Once you've landed: ·
Close throttle & fuel valve ·
Turn off Battery ·
Evacuate aircraft Power-On Recoveries These are an increasing trend in many companies, intended to reduce the number of autorotative accidents when practicing engine-off landings, and ensuring that some pilots don't get to practice real ones for years on end. The examiner is looking for a correct entry into autorotation and flare initiation height, but, thereafter, the process is a coordination exercise, and you should treat it as a rather fast transition to the hover— be careful not to check and level, or you can expect a large torque spike (in a 206, anyway), and looking at the torquemeter is not what you want to be doing at that late stage. 258 Operational Flying Tail Rotor Failure When the tail rotor fails, it will be in varying degrees of positive, neutral or negative pitch, depending on what you were doing at the time, so if you can remember what it was, you will have an idea of the state of the pedals. Unless it’s a drive failure, or you lose some of the components, the chances are that you won’t discover the problem until you change your power setting, as it’s very unlikely you’ll be flying along in the cruise, for instance, and find a pedal forcing itself completely over to one side, as simulated by instructors on test flights, unless you have a motoring servo or similar, in which case your problem is hydraulics and not the tail rotor, although the effect might be the same. More typically, you will be in a descent, climb, cruise or hover, with the pedals where they should be and won’t move when you want to do something else. When descending, for example, in the AS350, you will have more left pedal (more right in the Bell 206), both of which will aid the natural movement of the fuselage against the main rotors. The pedals would be in a neutral position if you were flying at medium to high speeds, and the power pedal would be forward in high-power situations, like hovering. In any case, the spread between the pedals is not likely to be more than a couple of inches either way, certainly in a 206 – try an autorotation properly trimmed out to see what I mean. You will notice the same in the hover. My point is that the situation may not be as bad as frequently painted. In fact, landing with a power pedal jammed forward is relatively easy, since the tail rotor is already in a position to accept high power settings (try also using a little left forward cyclic in a 206, and pivoting round the left forward skid), so you may be able to come in very slowly and even hover. If the pedals jam the other way (right in a 206), look for more speed because there will not be enough antitorque thrust available. A drive failure, on the other hand, or loss of a component, will cause an uncontrollable yaw, and maybe an engine overspeed, so the immediate reaction should be to enter autorotation, keeping up forward speed to maintain some directional control (which is difficult in the hover, so try to get one skid on the ground at least), if you have time. If you lose a component, the C of G may shift as well, although an aft one in general has been found to help with this situation. Pilots who have been there report that there is a significant increase in noise with a drive shaft failure, and that the centrifugal force in the spin is quite severe. Anyhow, an autorotation is certainly part of the game plan, and as speed is reduced towards touchdown, you will yaw progressively with less control available in proportion, so it may be worth trying to strike the ground with the tailwheel or skid first (if you’ve got one), which will help you to keep straight—according to the JetRanger flight manual, you should touchdown with the throttle fully closed, as you would if the failure occurs in the hover, to stop further yaw when pitch is pulled to cushion the landing. However, in some circumstances, such as the cruise, sudden Techie Stuff 259 movements like this may not be the best solution. If you can reduce the throttle and increase the collective, this would reduce the effect of the tail rotor at the same time as keeping the lift from the main rotors, as does |