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rbp
rbp
14:01
this helicopter aerodynamics question is driving me insane
they are all just right enough to be correct from an aerodynamics standpoint but all wrong about terminology or how the helicopter is actually controlled
14:30
@rbp The question about trim?
rbp
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9
Q: How do helicopters turn using rotor?

Thangaraj SundaramoorthyI know that airplanes use rudder to turn, and use elevator for nose up and down. How do helicopters change their altitude and how do they make turns?

Well in that one, OP said that rudder is used to turn. One can turn using ailerons too, cannot one?
@rbp You didn't answer it???
rbp
rbp
i'm writring one right now
@farhan anyone who says that the rudder is not used to turn has never flown in MCA
@rbp MCA?
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@Farhan minimum controllable airspeed
14:37
@rbp Ah, I was thinking about this.
rbp
rbp
oh yes, that too!
Minimum Control speeds (VMC’s) are so-called V-speeds that are included in the Limitations Section of Airplane Flight Manuals (AFM) of all multi-engine airplanes. In general, a Minimum Control speed is the calibrated airspeed below which directional and/or lateral control of an airplane (i.e. the desired heading and/or bank angle) on the ground (runway) or in the air can no longer be maintained by the pilot after failure of a wing mounted engine, or while such an engine is inoperative, as long as the thrust of the opposite engine on the other wing is at the maximum (takeoff) setting. VMC’s are...
@rbp the only thing missing from those answers is a bit of discussion on gyroscopes for completeness. e.g. to create lateral motion to the left the blade pitch changes to induce a downward force directly forward and gyroscopic precession causes the downward force to be manifested 90 degrees away in the direction of rotation, causing the downward tipped rotor disk to the left.
rbp
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@casey i am conposing a complete answer now :)
:)
rbp
rbp
15:06
@casey have a look now, i welcome your feedback aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/11709/…
and everyone elses
i think this is the only truly correct answer, both in terms of aerodynamics and gyroscopic physics, but also in terms of aircraft design and of piloting
+1
rbp
rbp
15:45
@casey thanks
16:13
user image
3
16:32
@rbp I've only edited my question once and I hope it's clear. Originally I thought that all the red airways were lettered B, but when I found the A, R and G airways I could see that the chart legend did in fact have the answer, that's why I removed the reference to it.
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@Pondlife our edits crossed
@rbp That can happen :-)
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upvote my heli answers and I'll forgive you
@rbp Tempting... ;-) You might want to include this in your answer, BTW. It gives some additional background on the ATS routes.
rbp
rbp
well, I think @voretaq7 knows more about this than me, so i've suggested he write the answer.
but i'll give it a shot
16:38
@rbp your answer is pretty complete
rbp
rbp
ok
I used to know where all the airways were but that trivia has long since leaked out of my brain (I know Blue is in the keys, and Green is in Alaska, I don't remember where Red and Amber are)
@rbp I deleted my comments, BTW, because they don't make sense any more
I'm also pretty sure there are no pretty lights on the NDBs anymore
@voretaq7 AK has R/A as well, I don't know if they're anywhere else too. This says the colour depends on the heading of the airway, but the ones I found in AK don't match that at all
16:44
@Pondlife Alaska is Special. Every section of the FARs ends with the phrase "Except in Alaska" :)
@voretaq7 Exactly. I started wondering where I could find some other red airways because I didn't see any in the south-east and my immediate thought was to check Alaska because they have all the odd stuff :-)
@voretaq7 IRS also follows that. You'll be charged hefty taxes ... except in Alaska!
@Farhan To be fair that's because you can make hefty money ... except in Alaska (unless you're in the oil business)
and we don't tax the oil business because we likes our oil.
@voretaq7 And our cheap avgas... 'Cheap' being a relative term here, of course!
rbp
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@Pondlife @voretaq7 ok, my edit is done and my snarky comments deleted
16:49
@rbp Nice map!
