![]() |
Hovering
Good morning all,
"Mature" student here just learning to fly helicopters for fun and to be able to do a couple of hours each month once / if I get my PPL (H). I have done almost 20 hours now, great instructor, very patient and encouraging etc and I have been making good progress with the exercises up to now Exercise 11 Hovering! I am starting to seriously worry I may not ever get how to hover. In an effort to get the neural pathways burned in I booked in a couple of hours of just hover and I must have had in total with the little bits at ends of lessons close to 5 hours of hover training and I am still unable to master it. I can do pedals on own and, getting better on pedals and collective but as soon as I go near the cyclic I am all over the place! So, serious question for those of you with way more experience, is there any practical tips on how I can practice at home so as to maximise time with rotors turning or, if I haven't got it by now do you think it is a lost cause? Is about 5 hours of just hover training a lot? How long is the average etc. Thanks for any advice offered. Old Dog |
Learning to hover is like learning to ride a bike, your subconscious just has to figure out how to balance it.
It will come eventually with continued exposure, and probably just all of a sudden. One morning you'll still be hovering like ####, then in the afternoon BAM you can hover. Anyway, the exercise that really helped me, was to go to a grassy area and hover taxi from sprinkler head to sprinkler head, stopping briefly at each before moving on to the next. We did it forward, then sideways hover taxi to the right, then to the left. |
Anyway, the exercise that really helped me, was to go to a grassy area and hover taxi from sprinkler head to sprinkler head, stopping briefly at each before moving on to the next. We did it forward, then sideways hover taxi to the right, then to the left.[/QUOTE]
Robbiee, sprinkler heads are few and far between in the UK (exclusive golf courses being an exception) maybe opt from puddle to puddle. |
What aircraft?
I learned on an R22 and held on to the cyclic like I was strangling a cat. My instructor said that if I held it between my thumb and forefinger I would have much finer control but that felt like alchemy to me. Then, one day, I don't remember when, I started holding the stick as described and it truly transformed my control of the aircraft, rather than controlling from my elbow and shoulder, I was making fine adjustments with my fingers and wrist. I distinctly remember the day that it all fell into place. I was holding short at the threshold looking up the approach and talking to ATC at the same time, my arms and legs were just doing their things without me thinking about it. BTW, like you, I was flying about an hour a week so that I could continue to run my business. Given my time over, I would have taken a couple of months off and flown every day rather than spending the first half hour of each lesson relearning what I'd forgotten from the week before. |
Learning to hover should be done in discrete steps. First is controlling the pedals, by themselves, keeping a distant target between your toes. Instructor will wait till you are doing OK, then introduce secondary effects - lift the lever, see if you can stop the yaw. Move sideways, keep that target between your toes. Then learn to slowly turn 90 degrees out of wind, new target, hold it. Then 180 with wind up backside, yaw control is touchy. Then make a 360 at a slow steady rate, anticipating the slow down/speed up of the wind. Keep it pointed while instructor lands and lifts off again.
