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The venerable Bell 47

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Old 8th Aug 2007, 09:33
  #161 (permalink)  

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outofwhack,

Being a newbie - dare I ask the question why helicopter pilots dont have parachutes. The old reason of not being high enough to use them does not apply anymore. Base jumpers prove that.
Parachutes were worn in the Whirlwind 10 when going to higher altitudes, it was to do with the possibility of an aircraft fire and the low rate of descent in autorotation.

The Flight Reference Cards gave the abandonment drill to be followed (something along the lines of: Open windows, control frictions full on, disconnect mic/tel leads, undo harness, sit on window sill, facing inwards and roll out backwards from aircraft window).

There was a note at the bottom of that page which worried me quite a lot. It said "Warning. Objects jettisoned from the aircraft in autorotation may go through the main rotor disc."

As the pilot, I can't think of another phase of flight when I would want to jump out.....most of us said we would give the cyclic a kick to the left, to try to roll the aircraft way from us.
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Old 8th Aug 2007, 16:23
  #162 (permalink)  
 
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OOW,in answer to your Q about FTH,think of it this way;in an ideal world,ideal engine, on the ground at full power(non turbo/supercharged)( full throttle) you would see a manifold pressure of 29-30"/0 lbs,ie static ambient presure; real life- about 27-28"/-1/2 lbs due to the configuration/losses in the induction system. On top of that, you have a transmission limitation which ,may be 26"/-2lbs,which means you shouldn`t actually use more than that.
Now, as you climb at,say 25", you will need to progressively open the throttle to maintain 25", until at some point the throttle is fully open,or you reach your time limit at max power,and reduce to MCP ,perhaps 23". This may be a transmission limit or engine limit. If you continue to climb,maintaining that limit(23"), you will reach an altitude where the throttle is again fully open, and if you go higher still, the MP will start to decrease. The throttle is fully open ,so there is no restricting of airflow into the carb,which is also doing it`s best to maintain the correct mixture. You can of course still climb,but even with full throttle, MP will be reducing; you may now be only able to maintain airpeed/height at one power setting- more likely you will be anoxic !!
I`m reminded of the Test pilot at Boscombe who was tasked to do a height climb in a Sioux,with oxygen, parachute,etc,who wrote that a stopwatch was irrelevant, a calendar would have been more useful!
2" of MP is approximately 2050 ft in altitude, so you can work the figures for the appropriate aircraft.
If you have turbo/supercharging ,you abide by the same principles,particularly
in helos, since you will have a transmission limit to maintain, but you will still reach an altitude where the throttle will be fully open ,and the boost starts decreasing......don`t forget the calendar, oxygen, blankets etc....Syc
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Old 8th Aug 2007, 18:10
  #163 (permalink)  
 
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don't forget the placard thats in the 47 about manifold pressures for 200 hp at various temps and altitudes...that technically becomes your limiting factor. since your transmission is rated for 200 hp of input hp, if you pull 25" MP at 5000' you'll actually be using more than 200 hp from the engine (you're into the 65 hp of spare power for which the engine was de-rated in the first place). i've never heard of anyone worrying too much about that MP placard, especially since the 200 hp limit is not actually stated as a limitation in any of the FM's that i've read.
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Old 8th Aug 2007, 18:57
  #164 (permalink)  
 
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So do you mean they have physically derated an engine from 265 HP to 200HP with a placard?

I always thought there might be some kind of mechanical stop that does it.

How is an engine physically de-rated?
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Old 9th Aug 2007, 04:15
  #165 (permalink)  
 
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i don't think i said it was physically de-rated...just rated at less than its full potential so there is some power in the bank for performance loss with altitude. for example, if the engine is putting out 200 hp and working at 75% of its possible output to hit the MP redline, there will be a point at which its working at 100% of capacity to deliver that 200 hp at some altitude/temp. you should never actually be putting 265 hp through the drivetrain unless you're exceeding redlines. its the same idea as the c-20 in a jetranger being 420 hp but only delivering 317 (i think) to the tranny. without that power reserve it would be like...well it would be like a jetbox with a c-18 i guess...(thankfully i never had to experience that)
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Old 11th Dec 2007, 14:22
  #166 (permalink)  
 
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I bought the last set of grips from Helicopters Spares inc. out of Pennsilvania.
PM me and I'll give you the contact info. He is an excellent source for 47 parts.
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Old 12th Dec 2007, 01:31
  #167 (permalink)  
 
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Grips

outofwhack.. I may know someone who maybe interested in them. PM me your details and I will pass them on, new there around $6000. PMA made here in the states and easy to get...
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Old 24th Jan 2008, 17:29
  #168 (permalink)  
 
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Bell 47

Hi all,

I've tried Google and not had much luck so I thought I'd delve into the wealth of collective knowledge (no pun intended) on the forum.

Highest hours, and or the oldest operational Bell47. I'm looking for the fleet leader.

Any info?

Thanks

Taff
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Old 24th Jan 2008, 20:11
  #169 (permalink)  
 
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Theres a pretty old one based at hawarden, im afriad i dont have the specifics of it though, give Hields a ring, use to be one of their machines! Sorry cant be of more help!

HC
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Old 24th Jan 2008, 20:42
  #170 (permalink)  
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oldest 47 still flying

morning all
google heli-Muster in Aus, they might just have the oldest 47 with the highest number of flying hours on it
blue skies
NNB
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 00:04
  #171 (permalink)  
 
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Give Joey Rhodes a try at the Bell 47 Helicopter Association.


www.bell47helicopterassociation.org


LM
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 00:15
  #172 (permalink)  
 
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The oldest B47?

I have been fortunate to have flown a fully restored B47B model back in the 90's, I believe it was the oldest helicopter still flying at the time. It was owned by the late Doug Daigle President of Tridair Helicopters, John Wayne Airport, California USA. It has now been donated & retired to the air & space museum in Washington DC.
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 05:43
  #173 (permalink)  
 
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Hi, Guy's
There's mine G-BFYI 47G-3B-1 ~5570 hours, made in 1965, mind you, we are just about to get it flyable again after brand new engine, gearbox and tail rotor blades (been a long and expensive year).
Kevin.
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 06:31
  #174 (permalink)  
 
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i've got a few hours on a g-2 with about 12500 hours on it...i'm sure that's relatively few in the 47 world though...
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 07:44
  #175 (permalink)  
 
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I knew you'd come up with some leads. Thanks all.

Taff
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 15:38
  #176 (permalink)  
 
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Bell 47 J

Any thoughts ?

Are these to old and rare to be practical in the UK. Are they thirstly and heavy. Does it really make a diffecrence to have the larger engine. Spares ? and are the rotables common with the other 47's
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 19:55
  #177 (permalink)  
 
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Try this website for 47 info.

www.bell47helicopterassociation.org
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Old 25th Jan 2008, 20:18
  #178 (permalink)  
 
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Here's a picture of one taken at Stapleford


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Old 21st May 2008, 21:47
  #179 (permalink)  
 
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Bell 47 Tail Rotor Blades

Hey Guys

Looking for a set of tail rotor blades for a Bell 47, anyone got a set to sell. Even a short time pair will do as we're getting very low on ours.

PM me if you can help

Cheers
ET
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Old 21st May 2008, 22:47
  #180 (permalink)  
 
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Try www.scottshelicopterservice.com. If they can't help, they should
know someone who can.
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