More of the same today. Concentrating on stable approaches. I say stable, which in helicopters mean a constantly changing dynamic situation.
I'm still fighting my fixed wing habits. I consistently ending up too fast at the end. Which means I end up having too much aft cyclic which translates into having to pull too much collective and rolling in too much power at the end, which means huge amounts of pedal too. It's all pretty ugly.
The ideal is once turning final and setting that initial back cyclic, it's a steady deceleration from 60 to the hover right over the landing spot. Which would mean, a more gentle collective at the end when you translate from flight to hover which would help slow down the helicopter more, which would require forward cyclic to keep from stopping, keeping a more level attitude, less required collective and power and anti-torque at the end.
I'm at that point in training where it's gonna be the same stuff over and over till I can actually do it.
I'm still fighting my fixed wing habits. I consistently ending up too fast at the end. Which means I end up having too much aft cyclic which translates into having to pull too much collective and rolling in too much power at the end, which means huge amounts of pedal too. It's all pretty ugly.
The ideal is once turning final and setting that initial back cyclic, it's a steady deceleration from 60 to the hover right over the landing spot. Which would mean, a more gentle collective at the end when you translate from flight to hover which would help slow down the helicopter more, which would require forward cyclic to keep from stopping, keeping a more level attitude, less required collective and power and anti-torque at the end.
I'm at that point in training where it's gonna be the same stuff over and over till I can actually do it.
2 comments:
Patience my friend... PATIENCE :-) And a healthy dose of stick time...
I had exactly the opposite problem when I went from helicopter to fixed wing training. For some reason fixed wing ips get nervous when you start slowing down close to the ground.
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