I have to admit, I'm pretty enamored with helicopters, despite being slightly fearful of their complexity. Perhaps far down the road when flying my fire-breathing Bearhawk becomes blasé, I will get my rating. But when I think about that, I think: What would that look like-- life as a PPL heli pilot? Most of the helicopters I would be interested in owning (could afford) are 2-seat piston-powered machines. That means useful load is likely terrible. And where is the cargo area? It's the ultimate machine for backcountry access, but what can you take with you?
It takes money, a lot of it. Far more than flying fixed wing by my estimate, for both buy-in and operational costs. Most light helicopters available to consumers are piston-engine-powered, and in that space there exists no shortage of opinion from pilots, owners, and mechanics as to the reliability and safety of light helicopters for a few reasons:
1. Many utilize aviation piston engines, which while very reliable, do not compare to the reliability of turbine engines which enjoy ubiquity in the working helicopter market.
2. Rotor mass is much less, resulting in less rotational inertia, which I understand can make autorotations a little more tricky.
3. Various engineering methods for drivetrain of tail rotor, main rotor, etc.
4. The narrow CG envelope
There's a short list of certified light helicopters, and a longer list of EAB kits. The market just seems quite small, despite the fact that it's the flying car the future promised.
Let's look at certified birds:
1. The venerable Robinson R22 - Lycoming-powered, 2-seat classic trainer, max gross: 1,370 lbs
2. Schweizer S300 - Lycoming-powered, 2-seat classic trainer, max gross: 2,050 lbs
3. Guimbal Cabri S2 - Lycoming-powered, 2-seat, Fenestron tail, max gross: 1,543 lbs
4-seat options rise steeply in cost, so other than the R44, I'm not sure it's worth mentioning.
And the experimental homebuilt kits:
1. CH77 Ranabot - Rotax 912/914 powered, 2-seat, side-by-side
2. CH77 Kompress - Rotax 912/914 powered, 2-seat, tandem
3. Mosquito XE (single seat)
4. Safari(2-seat, Bell 47 lookalike)
5. Rotorway Exec and A600 (they manufacture their own proprietary engine)
And the experimental homebuilt kits that utilize a turbine:
1. Konner K1/K2 proprietary turbine engine, 2-seat, side-by-side
2. Eagle R&D Helicycle (single seat)
3. Mosquito XET (single seat)
And then there are models you encounter on Youtube that you can't even identify, like this coaxial rotor thing. My friend Kerry, who is a commercial helicopter pilot, insists those are deadly because they are nearly impossible to autorotate but I've found countering opinions that claim they can autorotate fine if the rotors are rigid and there is forward airspeed. Fascinating.
/end stream of bullshit, initialize inspiring photos >
Guimbal Cabri G2 (certified) - they teach in these out in Chehalem OR
Konner K1
Safari kit helicopters
Mosquito XET
Helicycle from Idaho