Second is collective (by itself), learning to set a lever position, hold it, and wait to see what the height settles at. I usually have my left thumb on the edge of the seat, and can make small movements using my thumb as a pivot. Make only small smooth changes, wait. To land, it is down a bit, wait, down a bit, wait, down...ok, on the ground already. Next step is pedals and collective together, keep pointing and slowly land from hover height. Make 360 turn at steady rate and same height. Instructor moves cyclic around to get secondary effects, you have to fix them. When you are reasonable at this exercise, instructor takes them all back and then demos use of the cyclic. (I would show Bloggs that it is possible to hover the aircraft with one finger on the cyclic, one foot on the pedals, and left hand in the air - no need to be stirring custard, pumping water and doing a tap-dance.) Then key to controlling the cyclic is to look at the attitude out the front. When the instructor demos the hover, look at where the horizon is in the window. It will always be very close to that spot in the hover. Forward flight is a bit different, with attitude controlling airspeed. A little dynamic stability in forward flight helps you keep it steady. In the hover, no stability. It will change by itself and with secondary effects, so it is essential to be VERY picky on holding the attitude. If the attitude changes, FIX IT! Don't wait, do it immediately. If you allow the attitude to differ from the hover attitude, the aircraft will start to move. Say for example you let the nose get a bit low, and don't fix it straight away. The aircraft starts to move forward, and flapback starts to become a factor - the nose will tip back up, probably about the time you realise you are moving forward and you start to raise it up yourself. End result, forward movement stops, rearward starts, flap-forward starts, you slowly realise the nose was too high, and put in some forward cyclic. Too slow, you have lost it. Don't even try to hold position at first, just work on the attitude. Gets low, fix it. You might have drifted forward a bit, but if you get back to the hover attitude, you will coast to a stop. Eventually you will get used to working very hard on holding the hover attitude, and the aircraft has pretty much stopped. Then you can use pressure on the stick to control movement. Larger inputs to get back to hover attitude, pressure then to stop movement or initiate a hover-taxi. Instructor (on the pedals and collective) will then make some changes which will have secondary effects on the attitude, and your job will be to hold the attitude steady. Doesn't mean "lock the cyclic against your leg" because you will then crash. Fingertip pressure is all you need (different in an R22 though). When on all 3 controls, the priorities are : 1. Make it POINT! If you can't keep a target between your toes, or control the rate of turn, you will never be able to hover. Not ever. 2. Keep it FLAT! Hold the hover attitude flat in the window. 3. Fix the height. Least important. You will not hit the ground, because you will flinch and jerk up on the collective. Stay at height, let it settle by lowering the lever a centimetre, wait for it to settle, down a bit, wait, down a bit, wait... you are waiting for the aircraft to settle in ground effect and bounce back up a little. As said above, one day the Hover Fairy will whack you across the head with her magic wand and it will be just "a feeling" to make it hover. Rotsa ruck. |
Just to upset the proverbial apple cart here…. It is all in your mind anyways……
Why not forget trying to hover, and just move over the ground at 25 kts, then slow it down to 20, then 15, then 10……….. |
So, serious question for those of you with way more experience, is there any practical tips on how I can practice at home so as to maximise time with rotors turning or, if I haven't got it by now do you think it is a lost cause? 2. Balance a broom handle in the palm of your hand. Once you’ve mastered that, on the end of your index finger, then on your nose (seriously). It’ll begin to come together, and when you start to feel is won’t, refer to #1 :ok: |
2. Balance a broom handle in the palm of your hand. The end of the broom is the attitude, and you do whatever is needed with your hand to keep it steady. Good analogy and hand/eye training. |
Do not look down…biggest problem is folks focusing their eyes too close to the helicopter.
Look towards the horizon, do not focus too intently on one spot, you will get tunnel vision, let your peripheral vision do its job. i always remember my instructor, after returning the helicopter to a state of equilibrium..placing one middle finger on top of the cyclic the other on the end of the cyclic and the toes of his boots lightly on the pedals and doing a perfect hover pattern with a 360 at each corner and saying…”yer making it much more difficult for yourself than it really is….now relax!” Oh….hover hand relaxation device….a cigarette works even better. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....5fe366a11.jpeg |
Originally Posted by OldDog4NewTricks
(Post 11856597)
Good morning all,
"Mature" student here just learning to fly helicopters for fun and to be able to do a couple of hours each month once / if I get my PPL (H). I have done almost 20 hours now, great instructor, very patient and encouraging etc and I have been making good progress with the exercises up to now Exercise 11 Hovering! I am starting to seriously worry I may not ever get how to hover. In an effort to get the neural pathways burned in I booked in a couple of hours of just hover and I must have had in total with the little bits at ends of lessons close to 5 hours of hover training and I am still unable to master it. I can do pedals on own and, getting better on pedals and collective but as soon as I go near the cyclic I am all over the place! So, serious question for those of you with way more experience, is there any practical tips on how I can practice at home so as to maximise time with rotors turning or, if I haven't got it by now do you think it is a lost cause? Is about 5 hours of just hover training a lot? How long is the average etc. Thanks for any advice offered. Old Dog If you want a cheap home trainer get a bosu ball or one of several equivalents. If you're struggling with the rest of it, there may be a point where it's nature's way of telling you that helicoptering isn't for you, but it sounds like you're not there yet. I can assure you the first day it happens is worth the wait. In the meantime, for the rest of us, if you want to remind yourself what not being able to hover is like, swap hands. Might be good to have a friend in the cockpit when you do that ! PS I assume your instructor is doing the pedals and collective for you, so you can sort out the balance issues with the cyclic ? |
What do you think you are doing wrong? (Hint: Very few people are guilty of undercontrolling). Don't try to keep it on one place, just try to keep it level. Then you can introduce a slight bit of opposite drift correction and back to level again. You'll get it in the end. It's like flying a helicopter.
