What is it that is so ADDICTIVE about helicopters?
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What is it that is so ADDICTIVE about helicopters?
I got hooked when we went on a flight in a Long Ranger (G-LIMO) for my mums 40th. The helicopter picked us up from our house and took us to Filey in North Yorkshire and we landed on the cliff top. We ended up being on the front page of the local newspaper, much to our embarassment at the time!! We had a cup of tea on the sea front and then flew to sheffield airport. From then on i was well and truly hooked.
Whats Your story?
Thanks.
LongTailRotor..
Whats Your story?
Thanks.
LongTailRotor..
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I discovered my passion to fly when my friends dad kindly took me up for a short flight around the peak district in his R-22 (G-TIMH), whilst i was up something 'clicked' and I have been hooked ever since.
Thanks, Ethompson
Thanks, Ethompson
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My dad is a helicopter pilot. Growing up I idolized him and the cool things he got to do at work. He would take me along whenever possible and I was hooked ever since I can remember. Slash burning, Fire fighting, Animal capture, Tree topping, Fishing, Medivacs, Flying Santa, Moving drills, the potential for diversity is endless. Now I'm just in my second year of flying myself and some of the challenges I expected and some of them I didn't but I couldn't picture myself doing anything else.
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Not many in life get to fly a personal magic carpet, but when I first did a photo shoot from a 206, I knew what I wanted to do. However many years passed before I could fulfill the dream.
After my first day of training, it took several days for the smile to fade!
Many years on and I still love to fly the 'magic carpet'. In fact the phrase of SEX ON SKIDS comes to mind, but don't tell 'er indoors
After my first day of training, it took several days for the smile to fade!
Many years on and I still love to fly the 'magic carpet'. In fact the phrase of SEX ON SKIDS comes to mind, but don't tell 'er indoors
I went to the States to become a fixed wing pilot - for the money and the hosties, obviously... Whilst I was there a man named Osama got up to a few things which resulted in no career prospects and the potential to lose all my money - helicopters were a viable option and a good way to blow the money fast, before the school could go bust. The bonus is that you can fly low, slow and backwards a lot more (plus no 500' rule in the states!) - you're not IFR in big long straight lines everywhere. Plus after becoming a REAL pilot - handling again plank is childsplay...
Hovering AND talking
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During the 2002 Commonwealth Games, I had the opportunity for a jump-seat ride in a Bolkow (thanks SC and JJ). Loved it. I jumped out of that helicopter and announced to the world that I HAD to that.
A few months later, had a similar trip (thanks DB) which opened my eyes to it being a bit more tricky than it looked but still ....
And within 13 months, I had my PPL(H). After my first few lessons though, I was ker-nackered. Smiling but ker-nackered. And one of my favourite moments was when I got a round of applause at a small airfield for my beautiful reverse parking .
Cheers
Whirls
A few months later, had a similar trip (thanks DB) which opened my eyes to it being a bit more tricky than it looked but still ....
And within 13 months, I had my PPL(H). After my first few lessons though, I was ker-nackered. Smiling but ker-nackered. And one of my favourite moments was when I got a round of applause at a small airfield for my beautiful reverse parking .
Cheers
Whirls
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why i flying choppers
growing up around helicopters (parents own a helicopter company) i did not understand or could even see what all the fuss was about..
then as i grew up and had to make a career choice, i decided flying sounded like a good option, family company.. something fairly stable.. (over 25 years already)..
once i started and eventually gaining enough experience to do the desert surveys/filming etc i found out what it was all about!! being in control of such a piece of machinery that could and wil bite you at anytime..
flying on sunset up a river (that you KNOW has NO power lines or anything else, for that fact nothing for at least 100nm) at 5ft above the water at 110knots (all alone) listening to the great CCRs song Run through the jungle!! nil wind no doors, PERFECT - what better way to earn a living!!!
taking tourists/passengers on their first flight and seeing the smiles on their faces that you know will last for days..
i also LOVE the fact that i get to see some of Australia's country that you could almost gaurentee no human has possibly been!!!
also the start of a turbine.. tick tick tick.. the smell of burnt jet fuel!
what more could someone want in a career!!! bugger the money i do it for the love!!!!!
then as i grew up and had to make a career choice, i decided flying sounded like a good option, family company.. something fairly stable.. (over 25 years already)..
once i started and eventually gaining enough experience to do the desert surveys/filming etc i found out what it was all about!! being in control of such a piece of machinery that could and wil bite you at anytime..
flying on sunset up a river (that you KNOW has NO power lines or anything else, for that fact nothing for at least 100nm) at 5ft above the water at 110knots (all alone) listening to the great CCRs song Run through the jungle!! nil wind no doors, PERFECT - what better way to earn a living!!!
taking tourists/passengers on their first flight and seeing the smiles on their faces that you know will last for days..
i also LOVE the fact that i get to see some of Australia's country that you could almost gaurentee no human has possibly been!!!
also the start of a turbine.. tick tick tick.. the smell of burnt jet fuel!
what more could someone want in a career!!! bugger the money i do it for the love!!!!!