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:)
@Pondlife Cheap by Alaska standards means $8/gallon like at JFK? :)
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map makes it wasy to see why they are prioritized GARB
@rbp The 2nd and 3rd references are missing.
rbp
rbp
fixed
16:56
@rbp That map wasn't readable, so I added the reference for the higher resolution one.
rbp
rbp
<bows>
/me bows
heh
@fooot I was about to do that edit :)
rbp
rbp
interstingly, the NY-chicago-SLC-SFO route corresponds to the railroad route
@rbp IFR ;-)
17:12
@rbp A lot of the early airways were based on railroad and highway lines - that's what you'd follow if you didn't have a radio
rbp
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or a GPS :)
@rbp A WhatNow?
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and a pair of turbocharged engines
I've got a DME. That counts for something right? :)
rbp
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speaking of DME -- read this very interesting old article terps.com/ifrr/may96.pdf
the DME arc is on a VOR, final is a DME colo'd with the ILS
17:40
that is an approach with a DME arc all the way to the runway, and then off to the missed.
rbp
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@casey that's awesome!
that should be on every instrument checkride
the place I instructed at had an FTD and when my students thought they had a handle on briefing approaches and flying dme arcs I'd put them on a flight in the FTD and hand that approach to them and just watch :)
rbp
rbp
i had the easiest DME arc demo on my checkride
i had had to track the 15 DME arc from the MAP to a hold about 3 miles away
18:33
@casey . . . I wish to fly this approach now.
The funky-ass missed to avoid the restricted areas is particularly amusing.
I still think the discussion of the rotor disc tilting could be confusing
because one naturally pictures a single disc tilting like a spinning plate
a chair-o-plane
rbp
rbp
@DanHulme the other answers are wrong with respect to the tilting of the rotor disk
with certain rotors systems the blades move. with others the blades are connected together and move together.
crap, i've reached 200pts for today
your bottom diagram was helpful in that respect
rbp
rbp
18:49
@DanHulme unfortunately, people have voted on an incorrect answer
@rbp people also often vote for incorrect political candidates. Not much we can do about that except offer them better options...
rbp
rbp
i wonder if it would be better if the question were left up for some number of hours unanswered, and then all the answers are revealed at the same time
the first answer, correct or not (like my red airway), usually gets the most votes
@rbp maybe, but that has other problems (duplicate answers, multiple partial answers, etc.)
@rbp Well, that's not always the case.
rbp
rbp
we already have duplicate answres and partial answers
usually but not always (why do people think usually or often mean "always")
18:56
I noticed that several times my answer outdid the first answer.
rbp
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not disagreeing
@rbp For this current answer in discussion, the other answer has been posted since 23 hours, yours is only 3 hours old.
rbp
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true
Still you got 8 votes compared to 20 on the other one
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i am going to call this place and find out if i could be a candidate groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/rec.aviation.soaring/…
19:00
@rbp I'm proud of myself for holding off on voting on answers for that one.
@rbp I also don't think the other answer is inherently "wrong" (ok, he calls the anti-torque pedals "rudder pedals" - every fixed-wing guy I know does the same thing, and heli folks know what we mean). Aome of the comments under it have substantial issues, but the core explanation seems sound unless I'm missing something?
the answers are complimentary, though I prefer rbp's take on it
rbp
rbp
its correct as far as aerodynamics are concerned, but its wrong as far as how helicopters work or how pilots fly
holy crap, i may have a glider pilot job!
@rbp How much they are paying?
the first answer treats the flight dynamics as a black box that only addresses pilot input to the system and the analog to fixed wind flight. Rbp's answer actually describes the rotor and how the the turn actually works.
rbp
rbp
19:09
@Farhan i didn't ask because I don't care
and correctly invokes gyroscopic precession, which any proper answer on helicopter flight must do :)
@casey likewise
@casey complimentary? "that's a really well thought-out question, and only an inquisitive and clever person like you would have thought of it"
:-)
@casey It does not however invoke a sacrifice to Baal, which anything involving a helicopter must do :)
"OK, step one - slice this goat's neck open and spray the blood on the main rotor.
Alright, now that the demons have been appeased we can get in this upside-down hand mixer and attempt to commit aviation."
is it worthwhile learning to fly a helo?
rbp
rbp
19:14
blender, not mixer. you know how picky i am about terminology
there is a school in the next portacabin across from my flying group
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@DanHulme so fun!
and I've always thought it was pretty cool
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the woman said i was a very promising candidate and would I send her my flying resume and provide 2 rferences
@DanHulme I would like to learn to hover one someday
but zomg kerspensive
rbp
rbp
19:16
1. go to costco
2. buy a case of beans
3. eat
4. ....
