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Ever travel by helicopter?

gunnut505gunnut505 Member Posts: 10,290
edited September 2017 in General Discussion
A lot of folks have a fear of flying, many more are jaded jet fodder, but how many have made a chopper flight of notable duration?
I used to commute from the Survey campsite to the mining claims we were staking in a Bell Jet Ranger, when we worked in Nevada, Utah & Colorado.
We used a little Hughes a few times, Vets might remember the Loach as fondly as I recall getting back out of one.
Once, outside of Silverton, our Pilot Vern,floated us through the clouds into a High Power line against the bubble. Vern was a Nam Vet with a bazillion hours in rotary aircraft, and had a tic that would surface during times of stress; his head would shiver from side to side, while his eyes would blink VERY rapidly.
When the 6 of us saw the thick cables against the bubble, the pucker factor reached previously unknown levels.
Vern looked like an inmate in the electric chair, jerking & bobbing while struggling to back off the wires, keeping the blades above them.
When we finally set it down in the Burger King parking lot, we all leaped out for a refreshing mouthful of gravel!
No atheists that morning!

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    Rocky RaabRocky Raab Member Posts: 14,198 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Not long distances, but I took a helo sightseeing trip just last week. It still amazes me that those things can fly.
    I may be a bit crazy - but I didn't drive myself.
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    Big Sky RedneckBig Sky Redneck Member Posts: 19,752 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I almost lost my job as a FSR in Afghanistan because I refused to go FOB hopping in a Chinook. Told them I would gladly convoy, I would fly in a fixed wing but there was no way in hell I was getting into a Hand Me Down worn out Chinook that the Marines fly in. There was other FSRs who were just as qualified for the task at hand, I wasn't going, end of discussion.
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    AlpineAlpine Member Posts: 15,054 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Bell 47, and Pelican, and then Hughes 500. In the old days the department had the Bell. You had to help it get off the ground. Visibility out of the plexiglass bubble was great.

    The dive team trained with the Coast Guard. We boarded the helio at the San Diego Bay station. They dropped us off in the bay and then landed in the bay and picked us up.

    Towards the end of my career the department got the Hughes 500. Power to burn and churn out of that little turbine.
    ?The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.?
    Margaret Thatcher

    "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
    Mark Twain
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    p3skykingp3skyking Member Posts: 25,750
    edited November -1
    I hitched a ride on a UH-1 from Atsugi to Yokota airbase in Tokyo once.

    Got yanked out of the water by one every time I requaled at DWEST.

    Not a real big fan of rotary wing flying. It just seems so unnatural.
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    allen griggsallen griggs Member Posts: 35,241 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Ran the bubble right against the high tension lines, huh? Well that was a close call.

    I never flew in a chopper but I used to fly hot air balloons. That is just how the balloon boys get killed, fly that thing into the power lines. The arcing causes the wicker gondola to catch fire, then the propane tanks blow. Bad deal.
    Happens every other year or so, five or six people die when the balloon hits the power lines.
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    mark christianmark christian Forums Admins, Member, Moderator Posts: 24,456 ******
    edited November -1
    Many years ago, I flew from Long Beach to Santa Catalina Island (and back) in a Sikorski H-34 (commercial S-58), on Catalina Air Lines. It had a big radial engine, and even though it was a commercial helicopter, it was still noisier than I had expected. I can only imagine what it was like flying in the military version (the Marines used a lot of H-34s), which had no sound dampening materials.

    I had always wanted to ride in a helicopter, and I did it. I've never had any desire to fly in one again.
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    11b6r11b6r Member Posts: 16,588 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Helicopters do not truly fly- they merely flail the air into submission. [:p]

    Did my primary training with the Hughes TH-55, transitioned in UH-1s. Took my wife on her first rotary flight about 5 years ago in a Jet Ranger- she loved it.

    We used to call the TH-55 the Mattel Messerschmitt. Aircraft only weighed 896 pounds empty.
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    NavybatNavybat Member Posts: 6,849 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I've flown in SH-3s, SH-60s, JetRangers, and H-47s. Don't like them.

    If I had to fly helicopters for the Navy I would have quit flight school. Fixed wing is the only thing I want to fly. [;)]
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    MIKE WISKEYMIKE WISKEY Member, Moderator Posts: 9,972 ******
    edited November -1
    lots of miles in a hu-1
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    droptopdroptop Member Posts: 8,367 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Over 100 hours in Huey UH 1 with PHI.
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    Old-ColtsOld-Colts Member Posts: 22,700 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I worked offshore in the Gulf of Mexico a couple of Summers when I was in college and made a few trips between Morgan City, LA and the Rig in the Gulf.

    I made a couple of treks between the USS Midway in the Tonkin Gulf and DaNang.

