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JoesterVT

Joined: 10/21/2005 Posts: 41974
Likes: 11067


Not if these reports are correct(seen this a couple of different places)


Begin cut/paste from Fox article: Shortly after 9:40 a.m., the helicopter turned again, toward the southeast, and climbed to more than 2,000 feet. It then descended and crashed into the hillside at about 1,400 feet, according to data from Flightradar24.

When it struck the ground, the helicopter was flying at about 184 mph and descending at a rate of more than 4,000 feet per minute, the data showed. (end)

Sounds like it fell out of the sky rather than flying into the ground. Is there a scenario where a helicopter pilot in fog can get so disoriented that he loses which way is up? Could something like that then cause him to fly in a manner that puts too much stress on the aircraft and breaks the thing?
[Post edited by JoesterVT at 01/27/2020 09:18AM]

(In response to this post by EDGEMAN)

Posted: 01/27/2020 at 09:14AM



+1

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Current Thread:
 
  
ATC radio transmissions with Kobe’s helicopter. -- B777Fr8Dog 01/26/2020 10:26PM
  That's called vertigo, and it's a very real thing -- EDGEMAN 01/27/2020 11:47AM
  What in the post above rules out this report? -- JoesterVT 01/27/2020 09:28AM
  For sure...just saying... -- JoesterVT 01/27/2020 09:36AM
  "It sounds like the pilot was taking too much risk, -- PhotoHokieNC 01/27/2020 09:04AM
  Is 30 years old for that model? ** -- Late 80s Hokie 01/27/2020 06:16AM
  I learned a new term from those comments -- HokieAl 01/26/2020 10:47PM

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