Chop tail off in the hover??
Seriously, is there any helicopter that you know of or have flown that would not have provided sufficient margin under those conditions? And no corner cases like it was a hurricane or something. Just a plain old nice flying day like they had.
You can calculate your thrust margin by looking at the max weight on your OGE graph - for them 2500lbs and reducing that by 10% - ie 250lbs which is 120 lbs lighter than he was at the time of the accident.
His DA was around 1200' given the temp and elevation so he was further up the graph than you imply.
The example in the R44 POH of weight and balance shows full fuel isn't available with 3 POB and a small amount of kit - how much baggage would they have for a fishing trip? And the example uses 170 lbs per pax which is light by anyone's estimation, especially in outdoor gear.
Given the layout of the HLS and the wind direction he should actually have had a reasonably clean airflow, certainly above the treetops even though the report cites mechanical turbulence from the low buildings and the trees (with a max estimated of 20 kts, I feel this is unlikely.
Not sure why you think the yaw induced panic could have happened anywhere on the trip - the proximity of the trees was what seemed to panic him.
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Originally Posted by [email protected]

No, simply because we operated with a minimum of a 10% thrust margin whenever possible, especially for high power scenarios like confined areas, mountain flying and any OGE hovering.
You can calculate your thrust margin by looking at the max weight on your OGE graph - for them 2500lbs and reducing that by 10% - ie 250lbs which is 120 lbs lighter than he was at the time of the accident.
You can calculate your thrust margin by looking at the max weight on your OGE graph - for them 2500lbs and reducing that by 10% - ie 250lbs which is 120 lbs lighter than he was at the time of the accident.
His DA was around 1200' given the temp and elevation so he was further up the graph than you imply.
The example in the R44 POH of weight and balance shows full fuel isn't available with 3 POB and a small amount of kit - how much baggage would they have for a fishing trip? And the example uses 170 lbs per pax which is light by anyone's estimation, especially in outdoor gear.
Given the layout of the HLS and the wind direction he should actually have had a reasonably clean airflow, certainly above the treetops even though the report cites mechanical turbulence from the low buildings and the trees (with a max estimated of 20 kts, I feel this is unlikely
Not sure why you think the yaw induced panic could have happened anywhere on the trip - the proximity of the trees was what seemed to panic him.
Below the Glidepath - not correcting
Any trip is only as good as your planning. Weights, fuel, endurance, weather are the staples of planning and shouldn't reveal any surprises. What seems to have surprised this guy, as a relatively low-time inexperienced pilot, were the planning considerations that are needed to operate safely in and out of a confined area. When you're grizzly and ugly, a confined area is rotor span plus 2 feet. When you are just starting, an open football field can be a confined area. The accompanying aircraft with him got uncomfortable and threw it away, this guy didn't realize he'd run out of ideas until he was over committed to the landing. He was obviously thinking of getting home and maybe what a great fishing trip this had been, instead of thinking what 'gotcha's' were lining up for him. It's a tale as old as time, if you change the plan, change the thinking.
A78, there is no “your world” vs crab’s military world (at least not this time round).
I admire your patience. You are of course 100% right. And crab didn’t read the book.
The MTOW (of 2500 lb) is not a power limit. The power margin is not the difference between the actual weight and MTOW, but between the actual weight and the weight the engine could lift under the current circumstances (disregarding MTOW restrictions). Or as you correctly pointed out, by the difference between the current PA and the OGE ceiling at the current circumstances (which was massive).
The only limit was the pilot’s lack of skill and recency.
I admire your patience. You are of course 100% right. And crab didn’t read the book.
The MTOW (of 2500 lb) is not a power limit. The power margin is not the difference between the actual weight and MTOW, but between the actual weight and the weight the engine could lift under the current circumstances (disregarding MTOW restrictions). Or as you correctly pointed out, by the difference between the current PA and the OGE ceiling at the current circumstances (which was massive).
The only limit was the pilot’s lack of skill and recency.
And crab didn’t read the book.
What was I thinking - questioning aa777888?, the font of all Robinson related knowledge

