Hammer wrote:I've spent hundreds of hours as a passenger in certified helicopters and never felt uneasy, and they do come apart on occasion. When they do, the results to the people inside them are every bit as dramatic as to the fellow I watched being autopsied. But I'd never fly in an experimental helicopter. No doubt some of that is my ignorance and/or prejudice towards the medium, but a big part of the ridiculous expense of certified helicopters is the redundant safety measures. Removing those in the name of financial expediency is not something I'll stake my life on.
Others will, and that's fine. For them.
I flew (and before that maintained) Army OH-58 (A & C models) for 8 years. From my experience, there was not a single "redundant safety measure" on those Bell-206 variants. Weight is the enemy, and anything that adds weight better be adding practical benefit, or it isn't happening...
We all tend to gravitate towards what we know, and fear what we don't know. With an FAA-approved design / manufacturing process, you do gain a certain level of reliability (or at least repeatability). But I've seen both certified and homebuilt helicopters that were incredibly well maintained, and others that were incredibly poorly maintained. The type of FAA airworthiness certificate they were issued had little bearing on the "actual" airworthiness of the helicopter...
Caviat aviator...



