Helicopter made in Tanzania
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I'm sure they have plenty of money for this and that no school in Tanzania is short of books and no hospital is short of medicine....
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I love this part:
will be available to ordinary residents at affordable prices to ease the country’s transport woes Shudder! :ooh: |
"...VW flat engine on board. The motors, manufactured by Volkswagen in Germany, are the same used to make the ‘Robinson’ helicopters..."
Ah! That would be the Nigerian involvement. Sourcing build parts..:E . |
OMG
They couldn't even get my licence done in 3 months TIA,TIA |
Two months from concept to completed fuselage with "VW" engine fitted? No way.
This looks more like an exercise in fiction-writing than anything else, little here makes any sense at all. Is it a kit perhaps? Anyone recognise it? |
Looks better than the prototype...
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Ah, Tanzania and helicopters...
If you ever find yourself in the skies over Dar, there's a helipad on the roof of the Holiday Inn but don't land there! It was the brainchild of the hotel's owners and a brave chap from Everett actually landed a Dauphin there once as a kind of proof-of-concept. With the front wheel all the way forward of the pad, the rear wheels apparently cleared the rear edge by about 4 centimeters. Beyond the edge: a twenty-storey drop-off. To their credit, the Tanzanian CAA denied the hotel a license for their pad. So nevermind arriving by helicopter but do visit the rooftop bar if you can for sweeping views of the city and good food. |
Hope it's better than this one (video which came up after that one):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKL6-VqjShg |
What is it about African aeronautical engineering that leaves one with a feeling that it's all lacking a little, in design and construction professionalism? :)
The interviews with constructors, pilots, and persons in authority, all appear to be about 20 times longer than actual, successful, flight trials! |
Revolutionary,
Ah, Tanzania and helicopters... If you ever find yourself in the skies over Dar, there's a helipad on the roof of the Holiday Inn but don't land there! It was the brainchild of the hotel's owners and a brave chap from Everett actually landed a Dauphin there once as a kind of proof-of-concept. With the front wheel all the way forward of the pad, the rear wheels apparently cleared the rear edge by about 4 centimeters. Beyond the edge: a twenty-storey drop-off. To their credit, the Tanzanian CAA denied the hotel a license for their pad. So nevermind arriving by helicopter but do visit the rooftop bar if you can for sweeping views of the city and good food. The rooftop bar does have good views, but I have never found the food there to be particularly good. |
*Sigh* Ok. This was many years ago so admittedly the details may be fuzzy but this was the owner of the place who took me up to the rooftop to show me his helipad. It was a helipad alright but not built to anything approaching international standards. It might have fit a Dauphin with a few inches to spare but there wouldn't have been any room to disembark the passengers. As I recall, it was denied certification at that time. I think we might be talking different timeframes here, not that you stopped to ask me first before jumping in headlong with a stern rebuke. My god man, you even find fault with my characterization of the food. You insufferable know-it-all Limey ****.
Moderators, I am done with this forum. Please feel free to delete this post, my previous post and any and all previous posts by my hand. Also, please do de-register me as a member of this forum. |
*Sigh* Ok. This was many years ago so admittedly the details may be fuzzy but this was the owner of the place who took me up to the rooftop to show me his helipad. It was a helipad alright but not built to anything approaching international standards. It might have fit a Dauphin with a few inches to spare but there wouldn't have been any room to disembark the passengers. As I recall, it was denied certification at that time. I think we might be talking different timeframes here, not that you stopped to ask me first before jumping in headlong with a stern rebuke. My god man, you even find fault with my characterization of the food. You insufferable know-it-all Limey ****. Moderators, I am done with this forum. Please feel free to delete this post, my previous post and any and all previous posts by my hand. Also, please do de-register me as a member of this forum. I used to live in the Holiday Inn in 2013 and was also shown the helipad by the owner, though an Everett 365B2 Dauphin made the first landing there in 2010. It is available to view on You Tube. When I last assisted in offloading 6 passengers from a Dauphin on the roof, there was more than enough space for them and all their baggage and then to fit the blade tie-downs before leaving the helicopter parked there. The pad is licensed as a private category aerodrome by the TCAA http://www.tcaa.go.tz/files/AIP%20SU...Aerodromes.pdf as it complies fully with international standards. You would do well to check your facts first before insulting others you don't know with derogatory remarks. I will not lower myself to your level. |
Revolutionary. I know how you feel as I often want to smash my fist into the PC screen when I read some irritating post. However, don't lose it completely as there is more good than bad on PPRUNE and we are all guilty sometimes of upsetting each other.
Soggyboxers. You should be a little more gentle with some folk. |
Unfortunately we are to old and too far away from each other to go to sort it out over a few cans in a bar.
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Fareastdriver, it's probably because we are all A type extroverts who got bottle fed. We should all try to be a bit more like Topoftheworld man who has found Kama in the Himalayas!
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