|
Keep the cyclic still and let the helicopter do its thing around it. Don't chase it.
|
Another technique.......
All of the above is true, but there is always more than one way to 'skin a cat'.
I had exactly the same problem and my instructor, having failed to fix my control reversals, was on the verge of chopping me when he flipped his strategy. He took me to the hover squares and told me to 'stir' the cyclic in a pretty rapid and constant circular motion whilst he did pedals/collective, the point being to adjust the centre of the cyclic circle to prevent drift and remain inside the square. What ensued was initially both ugly and uncomfortable, but instantaneously effective. Because I was stirring I was avoiding the reversals and, due to the speed of the stirring, no single cyclic displacement had any positional effect (other than to make us nod in unison). All I had to do was incrementally (and subconsciously) move the centre of the circle to maintain the desired hover position. All that remained to do was to reduce the diameter of the circle until my subconscious brain got the hang of doing it the proper way, then add the pedals/collective back in. Probably not a recommended technique, but talk it through with your instructor. It may help. Thanks for bringing back that memory, seems like a loooong time ago! |
Two things worked or me - Ftrst (like topradio) grip - light and relaxed and resting on my knee. Second (and most important) 'fly the disc' Other than wind effects, the only thing which moves the helo from the hover is disc displacement. ergo, keep the disc steady and the rest of the machine has to behave ! :ok:
|
R44, pedals, collective I am good (well ok) with just cyclic wont behave itself when I get my hands on it!
|
Thank you for all the really good replies. I would press Like if I had the option on your posts.
I will try the pen trick Albatross. And the broomstick SilsoeSid. I wont be giving up, I absolutely love the flying just wish I had done it when younger but, when younger I would not have been able to afford it. Thanks Guys for all the tips, Old Dog |
Originally Posted by Gordy
(Post 11857006)
Just to upset the proverbial apple cart here…. It is all in your mind anyways……
Why not forget trying to hover, and just move over the ground at 25 kts, then slow it down to 20, then 15, then 10……….. |
If you could learn to fly from written advice alone, you wouldn’t need an instructor.
Avoiding to give another “this worked for me” comment, I suggest try bringing another instructor in the mix (without prejudice to your current instructor). Getting more than one viewpoint always helps. And choose a different profile. If your current instructor is a young guy with just “a hundred hours more than you”, go for an old hand. If your current instructor is a”general” who intimidates you, go for one of those people persons who tells you you are doing great, even if you fly like ####. You will do fine in no time. |
Originally Posted by Ascend Charlie
(Post 11857043)
Notice the difference between looking at your hand (whack on head) and looking at the end of the broom.
The end of the broom is the attitude, and you do whatever is needed with your hand to keep it steady. Good analogy and hand/eye training. LWAPAM Look well ahead & pick a marker. |
As per #4 and #5 ...
Most important rest your forearm on your thigh if you can, and keep it there; hold the cyclic lightly between thumb and the first two or three fingers only. Concentrate on the horizon and as soon as the aircraft attitude changes adjust it back quickly to the hover attitude with small movements before the aircraft moves; there is usually quite an interval between the change in attitude and aircraft movement unless the attitude change is big. If it does move go back to the hover attitude first then make small cyclic changes in opposition to the direction of travel until stopped, then hover attitude again. It's easier to prevent losing the hover than regaining it! Glance closer to the aircraft only to judge height and movement over the ground. Prolonged hovering is not easy so don't try for too long, try to relax, especially that hand and arm! We all felt as though we were rolling about in a saucer when we first tried to hover. |
| All times are GMT. The time now is 14:30. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.