@voretaq7 presumably that is taken care of in the factory, pre-delivery. I'm no expert on the details of the ritual though.
rbp
rbp
the discovery flight in the copter is beguiling.
@DanHulme only if you want to own on for personal flight or fly on professionaly. Quite expensive to rent for recreation.
@casey I'm not getting in that thing unless I'm DAMN WELL CERTAIN the demons have been appeased RECENTLY :-)
I have 20 minutes in an R22 and that cost me $60!! (2002 prices, ymmv)
rbp
rbp
19:18
you did see the picture I annotated.. there is a Jesus Nut
I saw that
@casey Last I heard the R22 they were training in at Republic rented out for $275/hr
that was a few years back
rbp
rbp
that's about right
usually includes instruction
for $275 an hour, give me an airplane with two engines please.
rbp
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44s are in the 400 range
19:19
yea, and once you are done training you don't want to be playing around in the 22 anymore
rbp
rbp
i have seen nearly timed out R44s for under $400/hr
@rbp I don't recall if instruction was included or if that bumped it up to an even 300/hr, but still gaaaaak!
What soured me on helicopters was learning that the R22 had a calendar airframe limitation
I still remember renting a C150 for $45/hour (wet) if you bought time in $400 blocks.
rbp
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john pyle was my DPE for private and commercial heli. on the commercial, he mostly told me vietnam stories
john runs sirius flying
19:21
the R22 in Cambridge is £275.00/HR + £15 landing fee
that's US$417/hr
@DanHulme can you ask your passengers to jump from a 0.6 m hover and avoid the fee?
(that's for instruction, not just hire)
@DanHulme Continuing the grand tradition of UK pricing: Take the US price, cross out $, and write in £
@DanHulme What's the landing fee for?
no idea
19:27
If you land safely, it's £15; otherwise cost of R22
they do have to cross the main runway to get from the helicopter parking to the low-level practice area, so perhaps they get charged that by the airport
@Farhan big airports typically charge landing fees. In parts of Europe (and Canada) you'll pay fees for just talking to ATC, flying approaches, etc
@casey In the US too one day. They keep trying...
because you know thats how you improve safety: Discourage pilots form using ATC services.
@voretaq7 Yup, and landing too.
yep, AOPA and EAA can only do so much lobbying. It'll happen slowly but it eventually happen completely :/
19:31
As much as I think AOPA is a bloated corpse these days I throw them a few bucks to keep screaming about that
we already have enough people doing stupid things, we don't want to add a financial incentive to be stupid. "1500 foot ceilings, barely 3 miles viz, and steadily deteriorating -- but I'm not going to file IFR and shoot an approach because it's gonna cost me $50 to talk to ATC!"
I'm currently seeing how many "last final offers" AOPA is going to send me to renew my lapsed membership.
I keep getting last chances to sign back up, my luck must run out at some point...
@casey It won't.
When you renew, ask them to send all the magazines you missed and they'll be very happy to do that.
rbp
rbp
i rotate between aopa, eaa, spa, and ssa, depending on what i'm interested in flying when i'm reading my mail
@Farhan i was surprised that last time I tried this experiment and renewed after 2 years of lapsed membership they still sent me my 10 year lapel pin :)
rbp
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i kid you not
19:37
i let AOPA lapse when I was ALPA, and I ocassionally send EAA some money
rbp
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i came very close to rejoining the SPA when i saw their booth yesterday at the Crappy Sport Pilot Expo
@voretaq7 perhaps we'll see a resurgence in the use of contact approaches. No flight visibility but I can see straight down -- I'm over the supermarket so thats a 3 mile final and if I follow this road...
rbp
rbp
19:50
I think of a contact approach as an IFR analog of SVFR
Who has a recommendation for online logbook software
@casey . . . I'll crash right into the radio tower because the Fairway and the Safeway look identical from above!
