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-   -   German BO105 TV video clip (https://www.pprune.org/rotorheads/175920-german-bo105-tv-video-clip.html)

The Governor 23rd May 2005 17:54

German BO105 TV clip
 
I don't know if this has been posted already.

http://tvtotal.prosieben.de/componen...and.html?mode=<a%20href

There's a couple of minutes of general chit-chat before the flying starts.

I just wish I knew some German so I could tell what the presenter says at the end. I think I have an idea and it isn't "Thank You".

bockywocky 23rd May 2005 21:39

They are talking about how long the pilot could do this. His answer is: "after half an hour, i also need a bit of rest but then i start from the beginning".

Then the reporter asks him how long it lasted, and the answer is: "about 10 minutes".

:cool:

Letsby Avenue 23rd May 2005 22:49

I felt a bit queasy just watching it...:yuk:

The Nr Fairy 24th May 2005 04:40

Do you mean this thread ?

Dash1B 24th May 2005 15:47

How long does it take to get used to aerobatics like that? Or even just the simple low-G pushover sensations? I still feel my stomach rise momentarily when bottoming the collective. Does that sensation eventually go away?

-1B

Letsby Avenue 24th May 2005 21:15

We used to regularly roll and backflip the Lynx during our 4 Lynx routine in the early 90s and you do get used to it but it still isn't that nice - You have to get used to the fact that you're always within 1% of certain disaster and there is no room for error.

Graviman 3rd June 2005 20:03

"... roll and backflip the Lynx ... you're always within 1% of certain disaster and there is no room for error."

Did you find that the articulated head made a big difference? I'm not sure how much difference the control system makes in a Lynx, but i noticed the pilot kept positive g throughout the B105 manouvres. Man, that takes skill though...

Mart

[Edit: replacing word "rigid" with "articulated" - never sure which i should really be using, since the objective is rigid flapping and lead-lag just allows for blade flex. Corrected misunderstanding that pilot was the late great Ziggy Hoffman]

IntheTin 3rd June 2005 21:14

Awesome. What an amazing bit of flying! :D

hemac 3rd June 2005 22:00

I would love to see this clip but when I hit the link I get an error on the page.
Can anyone tell me where I might download a version?

H.

BigMike 4th June 2005 06:22

Same as above. I only have dail-up. Too slow. A site where this can be downloaded anyone?

Cheers BigMike

widgeon 4th June 2005 09:24

The pilot in the clip is not Ziggy , he died during the making of a film about helicopters in the early 90's . There is a clip of one of his demo's that is even crazier then the recent German tv version. Including end over end summersaults ( for want of a better word) and rotation about the mast while in a vertical dive. There was an urban legend about the Lynx that an early test pilot put a permenant set in the titanium dogbone after attempting a barrel roll to close to the ground

Graviman 4th June 2005 14:53

Thanks widgeon, post corrected.

Which part of the Lynx control system is the dogbone? I take it though, that the Lynx control system results in an extremely manouvreable heli? My interest stems from the fact that this is (i understand) an electronic update on the AH56 system. See:

http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthr...hreadid=177241

Mart

widgeon 5th June 2005 12:25

I have been away from the lynx for some years so my info may be incorrect.
The lynx has a semi rigid rotor head with only the feathering hinge being a bearing.
THe flapping is handled by the titanium main rotor hub ( the Cutlet ) . The lead lag as i recall by the titanium member outboard of the hub ( the dogbone ) , so named for its shape.
The original Lynx blades were bonded stainless steel and extremely rigid.( also a nightmare to manufacture)

http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages...head/0282.html

the dogbone is the member fwd of the lag damper.
The 105 has a composite main rotor blade attatched to the titanium hub via a titanium cuff in the end of the blade , there are TT straps that link the 2 opposite blades. Feathering is like the lynx via a bearing . The lead lag and flapping hinges are actually the section of the blade before the trailing edge attaches. Considering the amount of bending happening at the blade root it is a credit to the designers that there has not been a single blade failure on a 105 though there has been a catastrophic failure of the TT straps.

http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages...head/0416.html
Safety pins in the picture are the blade fole quick release pins

http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Rotorhead.html



for picture of just about all heads ,

Graviman 5th June 2005 14:30

Great rotor head site.
 
Thanks widgeon. Don't think i'll ever get bored looking at rotor head designs...

Mart

jbrereton 5th June 2005 18:59

German video
 
This is an absolute pearl. I have not laughed so much since my wife asked me if the OutTakes at the end of "A Bug's Life" were real.


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