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Er....... women love a big chopper.
Unfortunately, I only have a small one these days. Well, a bit over 3 tonnes. Hardly enough to attract anyone.
Unfortunately, I only have a small one these days. Well, a bit over 3 tonnes. Hardly enough to attract anyone.
Hovering AND talking
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Not necessarily ShyT! I'd much rather fly, say, a 109 rather than a Sea King! Some women go for quality.
That being said, I'd love to fly a Chinook!
Cheers
Whirls
That being said, I'd love to fly a Chinook!
Cheers
Whirls
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I've been hooked up all my life - only now starting to fulfill my life-long dreams
I got hooked up ages ago.
First thing to get hooked up - girls in creche.
Second thing - planes and helicopters in kindergarten.
As a little boy drawing Bell 206 lookalike (all right, ugly something desperately trying to look like one) instead of cars and playing with anything that could fly instead of playing with cars in the dirt slope like my friends did.
Finding all the small Korea era MIGs left scattered around Slovakia in kids playgrounds very interesting, getting into cockpit and pretending it's not pile of junkyard aluminium. Having vivid dreams of that WWII DC-3 or so in green camo I once visited as a boy and rediscovered in central Slovakia while there at Uni (I didn't finish much to my mom's discontent).
Flying, whether gliders or choppers, ultralights, anything. It's all great.
Watching 'Hot Shots' TV series with bunch of guys with tiny cameras on their RC cars and more importantly, RC choppers. Amazing. Thrilling.
All the gorgeous flying and aerial activities and stunts in Ushuaia Adventure.
All the low level flying and steep bank turns in movies.
All that makes me uncontrollably veer to side with my head or body looking kinda frenzy and as if having fit. That says it all.
When as a kid, I played with little gliders, wind up choppers, envying my flat block neighbour's RC chopper I saw him fly couple times until it ended up hung on his balcony for good (probably screwed up flying).
I dreamt of having RC chopper. I couldn't afford it.
Come early teenage years, getting to know the amount of effort, money, TT hours and stringent health for the mil (fighter jets are also nice machines, shame they're made to kill) - having had some fractures and minor vision correction, I thought I could never make it - so I grew up and tried to find viable 'career' that won't bore me to death. Money is issue, but not important in terms of salary. Plus, not having a chance for any kind of sponsorship, huge loan to train to fly (still envying US citizens and Scandinavians or Brits/Irish with house or mortgage to spare)
Having saved up some dosh in the UK over past years (grew up in Czecho/Slovakia) for my future plans ie studies, living around the world, I had my life-long sparkle re-ignited by flatmate here in Belfast. He's Nigerian German passport holder with US green card and almost 1000 TT in planks up to 40 seater experience. He doesn't fly commercially anymore although he says he'd love to try choppers but doesn't see it as a career for himself anymore.
I'm going to fetch some cash from inheritance back home, begging my mom to get me more from some land sale over this year so I won't have to save so many more years until I'm up to CFI/FI and 'employable'.
Having saved for years on pittance wages, any 'leftover' chunk of money is highly appreciated as it spares me from saving yet another few years on top of next two.
I've been hooked up since I remember. The only things that would prevent me from flying would be loss of medical (for comm flying) or death.
Since I cheated death at quite a few occasions during my life, I know I'm not invincible.
I used to fly paragliding a bit when younger as it was the only 'affordable' way of flying. But it brought me more sad times than joy for many reasons, not the flying itself.
I don't find big passenger jets interesting. I don't feel that interested.
One can fly smaller planes for living, I could, but it's not as fun as flying helicopters.
All the reasons mentioned in dif threads about which direction to choose, whether FW or RW. Heli flying is about flying. Not getting from A to B unless it's charter. We all know all this since we're PPRUNE regulars.
I'm starting my real life this summer in the US. It brings lots of uncertainties, but it's a challenge. As with anything really important in life, I'm trying to arrange everything, prepare for possible outcomes etc.
One should rather ask what is there NOT TO get hooked up to helicopters or flying in general. Women and flying. Two best things in life.
I'm sacrificing the earlier in order to have both later in my life and not whinge 'what ifs' for the rest of my life with women only.