@rbp LogTen seems to be popular
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Oh give yourself more credit @voretaq7
Scud running is not that hard on your own turf
@rbp Your right - there are no radio towers near FRG... I'll get caught in the driving range's net instead :P
@rbp No it's not. I've done it under what I'd consider low-ish (2000-2500-foot) ceilings, but always with good forward visibility (~8 miles)
rbp
rbp
Need 1000ft ceiling
It's also not particularly fun - I like having distance between me and the ground. I'm funny that way...
rbp
rbp
19:59
heh, I guess we have a different view of low :)
@rbp we have lots of 500 and 600 foot towers around these parts. You fly right over them on normal VFR arrivals...
Also the entire sectional is lemon yellow 'round these parts so there's some other legalities to consider.
rbp
rbp
They're clearly marked/lit what's the problem
What's lemon yellow mean?
@rbp hahahahahaha lit that's a good one.
@rbp It means "congested area", but the practical implication is "If you're not 1000 feet above or 2000 feet away from obstacles don't worry - the FSDO is right in the terminal, it's a short walk for them to bust you"
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oh you mean populated. Right. I would stay over the highways. Take the lie to the moshulu exit 3 and then the sunrise westbound till you hit exit 80..,,
yeahhhhh no:
rbp
rbp
20:05
ok then!
I need to get you up in a glider this summer.
You could thread your way in from the south shore SVFR, that's about it.
rbp
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The Bay Area has a daily marine layer, sometimes down to a few hundred feet. But the local pilots have good routes for getting around
When it's legal
@rbp One day I'll go do some glider rides out at Brookhaven. Not sure I'd make much use of a glider rating, but I'd like to get some glider time.
@rbp yeah they have a lot more options out there where you can get down low
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I've flown a heli from Napa to San carlos over the bay itself when it was OVC005 but good viz
we have people. people with phones. who like to call up and cry about the big loud airport that's been there since the 1930s. :-/
rbp
rbp
20:10
Got higher closer to SFO so it wasn't a problem over land
No no, we need to drive up to wurstboro NY where there's thermals and ridges, not just tows
@rbp . . . points at airport
Fly. Cheaper than tolls.
(seriously, it is)
rbp
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Oh yes fly to wurstboro!!!
In your Cherokee.
What's the free online logbook
Don't know any that are free - honestly I just scan the pages from my logbook and stick them on a server somewhere
(when I'm done transcribing the plane's logbooks I'll start doing mine. There's a lot less of it, could probably knock it out in a day...)
@rbp that can potentially get you into trouble too around there. the expressway visual into LGA keeps you right over highways and somewhat low
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@casey if the expressway visual is in use, doesn't that mean its, uh, visual?
or are they still in the clouds until closer to the airport
20:21
<stares at California charts> it'd be nice to fly somewhere without people :P
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rbp
tiptoe visual @SFO needs, i think, ceiling above 3,000
@rbp I think all the LGA visuals are 3000 feet and 5 miles?
@rbp myflightbook.com is free and very good. The developer takes donations if you feel it's worth it
rbp
rbp
Weather Minimums: SFO 2400’/5 (If AWOS inoperative, SQL 2400’/5)
in eastern quadrant (030° clockwise to 120°) and San Mateo AWOS
Weather Minimums: SFO 2100’/5 or SFO 1000’/3, with 5 mile visibility
@voretaq7 not only are there fewer people once you're past 25DME SFO, there a LOT of airports, of all shapes & sizes
20:25
we have surprisingly many airports on Long Island.... most surrounded by people that like to complain about their existence.
@voretaq7 Those must be retired people who have this hobby to call the airport and complain, in addition to gardening and watching TV.
@Farhan A lot of the ones that gripe about Republic are.
20:41
@voretaq7 I saw that happening once. A woman called the airport to complain that an airplane passed over her house and made a lot of noise. She gave her home address. Turned out she was living right under base-to-final turn.
@Farhan "Yup. Get used to it."
That was the traffic pattern.
Urban Planning Fail?
a few years ago in Cambridge there was uproar in the paper because of a low-flying Hercules over the town, because it was practising for the Farnborough Air Show
 
2 hours later…
rbp
rbp
23:05
so, i spoke with the person hiring for the glider sightseeing pilot job, and she said that I am a very promising candidate (and so far the only one!), and to send her my docs and 2 references
23:23
the hole is suspiciously neat and rectangular in the photo
Yeah, doesn't seem like a typical random sink hole.
@fooot former storm drain improperly capped off?

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