- Reaction score
- 17,751
- Points
- 1,010
To be fair, it does not happen often, but when it does, it is epically frustrating for us denizens of the aluminum tube, who sit sideways and do not have a window.
garb811 said:What are the advantages to an inflight hot refuel, which I think is what they were doing at the end, compared to putting it onto the deck for a hot refuel?
Loachman said:Trying to hot-refuel a helicopter on a pitching deck strikes me as a tragedy waiting to happen - rotors turning, major source of potential ignition in the event of a leak, personnel moving in close proximity and under the rotor disc, a large fire extinguisher that could roll or tumble, and the likely damage to the ship in the event of a catastrophic fire.
Loachman said:My only attempts at deck landings were on severely reality-limited simulators with no peripheral vision, resulting in very few successful ones despite fairly mild (so it was claimed) sea states, but...
I've done a lot of hot refuelling on land.
The refueller has move in under the rotor disc to plug the nozzle in and remain there until refuelling is complete. A fire guard is also right up close, in the event of a leak - the nozzle separated from the hose while an AH64 was being refuelled hot several years ago, resulting in fuel being sprayed into at least one of the engine air intakes, almost immediate ignition, and complete loss of the machine but, fortunately, minor injuries.
Kiowa's fuel capacity was only 276 litres. Refuelling still took a while (although I never timed it). Larger helicopters take longer, obviously.
Trying to hot-refuel a helicopter on a pitching deck strikes me as a tragedy waiting to happen - rotors turning, major source of potential ignition in the event of a leak, personnel moving in close proximity and under the rotor disc, a large fire extinguisher that could roll or tumble, and the likely damage to the ship in the event of a catastrophic fire.
Picking up a flexible hose from a stable hover and then moving off to one side - and right over the world's biggest fire extinguisher - until refuelling is complete seems to be far quicker, simpler, and safer.
Operating over land was far more comfortable for so many reasons.
Cloud Cover said:Is it true that there is a Cyclone det on Asterix?
"MS Asterix, HMCS Montréal and HMCS Ville de Québec are currently the only naval vessels assigned with the Cyclone. The remaining Halifax-class frigates will receive the Cyclone once the Sea Kings are officially retired at the end of 2018."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikorsky_CH-148_Cyclone
SeaKingTacco said:No. It is not true. She is not even certified yet for Cyclone.