I see money in my savings as a means to fly. Not as something to spend on lavish 'lifestyle' BS. Some people, wannabes, ask others on another threads about investment to potential salary ratio, investment (ie training costs) return time etc. They might have to consider their families, mortgages etc, but if it's young persons (guys and the odd but very welcome female aviator) I see them as not so dedicated to the cause.
It can be both making good money and flying, but it should be about flying first of all. If there's someone who decides not to train to fly as it's financially silly step, then, alas, they're not meant to fly for living.
Let's all fly until we die (of age)
Happy flying and training to fly
First thing to get hooked up - girls in creche.
Second thing - planes and helicopters in kindergarten.
As a little boy drawing Bell 206 lookalike (all right, ugly something desperately trying to look like one) instead of cars and playing with anything that could fly instead of playing with cars in the dirt slope like my friends did.
Finding all the small Korea era MIGs left scattered around Slovakia in kids playgrounds very interesting, getting into cockpit and pretending it's not pile of junkyard aluminium. Having vivid dreams of that WWII DC-3 or so in green camo I once visited as a boy and rediscovered in central Slovakia while there at Uni (I didn't finish much to my mom's discontent).
Flying, whether gliders or choppers, ultralights, anything. It's all great.
Watching 'Hot Shots' TV series with bunch of guys with tiny cameras on their RC cars and more importantly, RC choppers. Amazing. Thrilling.
All the gorgeous flying and aerial activities and stunts in Ushuaia Adventure.
All the low level flying and steep bank turns in movies.
All that makes me uncontrollably veer to side with my head or body looking kinda frenzy and as if having fit. That says it all.
When as a kid, I played with little gliders, wind up choppers, envying my flat block neighbour's RC chopper I saw him fly couple times until it ended up hung on his balcony for good (probably screwed up flying).
I dreamt of having RC chopper. I couldn't afford it.
Come early teenage years, getting to know the amount of effort, money, TT hours and stringent health for the mil (fighter jets are also nice machines, shame they're made to kill) - having had some fractures and minor vision correction, I thought I could never make it - so I grew up and tried to find viable 'career' that won't bore me to death. Money is issue, but not important in terms of salary. Plus, not having a chance for any kind of sponsorship, huge loan to train to fly (still envying US citizens and Scandinavians or Brits/Irish with house or mortgage to spare)
Having saved up some dosh in the UK over past years (grew up in Czecho/Slovakia) for my future plans ie studies, living around the world, I had my life-long sparkle re-ignited by flatmate here in Belfast. He's Nigerian German passport holder with US green card and almost 1000 TT in planks up to 40 seater experience. He doesn't fly commercially anymore although he says he'd love to try choppers but doesn't see it as a career for himself anymore.
I'm going to fetch some cash from inheritance back home, begging my mom to get me more from some land sale over this year so I won't have to save so many more years until I'm up to CFI/FI and 'employable'.
Having saved for years on pittance wages, any 'leftover' chunk of money is highly appreciated as it spares me from saving yet another few years on top of next two.
I've been hooked up since I remember. The only things that would prevent me from flying would be loss of medical (for comm flying) or death.
Since I cheated death at quite a few occasions during my life, I know I'm not invincible.
I used to fly paragliding a bit when younger as it was the only 'affordable' way of flying. But it brought me more sad times than joy for many reasons, not the flying itself.
I don't find big passenger jets interesting. I don't feel that interested.
One can fly smaller planes for living, I could, but it's not as fun as flying helicopters.
All the reasons mentioned in dif threads about which direction to choose, whether FW or RW. Heli flying is about flying. Not getting from A to B unless it's charter. We all know all this since we're PPRUNE regulars.
I'm starting my real life this summer in the US. It brings lots of uncertainties, but it's a challenge. As with anything really important in life, I'm trying to arrange everything, prepare for possible outcomes etc.
One should rather ask what is there NOT TO get hooked up to helicopters or flying in general. Women and flying. Two best things in life.
I'm sacrificing the earlier in order to have both later in my life and not whinge 'what ifs' for the rest of my life with women only.
I see money in my savings as a means to fly. Not as something to spend on lavish 'lifestyle' BS. Some people, wannabes, ask others on another threads about investment to potential salary ratio, investment (ie training costs) return time etc. They might have to consider their families, mortgages etc, but if it's young persons (guys and the odd but very welcome female aviator) I see them as not so dedicated to the cause.
It can be both making good money and flying, but it should be about flying first of all. If there's someone who decides not to train to fly as it's financially silly step, then, alas, they're not meant to fly for living.