    Most memorable was at Fort Hood, TX in the later 70's. I was a Project Engineer and we were putting an Artillery Control System through Field Tests and the only way to get from our offices to the "Battle Area" was via helicopter. We had an Army pilot on a couple of occasions that appeared to be making up for missing duty in Vietnam!!! It took several months for my butt to unpucker!!!!!!

    If you can't feel the music; it's only pink noise!

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    grumpygygrumpygy Member Posts: 53,466
    edited November -1
    Huey, 53 and a 46.
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    Mr. PerfectMr. Perfect Member, Moderator Posts: 66,309 ******
    edited November -1
    Yep. My last season fighting fire I was helicopter crew member certified.
    Some will die in hot pursuit
    And fiery auto crashes
    Some will die in hot pursuit
    While sifting through my ashes
    Some will fall in love with life
    And drink it from a fountain
    That is pouring like an avalanche
    Coming down the mountain
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    mogley98mogley98 Member Posts: 18,297 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    When I was in the Navy I was jogging on the Helo deck and tripped and fell. The Corpmen thought I might have broken my arm and we were a small ship with no X-ray or actual Doctor.

    They were going to call in a Helo to Evac me off the ship, but due to the heavy seas they would need to lift me off in a basket.

    I helped the Corpman decide it wasn't broken!

    I did not want to ride off the deck in a basket, so the only Helo ride I ever had was at the Fair :)
    Why don't we go to school and work on the weekends and take the week off!
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    JamesRKJamesRK Member Posts: 25,670 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Seems like everybody who has ridden a helicopter more than once has a story about the time they almost got killed. Kinda makes me wonder if those things are as safe as advertised.

    I never had a near death experience in a helicopter but I did witness some of the mentality that contributes to them. Long, long ago and far, far away, when I was in Antarctica, the Army sent a gang of helicopters with pilots to McMurdo. Some of the most certifiably crazy people I ever met. They ran a shuttle service from Williams Field (Ross Ice Shelf air strip) to "town" (main station at McMurdo).

    The Admiral had a standing order that routine shuttles between Williams Field and McMurdo Station had to follow the ice shelf and not take the short cut over open water because if you went into the drink, for all practical purposes you were dead as soon as you hit the water, but officially your life expectancy was measured in single digit minutes.

    I caught a ride with the Army one day and noticed we were flying over open water. I asked the pilot if he was aware of the Admiral's standing order. He said "Not a problem. The Army has plenty of helicopters."

    One day the Army took some scientists up into the Horlick Mountains and when they went above the altitude where a helicopter can fly, they crashed. The Army took the obviously appropriate action and sent a helicopter to get them. When the rescue helicopter got to about the same place the first helicopter crashed, they crashed.

    VX-6 sent a C-130 with motor toboggans (snowmobiles) and they came down the hard way.

    I never voluntarily got into a helicopter and if I ever get in another one it will be the same way I got into the first one.
    The road to hell is paved with COMPROMISE.
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    grumpygygrumpygy Member Posts: 53,466
    edited November -1
    Huey from Cap Pendelton to El Toro . We took off with the doors open, but to go above a certain speed the doors need to be shut. We the door on my side would not latch closed. All the way up I had to use my leg to keep it shut.

    CH 46 short flight to the field at Camp Pendelton. I noticed a leak to the crew chief. Who told me to let him know when it stopped. Cause that was when We had Problems.

    I have never really come close to saying we would have crashed. So that is something.
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    perry shooterperry shooter Member Posts: 17,390
    edited November -1
    been in 4 different ones a Bell HUEY CHINOOK and some kind of Commercial twin rotor from sanfran to oakland that was my first ride [V][:0]it had a drive shaft in the top of passenger compartment the dam U JOINT had so much play and vibration I tried to get him to put it down and let me off no such luck I used to watch the old flying banana on training auto gyro that would take big balls[:(]
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    JunkballerJunkballer Member Posts: 9,183 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by MIKE WISKEY
    lots of miles in a hu-1
    Yep, me too, short & long hops...got the bad knee caps due to entering the doorways fast [;)]. As the native Americans would say "never no more".

    "Never do wrong to make a friend----or to keep one".....Robert E. Lee

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    hillbillehillbille Member Posts: 14,182 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    just got one few weeks ago, got lifeflighted to pittsburg, not nearly as fun as the hueys we had in the service though..............
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    Don McManusDon McManus Member Posts: 23,489 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Shuttled between the USS Nassau and USS William V. Pratt in a UH-1 over the Med in 1981. About half an hour in the air, lowered to the deck of the Pratt.

    Half an hour was enough.

    Trapping on board the Carl Vincent in a C-1 Trader with a woman pilot was more comfortable.
    Freedom and a submissive populace cannot co-exist.