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Originally Posted by [email protected]

Mea Culpa, that's what comes of rushing things when the rugby is on - doh. The example in the POH has 4 POB not 3.
What was I thinking - questioning aa777888?, the font of all Robinson related knowledge
What was I thinking - questioning aa777888?, the font of all Robinson related knowledge

Taking procedures from (relatively) powerful twin turbine aircraft and applying them to R44s is not a practical or realistic way to operate.
Taking procedures from (relatively) powerful twin turbine aircraft and applying them to R44s is not a practical or realistic way to operate.
Those with PPLs and low time would be better served to give themselves as much safety margin as possible.
Operating into confined areas at close to max gross weight is something to be done very carefully and progressively.
Originally Posted by [email protected]

Operating into confined areas at close to max gross weight is something to be done very carefully and progressively.

Hmm,...that was basically every day training in the R22
Originally Posted by [email protected]

Clearly I am talking about proper confined areas like the one in this accident, very limited on space and requiring OGE hover and vertical descent, not just something you have to make a slightly steeper approach into.

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My PPL(H) training was into a site surrounded by trees, requiring OGE hover and about 100ft vertical descent / ascent to leave. Same site was used on my PPL(H) skills test.
And are you both typical of the PPLH trainees? Do you think all PPLH trainees operate out of such sites?
What is taught regarding performance planning on Robbies regarding confined areas?
What is taught regarding performance planning on Robbies regarding confined areas?
Originally Posted by [email protected]

And are you both typical of the PPLH trainees? Do you think all PPLH trainees operate out of such sites?
What is taught regarding performance planning on Robbies regarding confined areas?
What is taught regarding performance planning on Robbies regarding confined areas?
However, the way I was taught to handle off-airport landings is to crawl it in, basically just riding that vibration down at around 150fpm. So before committing I'd pull it back to pretty much a hover (while still high enough to abort) then check my MAP to see how much I have between what I'm pulling and what my takeoff limit is. If there's at least an inch and a half, or two (depending on just how steep and how high the takeoff will need to be) go for it.
Now I can't speak for other schools, but I went to one of those "CFI Factories" that pumped out CFIs like Tic-Tacs.
Originally Posted by [email protected]