Let's all fly until we die (of age)
Happy flying and training to fly
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When I was 7 a relative invited my dad and I to look around his Royal Navy Frigate that had docked in Newcastle.
Although the ship was fascinating, it was when he let me sit in the Lynx helicopter that saw me hooked.
Since then i've flown to Rigs in the North Sea, been from Nice to Monaco on several occasions and even had the pleasure of flying in a Sea King with the lads from RAF Boulmer..........all as part of my job as a Film and Television Sound Recordist!
Now i'm just about to embark on my PPL(H), 35 years after sitting in that Lynx!
Although the ship was fascinating, it was when he let me sit in the Lynx helicopter that saw me hooked.
Since then i've flown to Rigs in the North Sea, been from Nice to Monaco on several occasions and even had the pleasure of flying in a Sea King with the lads from RAF Boulmer..........all as part of my job as a Film and Television Sound Recordist!
Now i'm just about to embark on my PPL(H), 35 years after sitting in that Lynx!
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At the age of three, someone gave me a plastic toy Dragonfly helicopter. My thought was not 'what is this' but 'so THIS is what I've been looking for'. Nowadays I cannot possibly afford to fly and keep a tight lid on wanting to.
EDIT: so what is it that is so addictive? For me it's purely genetic. Joe Average can point to how they arrive on the scene with a swirl of noise and glamour, those samurai swords flashing overhead and the people inside looking so cool, but I didn't get even that close until I was 11.
EDIT: so what is it that is so addictive? For me it's purely genetic. Joe Average can point to how they arrive on the scene with a swirl of noise and glamour, those samurai swords flashing overhead and the people inside looking so cool, but I didn't get even that close until I was 11.
Last edited by Hilico; 6th Feb 2008 at 11:38.
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I've been hooked up all my life - only now starting to fulfill my life-long dreams
i'm just to glad to see that i'm not the only one addicted to helicopters.i used to go the the heliport back then in port harcourt (shell i.a) and watch the bell 212 operated by Bristow.i still remember their lovely sound and sight.
Hopefully,i'll get to fly a 412 soon as i'm about to commence my heli training.
To all the lovers of helicopetrs,i say "keep it up"
ciao
Hopefully,i'll get to fly a 412 soon as i'm about to commence my heli training.
To all the lovers of helicopetrs,i say "keep it up"
ciao
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Never really thought about helicopters at all until I went to work for a company in Newbury that had one. We used it to go and visit customers, make service calls and so on. After the first ride I knew it was something that I just had to do!
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I can't remember being an age when I didn't want to fly helicopters, know everything about how they worked and what they did. I can only remember not understanding why most other people didnt understand
Sorry TET, lost something in my explanation there! - I didn't mean I knew everything about how they worked & what they did; I meant "...I can't think of an an age where I didn't want to know everything about how they worked and I can't think of an age where I didn't want to know everything about what they did". Badly worded I guess
Sorry TET, lost something in my explanation there! - I didn't mean I knew everything about how they worked & what they did; I meant "...I can't think of an an age where I didn't want to know everything about how they worked and I can't think of an age where I didn't want to know everything about what they did". Badly worded I guess
Last edited by BusinessMan; 8th Feb 2008 at 21:57.
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know everything about how they worked and what they did. I can only remember not understanding why most other people didnt understand
The only thing I know is that if helicopters didn't come along to my life, I'd a had to be robbing banks.
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When I was a youngster many moons ago I used to cycle about 4/5 miles from school in the Yorkshire Dales to our home, on certain afternoons I used to go like hell so that I could have my evening meal early and then watch "Chuck and PT who were my hero's for they were the pilots in the the Bell 47s in the tv programme "Whirly Birds", that programmes was the ignition of my fire and absolute total wish to fly helicopters.
Many moons later at the age of 50yrs I took the chance and started being taught to fly the R22, 40 hours of tuition later I had my PPL(H), I soloed at about 10/12 hours and guess what,... that smile has never left my face
Peter R-B
Vfrpilotpb
Many moons later at the age of 50yrs I took the chance and started being taught to fly the R22, 40 hours of tuition later I had my PPL(H), I soloed at about 10/12 hours and guess what,... that smile has never left my face
Peter R-B
Vfrpilotpb
Being a guy who always liked his toys( boats motor bikes etc) I took a pleasure flight with my daughter who was 13 at the time on the Isle of Arran in an R44. The pilot, Graham, took us low level and fast across a field before lifting over a hedge and climbing. On the return he showed me how manouverable it was going left to right and even backwards. When we got out my daughter said " so how long before you get one of these dad?" 12 months later I owned my own R22 , now have a 44 and still get out the heli after a flight with a big smile on my face.