Lesson 3 – 12th May 2009 – 12.45pm – 1hr 5mins – Total so far – 3hours 11minutes

Written by David Pollard on June 7th, 2009

Thoroughly enjoyed this lesson. It didn’t feel as exhausting as the hover lesson from the previous day. It was mostly practicing climbing/descending, climbing turns, descending turns etc..PLUS we got another 15 minutes worth of hover practice in !! :-)

The climbing/descending turns etc was all fine and event-free, and the hover practice was the bit I was really looking forward to and it went MUCH better today. From yesterday’s “How will I ever crack this ?” to “Yes, I can see it’s possible I might be able to crack it”. It was a big relief to me, and I felt good. Don’t get me wrong. If you’d seen my hover, you would have thought I was doing aerial aerobatics to music, but whereas yesterday I managed a ONE second hover, I managed a 30-second hover and that’s a LONG time when you’re doing it. Still, not there yet. I still lost it, and could maybe only get it back to hover 50% of the time. Steve saved the day, the rest of the time.

Another plus is I did all the R/T myself. I did have a bit of a scare though. Not sure if it’s my headset or me concentrating too much on flying the helicopter, but the Tower had told me I was “Number 1 to land”, which means I should be the next one to be given clearance to land, so we turned onto final approach, all lined up with the runway, where I heard “SOMETHING SOMETHING, Cleared to Land”. I didn’t hear our callsign (Northumbria ZERO FOUR), and nearly shit a brick thinking there was an Easyjet 767 right behind us. Steve quickly told me “don’t worry, that’s us”. Phew !!!

Steve found it funny – ha bloody ha !

So, great lesson. I am quietly confident that I will crack the hover now. It may take a while, but at least it’s a possibility !

Bonus today was that we did one autorotation. That’s what a helicopter does when the engine goes. Bit like a sycamore from a tree when it falls, it spins round. When a helicopter falls through the air, the rotor does the same and spins round itself. This potential energy in the spinning rotor can be used to safely land if the engine goes. So, Steve did a complete autorotation. Cut the power, enter autorotation, last second, flare, kick the engine back in. Very interesting maneuvre !

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