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10/1/2003: PA National Guard in Afghanistan
http://cellar.org/2003/PAguard.jpg
xoxoxoBruce has really been finding 'em recently, and he sent along this huge image of a Pennsylvania Nat'l Guard helicopter offloading some troops on, as he puts it, "some god forsaken hill. Doesn't look like tourism is going to be a viable option there." In the past, I've reduced the size of things like this for our consumption. But as we have increasingly better connections and bigger monitors, why not just show the whole big thing? Except for the fact that it throws off the width of the table for text, but I can just put line breaks in by hand... it still breaks the blog view, but what're ya gonna do. |
That's both a great photograph *and* an impressive piece of helicopter piloting.
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I'm surprised..with the back end in the air like that the rotors must be in motion, but the shot froze them in place from what looks to be a pretty good distance.
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EZ that is the front of the helocopter in the air .
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EZ, I saw two of these helicopters land on the Ellipse in D.C. a week or two ago. (Dropping off some sort of mid level VIPs outside the rose garden fence.) I was surprised at how slowly the blades rotate. With the naked eye, I could follow the rotation of the blades. I think it's because they are so big, they can rotate a little more slowly. Normally the props on helicopter are a blur to me, but these weren't. So I'm not at all surprised that the camera froze these blades in this picture.
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Happy now?;) |
I'm just glad they're keeping Pennsylvania safe!
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What The!
Never seen anything like that before Bruce.:) |
Chinooks are awesome. Real workhorses, and surprisingly high performance to boot. And *loud*. They rumble the ground when they fly over at low altitude. I saw one flying over my neighborhood once carrying an A4 Skyhawk slung underneath it with giant web straps. I was impressed.
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They sling about 26,000 pounds of external load from the center cargo hook underneath. The rotor speed is 225 rpm and each rotor is 60 feet in diameter. The rotors spin in opposite directions and overlap so the total rotor coverage is 99 feet long.
They carry 44 troops in folding canvas seats or 24 liters. two engines rated at 7500 shaft horsepower maximum, each. They get a whopping 3 gallons per mile. They are particularly well suited for Afghanistan because they will handle the altitudes under load and as the picture shows they don't need to land. To unload just open the rear ramp then squat and poop troops. You might have seen the Army commercial where they set it down far enough in the water for a Zodiac rubber boat with half a dozen rangers to scoot right in the rear ramp. If they close it up it becomes a 27,000 pound boat. |
Can you imagine what the EPA might say about MilOps?
Let's remove the spent bullets from this firefight scene, men! And clean up that blood, it's a biohazard! |
Thanks for that info Bruce. 225 RPM is pretty slow but jives with what I saw recently. That works out to just 3.75 revolutions per second. I think figure skaters spin faster than that. Pretty amazing.
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225 RPM sounds pretty slow but on a 60 foot rotor the tip of the blade is traveling at 482 miles per hour. That be honkin'.:D
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Big Pictures
I like the big picture, but why not just have the old smaller pictures link to the biggest available picture? That way there'd sometimes be much bigger pics available and the current table sizes could stay the same.
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All US military helicopters are named for Indian tribes. If they were named for the sound they make they'd be Italian. wop wop wop wop wop
I'm sorry, I couldn't resist. I'm sorry, I really am, Godfather. :D |
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Was it a Chinook or the smaller Ch-46 (painted grey, Navy, Marines) on the ship? I have a clip of a marine pilot trying to land on a ship. She missed her mark and one rear wheel missed the deck. Went reverse half gainer into the ocean. :(
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it may have been a ch-46, all i know was that it had 2 rotors on top . I have seen the clip of the helo doing the half gainer in the sea , that would have SUCKED !!!! This helo hit squarley in the middle of the landing zone HARD!!!!! We all said "DAMN that must have hurt !!!" as we got back to our feet .
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This week I was talking to a Major with B company, 159th Air out of Georgia. He said in Afghanistan they would fly 14k to 16k feet and 140 knots at max gross weight (54k lbs). The Apache and Cobra pilots that were flying escort, bitched because they couldn't keep up.:D
Oh BTW, he also said they were told to get ready for Iraq, the first week of October '02. |
max gross weight (54k lbs).
They can carry 54k or total weight is 54k ???? |
Zip the MH-47E Chinook is 26,918 lbs empty and 54k max loaded.
The H-46 Sea Knight (Navy) is 15,537 lbs empty and 24,300 max loaded. |
Used to be if you went to the PanAm building in NY, they would pick you up from "their" roof. Now they'll pick you up from "your" roof.:)
Check out the log ladder to the roof. |
Hell those guys have all the conforts of home !!! A cabin in the mountins , a camp fire (??) , and they can catch a commuter flight from their roof :D :D
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"Those guys" are "suspects" being snatched up for interrogation. They had to hear them coming.;)
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The latest and most advanced Special Operations Chinook completed its first flight Friday in Philadelphia. After a series of system checks, the aircraft, an MH-47G, performed basic aerial maneuvers for more than an hour. The aircraft is one of three reconstituted Chinooks being upgraded from the U.S. Army CH-47D configuration to meet immediate customer needs. Currently, the U.S. Army's Special Operations Chinook inventory consists of 34 MH-47Ds and MH-47Es, but is expected to double in size over the next decade due to growing operational requirements. Boeing will deliver its first G-model Chinook in May and 36 more by 2007.
That's official blurb on the first flight of the G-Mod. It really doesn't look much different than the the D-mod shown at the beginning of this thread, except it's still in primer and the refueling boom. Even though it's the same size and just a little heavier, the carrying capcity is now 54,000 lbs which is almost twice the weight of the empty ship. Of course that hurts the fuel mileage which is about 3 gallons per mile. Yes, gallons per mile. :eek3: |
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