For William's eyes only!

RotaryWingBob

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iHover
I don't know if you saw these NTSB reports, William, but they do motivate pilots to do a thorough preflight of the rotor head. It's not unique to Robbies either -- there was a 2000 accident in Canada where the main rotor separated in a B206B JetRanger II) because the mechanics had left off the mast nut, and the accident pilot didn't preflight the ship...


http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20070405X00374&key=1

http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20050525X00675&key=1

(these new links should work)
 
Last edited:
Bob, the links aren't working.

Nice avatar, by the way!
 
Geeze, these flights were doomed. But preventable with one action... look at all fasteners possible, particularly flight controls. If it just came out of maintenance, look again. I have a feeling the mechs will pay on these but they were still preventable with a better preflight.

Bob, I know next to nothing about how a helo operates. I gather these are areas which are part of the preflight checklist? Where are they located in the R-44?
 
Geeze, these flights were doomed. But preventable with one action... look at all fasteners possible, particularly flight controls. If it just came out of maintenance, look again. I have a feeling the mechs will pay on these but they were still preventable with a better preflight.

Bob, I know next to nothing about how a helo operates. I gather these are areas which are part of the preflight checklist? Where are they located in the R-44?

No Ken, they're not on the checklist. The area we're talking about is at the top of the rotor head -- the swash plate communicates stick movement to the rotor. There are 9 checklist items, but the coupling between the cyclic (stick) to the swashplate is not among them. I have asked our A&P to show us where the bolts in question are...
 
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