That's not performance planning, that's a reasonable technique for confirming the performance you have is sufficient for want you have planned to do.
I'm sure there's some pre-flight performance stuff they taught me, but I'd have to go look for it (think its on my kneeboard), as I haven't actually "planned" to land off-airport since my checkride.
I'm sure there's some pre-flight performance stuff they taught me,
You need at least OGE performance and ideally some extra - unfortunately there are no graphs to tell you how much extra you have got.
Hot and High is correct that the MTOW isn't a power limit but taking 5 or 10% off the weight would guarantee you a thrust margin of probably more than you need if the weight line is the first limit you hit rather than the OAT or Pressure altitude.
If you have the performance on the chart then you just need to confirm it before committing to landing - I'm sure you check your hover MAP against the placard to make sure it is correct before transitioning.
Once in the vicinity of the landing area, pull to your calculated max take off MAP - ie your max continuous plus 2.8 to make sure it is available without Nr decay or exceeding any other limits.
One problem is that the OGE graph is based on 5 min take off power and not the max continuous MAP which may pass people by if they are not paying attention - the problem being that if you need 5 min power to achieve OGE, you have no spare to deal with turbulence or any unexpected rate of descent - hence my advice - especially if you are hot and high, to have a thrust margin.
Now a 5% thrust margin was defined in various military Operating Data Manuals (same as POH) as sufficient to overcome light turbulence or manoeuvre gently in the hover - in a couple it quantified a vertical rate of climb of between 100 and 200 ft/min so it is not a huge amount of excess power.
Clearly such advice doesn't exist in the POH but you could experiment to see what difference 1 inch extra MAP gives you from an OGE hover - it will at least give you an idea of the difference between Sea Level at plus 23 degrees and 5300' at plus 23 degrees since the max continuous MAPS are only about 1.4 ins apart from the placard.
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R44 Raven II POH is available online from Robinson. Section 5.5 (Performance) contain the graph of weight / OGE Hover, Take-Off power, Nil Wind at Density Altitude.
In addition, relevant to the actual Tread topic, Section 4 contains the checks that should be done after every engine start, and the hover checks - which includes "note MAP"
Craab - you make a good point. Don't recall being taught in PPL lessons "performance planning" for the confined area flight we were going to undertake. General planning for a flight (weight & balance, performance, fuel, route and diversions, etc) but not specifically planning ahead for this. Certainly was taught - as Robbie notes - how to assess the site, check available power for OGE and descent / climb-out, and how to approach and get into the site. That is not the same thing, as you say. There is therefore room for a training improvement there.
Training did include "artifically lowered" power so that you had to decide not to go in, or once in artificially lowered margins to show what might happen you now had to get out with less power than you might have wanted. This included towering but also restrictions so tight that you could not get out - as a means to showing you how to take responsibility for stopping and rethinking, rather than pressing on until you hit a tree.
I thought (still do) that the technical training was good and it left me with with this. The site we used in training for confined area was very (by my standards) tight. When first shown it from above, my reaction was "I appreciate the skills and training, but I am never going into a site like that when I have my license". I have stuck to that decision ever since, and take the view that "just because I can" doesn't mean that I should. There is, in reality, no justification for me to act otherwise as I only fly for pleasure. I do use these techniques - icluding OGE hover and descent into a lawn surrounded by Scots Pine trees, but the space is more than 3x larger than my old training area.
I would add; some years after getting my PPL the airfield stopped the use of that confined site and instead provided one surrounded by low bushes & shrubs and actually open on one side. Nothing like as challenging, and though technically "safer" to learn in I don't think it provides as good a training experience. Doing annual LPCs at that field, using that site is pretty much a non-event to me, and I think the risk is that you don't see the value of making all the right checks and asking the right questions as then you land on something that is "less difficult" than some of the Heli Pads provided on the airfield (close buildings giving recirculation issues, for example).
In addition, relevant to the actual Tread topic, Section 4 contains the checks that should be done after every engine start, and the hover checks - which includes "note MAP"
Craab - you make a good point. Don't recall being taught in PPL lessons "performance planning" for the confined area flight we were going to undertake. General planning for a flight (weight & balance, performance, fuel, route and diversions, etc) but not specifically planning ahead for this. Certainly was taught - as Robbie notes - how to assess the site, check available power for OGE and descent / climb-out, and how to approach and get into the site. That is not the same thing, as you say. There is therefore room for a training improvement there.
Training did include "artifically lowered" power so that you had to decide not to go in, or once in artificially lowered margins to show what might happen you now had to get out with less power than you might have wanted. This included towering but also restrictions so tight that you could not get out - as a means to showing you how to take responsibility for stopping and rethinking, rather than pressing on until you hit a tree.
I thought (still do) that the technical training was good and it left me with with this. The site we used in training for confined area was very (by my standards) tight. When first shown it from above, my reaction was "I appreciate the skills and training, but I am never going into a site like that when I have my license". I have stuck to that decision ever since, and take the view that "just because I can" doesn't mean that I should. There is, in reality, no justification for me to act otherwise as I only fly for pleasure. I do use these techniques - icluding OGE hover and descent into a lawn surrounded by Scots Pine trees, but the space is more than 3x larger than my old training area.
I would add; some years after getting my PPL the airfield stopped the use of that confined site and instead provided one surrounded by low bushes & shrubs and actually open on one side. Nothing like as challenging, and though technically "safer" to learn in I don't think it provides as good a training experience. Doing annual LPCs at that field, using that site is pretty much a non-event to me, and I think the risk is that you don't see the value of making all the right checks and asking the right questions as then you land on something that is "less difficult" than some of the Heli Pads provided on the airfield (close buildings giving recirculation issues, for example).
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Originally Posted by [email protected]