    Brad Steele
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    grizzclawgrizzclaw Member Posts: 1,159 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    6 yrs flew everywhere in UH-1 with Ohng. Gunships. Lots of fun on practice gun runs. I was a 45m20. Aircraft armament sub-systems mechanic. Pilots were Vietnam experienced warrant officers. Scare the crap out of us. Good times. Ft Campbell ky, Atterbury ind, Grayling Mich, Camp Perry, Aberdeen Proving Ground.
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    armilitearmilite Member Posts: 35,483 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by grizzclaw
    6 yrs flew everywhere in UH-1 with Ohng. Gunships. Lots of fun on practice gun runs. I was a 45m20. Aircraft armament sub-systems mechanic. Pilots were Vietnam experienced warrant officers. Scare the crap out of us. Good times. Ft Campbell ky, Atterbury ind, Grayling Mich, Camp Perry, Aberdeen Proving Ground.


    I was a 45L20 at Aberdeen in the early 70's
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    Ricci WrightRicci Wright Member Posts: 8,260 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Nope but used to do a service contract with Sikorsky Helos in Stratford, CT.where they were building Blackhawks. My first time there I went to get my security clearance done and the guard at the gate asked whether I was a Duke or Carolina fan. I replied Carolina and he told me I was denied entrance. It caught me off guard being so far from N.C. and I thought he was serious. He smiled and pointed to his name tag,"Krzyzewski". He was a cousin to Mike Krzyzewski the Blue Devil basket ball coach.[:)]
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    Marc1301Marc1301 Member Posts: 31,897 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I've been up for six or seven sight-seeing excursions of various lengths.

    After reading this, I doubt I'll ever go again![:0]
    "Beam me up Scotty, there's no intelligent life down here." - William Shatner
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    bearman49709bearman49709 Member Posts: 503
    edited November -1
    Went up in a few, only landed in one.
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    serfserf Member Posts: 9,217 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Flew on one once at the beach,one of those Old M.A.S.H. units with a glass bubble,scared me looking down through glass at the ground, I guess that's why they used them in Korea!

    serf
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    Jim RauJim Rau Member Posts: 3,550
    edited November -1
    1400+ hours in Hueys and 58's. I got to see a lot of fireworks while flying too!!![;)]
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    CaptFunCaptFun Member Posts: 16,678 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    They don't fly as much as they just beat the air into submission. I did a SLED camp in high school where we got to fly on a couple of basically sightseeing trips around Columbia (SC). I would prefer not to have to fly in one again, but if it was required...
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    NeoBlackdogNeoBlackdog Member Posts: 16,654 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I've had two short helicopter rides and that was enough! First one was with a guy spraying potato fields. I swear that guy was flashing back to strafing rice paddies with every pass! The second was when I was fighting fire and they had that thing packed to the gills with fire crew. I didn't think it was ever gonna get off the ground.
    There's an old fella here in town that used to fly the big Sikorsky Sky Cranes rigged for fire fighting. I asked him once where he learned to fly choppers and he said "Uncle Sam's US Army flight school... But those little yellow people taught me how to do evasive maneuvers!"[:0]
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    pwilliepwillie Member Posts: 20,253 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Hueys and Chinooks......Ton Son Nhut to Vung Tau....many trips....Dalat!...and many flights in Caribous...
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    select-fireselect-fire Member Posts: 69,453 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
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    pickenuppickenup Member Posts: 22,844 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
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    Laredo LeftyLaredo Lefty Member Posts: 13,451 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Yes.....regularly.
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    Tech141Tech141 Member Posts: 3,787 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I had the pleasure of being 'invited' on a few Blackhawk flights out of Bagram whilst deployed to Afghanistan. The flights didn't bother me, but the folks 100ft below seemed to be a tad peeved and we garnered their undivided attention. I was very glad for the harnesses that kept us inside the aircraft as the pilots exhibited their skills of "alternative flight characteristics".

    Seriously, I hate flying in airplanes, but helicopters don't bother me. But then again, I also like playing with snakes.
    To be honest, we really didn't get much higher than 150 feet AGL (flying that low reduces your time of exposure to those who don't appreciate your presence). Also, helicopter pilots have a really good grasp of profane language when under extreme amounts of stress.
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    MIKE WISKEYMIKE WISKEY Member, Moderator Posts: 9,972 ******
    edited November -1
    "Huey from Cap Pendelton to El Toro . We took off with the doors open"................you had 'doors'?[:0]
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    montanajoemontanajoe Forums Admins, Member, Moderator Posts: 58,027 ******
    edited November -1
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    kidthatsirishkidthatsirish Member Posts: 6,985 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I have 256 hours of stick time in helos....me and a buddy flee one from Pensacola,Fl to Tallahassee once....it was fun.
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    82trooper82trooper Member Posts: 251 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I parachuted out of a UH-1 and a Chinook (out the tailgate)...I guess that counts as a "ride in a helicopter"!!
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