EverydayBeast
ChatShitGPT Alpha 0.001
You're supposed to trust the helicopter
Not at all. It does become much more difficult to control, especially at low speed, (the tail rotor is there to counter the forces imparted on the helicopter by the engine and blades and stop the helicopter spinning) but it's by no means impossible to recover and a skilled pilot can bring it in safely.Is it true that it's game over if a helicopter's tail rotor fails? I've often heard the view that if something goes wrong in a civilian helicopter then the chance of survival is very low – you are basically a passenger in a falling chunk of metal.
I mean, objectively.. I don't see why that'd be a bad idea. It'd only really work if your engine somehow went out at altitude, but that seems like it would at least solve that problem. I am not sure how many times that's happened (and wouldn't have saved Kobe).
This sounds like the kind of idea a stoner would come up with when you explain to him that giving helicopter passengers parachutes is a terrible idea.
"...then just like...put the parachute on the helicopter bro..."
Jumping out of a plane / helicopter that is still actively in flight is a very different prospect from jumping out of a helicopter that is actively falling. As soon as you leap from the helicopter it will cease to influence your velocity. Depending on a number of different factors such as the exact mode of failure, orientation and aerodynamics of both you and the helicopter, it may / may not fall faster than you.And anyone who said helicopter blades then you need your head examined. When you jump out it's not like a parachute magically pops open to full extension the second you set one foot out of the vehicle like its spring loaded or something.
Then again not a lot of people earned their jump wings like I have.
anyone have an idea what the debris at the crash site mean? since its scattered so far and how everything has been disintegrated. also theres a huge patch of dirt wasnt sure if that was always there or if thats where it initially hit.
seeing alot of people say it slammed into the side of the mountain but it seems like a somewhat a gradual incline so shouldn't it skidded and not have been such a violent looking crash.
for passangers to use in case they have to bail, this whole kobe thing could of been avoided
seriosuly why havn't aviation officials added emergency parachutes in helicopters
Atleast, with the forces involved in hitting a mountain at 150MPH, it's likely there was little more than a split second of sheer terror before the end and they didn't suffer...much...
Ejection seats could be cool maybe. Not sure if the physics work.
While it's true that a parachute wouldn't have saved Kobe OP asked a more general question: Why don't helicopters have parachutes? Well, the answer is because you can either bring it in safely for landing, and so don't need a 'chute, or it's spinning wildly out of control in freefall with no hope of survival, in which case you don't need a 'chute because you're going to die either way. There's really no inbetween with something like a helicopter that is already incredibly unstable when it's working properly. In or out of the helicopter, it makes no difference, a parachute can't save you.Some people are talking about it as if it's like the movies when you see a helicopter spinning wildly out of control so you fear they would be cut to pieces if they bailed, but the reality is that Kobe's helicopter crashed into a hillside in extreme fog considered dangerous for flying.
The pilot nose dived 4000 feet into the ground.I mean, from what I read they were going 184mph when the helicopter impacted. They would've had no time to react at all once they realized what was happening. Sometimes there's just no escaping death.
Because the human body is pathetically weak.Real question, why aren't cabin cockpits stronger than fiber glass to withstand harder impact. Yes, cost factor vs weight, but plenty of strong material for those who can afford better.
Allow me to demonstrate why with a handy dandy gif.
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Hope that clears up any questions you might have OP.
/threadAllow me to demonstrate why with a handy dandy gif.
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Hope that clears up any questions you might have OP.
Is it true that it's game over if a helicopter's tail rotor fails?
That reminds me of those old troll physics comics.yo for real though why didn't they just all jump up in the air at the last second right before it hit the ground
A cockpit and body frame can be built to withstand greater impacts. With massive airbags, seems like some possibility to survive would exist.The pilot nose dived 4000 feet into the ground.
Some thing went wrong other than not seeing a mountain.
Because the human body is pathetically weak.
Helicopters aren't like planes, they have to be lightweight. Planes use aerodynamics to float on a cloud of air. Helicopters batter air into the ground with giant paddles to maintain lift.A cockpit and body frame can be built to withstand greater impacts. With massive airbags, seems like some possibility to survive would exist.
You are not surviving a 186mph impact head on into the ground. No matter what.A cockpit and body frame can be built to withstand greater impacts. With massive airbags, seems like some possibility to survive would exist.
Apollo capsule used 'shutes to deccelerate their reentry. As with the Russian chopper popping off blades, under some conditions the Apollo method would work, which in a % of crashes is beneficial. Like seatbelts saving lives in some conditions, but not all. Running smack dab into a mountain isn't the same set of conditions. Instead, build chopper cockpit infrastructure stronger than fiberglass. Am sure it can be done, right Elon? It comes down to cost vs weight.You are not surviving a 186mph impact head on into the ground. No matter what.
What if you jumped out in a squirrel suit and had a parachute that came out of your ass?
Hollywood. Lol.
Just jump out and dive roll when you hit the ground. If you're a good guy you'll live. If you're a bad guy you'll be skewered on a fence or flagpole.
Dude this is reality. Physics and human error are at play here.
When you jump out in the right moment you can pass between the blades.Helicopters fall straight down........... Giant spinning blade.
Yes let the rich people in the helicopters dump highly flammable fuel all over us expendable plebs so they have a 10% higher survival rate.Honestly one of the biggest problems is the explosion and fire that follows a crash, and that goes for cars too. Even if you survive the crash you can be set ablaze.
If only there was a system that in case of an impact would pump the shit out of the fuel the fuck outta there at high speed, IDK. Or that would burn it in a controlled way. It could at least minimize the hell that goes on in such an event.
I am just spitballing, not greenlighting an idea without even seeing its execution or reliability. There's just so advanced tech nowadays, AI, machine learning, machine vision, things that could be used to determine if it such a manoeuvre is safe or not etc.Yes let the rich people in the helicopters dump highly flammable fuel all over us expendable plebs so they have a 10% higher survival rate.
Plus what if the fuel evacuation device is faulty and spews all the gas out of an otherwise perfectly functional helicopter.