You don't need much - the OGE hover ceiling vs gross weight chart in the POH is the place to start having worked out your pressure altitude and expected gross weight.
You need at least OGE performance and ideally some extra - unfortunately there are no graphs to tell you how much extra you have got.
You need at least OGE performance and ideally some extra - unfortunately there are no graphs to tell you how much extra you have got.
Hot and High is correct that the MTOW isn't a power limit but taking 5 or 10% off the weight would guarantee you a thrust margin of probably more than you need if the weight line is the first limit you hit rather than the OAT or Pressure altitude.
The only time you have the sort of margin you are talking about is when you are flying an R44 with only two people on board (or an R22 with one). If you want a "rocket ship", two people and half tanks. And the performance difference is dramatic. That makes for safer initial training, but ultimately one must learn to fly the machine the way it will really be used, and that means at max. weight. In the R22 that happens by default. In the R44, at least at the school I attend, that happens by finding two other erstwhile individuals to fill the back seats and endure max. performance takeoffs, confined space landings, and ham handed auto's without puking (screaming is allowed). Normally these are more students and it's actually quite a bit of fun as each student rotates through the pilot's seat. The repartee meter does get pegged!
Robinson marketed the R44 Cadet to address this issue, but it's just such a dumb choice on so many levels. Few small schools will buy one because they need a machine they can use for more than just training. And it actually offers too much performance and does not prepare one for the real world of a regular 44 loaded to the gills.
If you have the performance on the chart then you just need to confirm it before committing to landing - I'm sure you check your hover MAP against the placard to make sure it is correct before transitioning.
Once in the vicinity of the landing area, pull to your calculated max take off MAP - ie your max continuous plus 2.8 to make sure it is available without Nr decay or exceeding any other limits.
One problem is that the OGE graph is based on 5 min take off power and not the max continuous MAP which may pass people by if they are not paying attention - the problem being that if you need 5 min power to achieve OGE, you have no spare to deal with turbulence or any unexpected rate of descent - hence my advice - especially if you are hot and high, to have a thrust margin.
Now a 5% thrust margin was defined in various military Operating Data Manuals (same as POH) as sufficient to overcome light turbulence or manoeuvre gently in the hover - in a couple it quantified a vertical rate of climb of between 100 and 200 ft/min so it is not a huge amount of excess power.
Clearly such advice doesn't exist in the POH but you could experiment to see what difference 1 inch extra MAP gives you from an OGE hover - it will at least give you an idea of the difference between Sea Level at plus 23 degrees and 5300' at plus 23 degrees since the max continuous MAPS are only about 1.4 ins apart from the placard.
Clearly such advice doesn't exist in the POH but you could experiment to see what difference 1 inch extra MAP gives you from an OGE hover - it will at least give you an idea of the difference between Sea Level at plus 23 degrees and 5300' at plus 23 degrees since the max continuous MAPS are only about 1.4 ins apart from the placard.
Regarding confined space operations: I can't speak to other schools. The school I use is a pretty good school in this regard. Like any school they are obviously focused on getting people to pass the FAA checkride. But they will train you just as hard and thoroughly as you can safely be trained. Not every student learns at the same rate, not every student wants to be an accomplished helicopter pilot (e.g. wealthy guy in a hurry--just make me good enough--one major reason for the Robinson accident rate). But for folks who have the drive to train more comprehensively, this place will take you way, way beyond paved runway to paved runway and Farmer Jone's field. During my commercial training surprise landings were as common as surprise auto's. Instructor says "See that hole? Put me in there. See that pinnacle? Put me on top." One of the more challenging sites is a mountaintop transmitter site that is very popular with the instructors. It's a forest of guy wires and tall pine trees and a 15ft square gravel pad on a jaunty slope. Really great stuff.
One does see quite a bit of this sort of thing on the schools who like to publish on Youtube. Mischa Gelb's stuff, for example. One would like to think that all schools are teaching the same stuff to the same level, but of course that is not true.
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Originally Posted by [email protected]

So you'll be able to tell me what extra performance 1.4 inches of MAP gives you in an OGE hover then?