If you go out and do a series of full-downs with progressively higher flares, one thing you discover is how much leeway you have as regards dropping the aircraft straight down (or nearly so) onto the ground. At least in a training scenario (two dudes, half-tanks) at our sea-level-ish airfield it feels like you can begin a flare at ~70', finish that flare at ~40' AGL, and (as long as you leave the RPM above 100% by running it up during the flare and then ~*leaving the collective full-down during the "fall"*~), you've got plenty of rotor inertia to touch down. I don't even mean "survivably," I mean gently, like often-ends-up-softer-than-a-power-on-landing levels of gentle. At higher gross weights, higher DA, or on a dead-calm morning maybe less-so, but having done a bit of that kind of practice I'm now way less concerned about coming into a flare with the textbook 60+ knots or making sure I get down to ground level before I flare. As long as I've made it to a land-able spot, my RPM is up, and I'm low/zero-ish groundspeed by the end of the maneuver, I'm happy. I used to want to fly the 44 like it was a 22-- always keeping the speed up until pretty close to the ground, and then wanting a solid flare to almost zero rate of descent before finishing up. Now I'm happy to just let the thing coast in at pretty low speeds, flare higher up, build that RPM up and just let the inertia catch me at the bottom. It's made me so much more confident flying the aircraft out in the real world, since I know I can come in over a lot of everyday obstacles and still stick it into a confined landing spot survivably. Your instructor in these videos seems super cool-- it's really fun to watch.
If you go out and do a series of full-downs with progressively higher flares, one thing you discover is how much leeway you have as regards dropping the aircraft straight down (or nearly so) onto the ground. At least in a training scenario (two dudes, half-tanks) at our sea-level-ish airfield it feels like you can begin a flare at ~70', finish that flare at ~40' AGL, and (as long as you leave the RPM above 100% by running it up during the flare and then ~*leaving the collective full-down during the "fall"*~), you've got plenty of rotor inertia to touch down. I don't even mean "survivably," I mean gently, like often-ends-up-softer-than-a-power-on-landing levels of gentle. At higher gross weights, higher DA, or on a dead-calm morning maybe less-so, but having done a bit of that kind of practice I'm now way less concerned about coming into a flare with the textbook 60+ knots or making sure I get down to ground level before I flare. As long as I've made it to a land-able spot, my RPM is up, and I'm low/zero-ish groundspeed by the end of the maneuver, I'm happy. I used to want to fly the 44 like it was a 22-- always keeping the speed up until pretty close to the ground, and then wanting a solid flare to almost zero rate of descent before finishing up. Now I'm happy to just let the thing coast in at pretty low speeds, flare higher up, build that RPM up and just let the inertia catch me at the bottom. It's made me so much more confident flying the aircraft out in the real world, since I know I can come in over a lot of everyday obstacles and still stick it into a confined landing spot survivably.
Your instructor in these videos seems super cool-- it's really fun to watch.
Lindo essa imagem
Where is this??
What did the "waggle" end up being?
What a beautyful place! Were is it?
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Its like practicing dying........ ;-)