:18
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From: Lancashire U K
Channel 5 at 20.00Hrs tonight will show the white B206 hitting the drink , sorry mentioned wrong prog earlier.

The Ultimate Helicopter programme was on Ch5 last night was very good, but about 10 hours too short! showed the boffins who made a new rotor/blade design for the Lynx allowing it to reach 249.9945678 MPH in forward flight, they should have alook at the R22
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Old 5th November 2003 | 03:06
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From: The Daylight Saving Free Zone
Cool

Vfrpilotpb: Saw that program a couple of weeks ago. I dont have the answers to your question, even after a couple of replays.
The rope seemed to hit the belly of the 206, his lack of airspeed for the amount of nose down attitude would have meant, perhaps, he needed more height to recover!

Besides, I was more intersested in why the girl in the boat was putting her top back on.
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Old 5th November 2003 | 03:20
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From: Propping up bars in the Lands of D H Lawrence and Bishop Bonner
Lynx allowing it to reach 249.9945678 MPH
vfrpilotpb - please tell me you looked that up and do not know that off by heart.

.....and I thought I needed to get out more

Just saw the whole clip - the 206 simply seems to fall into the sea!!

Cheers

Whirlygig
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Old 5th November 2003 | 03:51
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From: the bump
I agree with Crashondeck, “What sort of donkey would try towing a boat with a helicopter??”

Last time someone tried that he got eaten by a great white!
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Old 5th November 2003 | 05:10
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I have seen a pic of a Boeing 107 towing a drilling rig off Newfoundland.

ATN
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Old 5th November 2003 | 05:24
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Having seen the clip several times it seems that

1. the rope breaks about halfway down the line and if you look closely you can seen just before the breakage there is some sort of knot in the rope this proved to be a breaking point to start things off

2. just backtracking a bit before the breakage the 206 had a huge nose down attitude in trying to pull this boat and if you look at the boat its certainly mooving quite rapidly before the breakage occurs

3. you could imagine the rotor thrust at this huge nose down attitude and basically when the load or sling broke he just catapulted into the water. he would just not have the time to pull out of this unusual attitude.

4. I could imagine the insurance company would be a little less than impressed!!

Just my opinion thats all
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Old 5th November 2003 | 06:49
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From: Here,there &everywhere
Seen the clip.Can't remember exactly but this is just speculation:

Rope was over skid, so pilot compensates for it by puting in oposite cyclic.Rope snaps and BaraBing. To much left cyclic =drink
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Old 5th November 2003 | 07:28
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From: Bai, mi go long hap na kisim sampla samting.
Red face

If its the same clip we saw in auz, it went in backwards and rolling to the left.
low airspeed, over compensation on the cyclic rearwards to make up for the large nose down attitude and a bit of the same for left cyclic, as well as not enough altitude to recover from the over compensation, tail rotor went in first and dragged the rest of it in with MRRPM decaying and MR blades getting shorter and shorter by the second
All in all....really stupid.
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Old 5th November 2003 | 10:46
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From: Michigan USA
Is there a downloadable clip anyone knows of?
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Old 5th November 2003 | 18:03
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From: North of the Border
ATN

"Beoing 107 towing a rig off Newfoundland"

Is that the picture showing the topside of all the blades, 70 degrees nose down, nose altitude 30'?

Bet he's glad the tow rope didnt snap!
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Old 5th November 2003 | 23:27
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From: Used to be God's own County
Amazing what people will do to pull!
Pulling a boat is not a problem as long as you have a strong enough rope and don't go anything faster than walking pace!!
As pointed out previously, the nose down indicates a huge force - not unsurprizingly. You have a massive (Staines) reaction on the blades. If that reaction is removed as quickly as it was, the helicopter will not 'spring' up as some imagine but the blades will react and the change of RAF will literally stall the blades in an instant, producing ****** all lift and down you go Dumbo!
Haven't tried it for real but TR failure was not the issue as the rope seemed to miss.
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Old 6th November 2003 | 06:42
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From: Australia sometimes
On helicopters pulling things .... I watched a B222 tow a B206L (post engine problem) for some distance once. Was all going OK until one of the floats tore off the 206 and it rolled over. Fortunatly the guy in the 222 owned them both so he couldn't sack anyone!
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Old 6th November 2003 | 08:20
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From: Australia
Devil comon fellas

you's all realize it's the sudden increase in induced airflow as the helicopter suddenly accellerates, (in through the top) that the pilot encounters without hight to recover.
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Old 6th November 2003 | 11:24
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From: Denver, CO and the GOM
vorticey said:
you's all realize it's the sudden increase in induced airflow as the helicopter suddenly accellerates, (in through the top) that the pilot encounters without hight to recover.

EESDL said:
As pointed out previously, the nose down indicates a huge force - not unsurprizingly. You have a massive (Staines) reaction on the blades. If that reaction is removed as quickly as it was, the helicopter will not 'spring' up as some imagine but the blades will react and the change of RAF will literally stall the blades in an instant, producing ****** all lift and down you go Dumbo!
OK you guys, in English please...
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