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by e12e
2445 days ago
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I'm curious - surely there's still some single point that would let the rotor fly away? What does it mean that newer helicopters "doesn't have" this? I mean the rotor is attached? It's a single axel? There are scenarios where the rotor falls off? |
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On the older 'teetering head' designs like the Huey, you can bump the mast (rotor shaft) in aggressive nose overs or low g conditions which would also separate the rotors from the aircraft.
[0] https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=213384
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHC_Helikopter_Service_Flight_...