contactflying wrote:Time life means if you don't change everything that moves, other than engine, well before it wears out, it could kill you. Time life also means it continuously becomes young again, regardless of total hours on the magnesium frame. Also it has been in the Army inventory long enough that design flaws have been corrected.
Commercial helicopters, to be economically viable, have to be doing work that can't actually or legally be done with airplanes. Time life is expensive.
I need to know where you are coming from. Don’t understand exactly what we are talking about! My apologies.
Again, I was taught simplification of broad ideas doesn’t work in aviation. I worked under Marine One’s Chief Mechanic, who maintained it (each version) for several Presidents. Strarting with President Johnson. Retired E8 now. The more I turned wrenches with him, the more I understood, there was no back channel to success.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_OneWhen was the last time you approved a helo to airworthy condition? Or looked at a TCDS, Conditions for Continued Airworthiness, AD’s, SBs, or a service manual to a helo? Rotorwing airworthiness is not that simple.
I’m looking for something with two seats and is easy to maintain with one person. The Robisons may be that.