• Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
Helicopter Flight Training Sponsors
 Search

Author: Admin




Dec
04
2017

Meet A Rotorcraft Pro - Dwaine Parker

Posted by Admin

RPMN: Tell me about your first flight. My dad had arranged a helicopter flight with a company operating out of the Tampa International Airport for my 18th birthday. This company would fly around to all of the large banks in the Tampa Bay area and pick up the bank notes and other paper transactions. Since there was no Internet in those days, the quickest way to get the “goods” to the airport for an overnight flight was by helicopter. The pilot would hover over the roof of the bank and the guy in the back, known as the “hooker,” would use a long pole to snatch the bag off the top of a flagpole. My fate with helicopters was sealed at the conclusion of that flight. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryCareer Development categoryHuman Interest



Nov
27
2017

From the Desk of the Editor - Three Hurricanes. Helicopters Respond. Lives Change.

Posted by Admin

In late August, the Rotorcraft Pro team was diligently working on the feature articles for this issue you are reading. Though every story involved helicopters, none had anything to do with hurricanes. Then storm history occurred on what seemed like a Biblical scale. I watched in shock from the safety of my Florida office the heart-breaking images coming out of the Houston, Texas, region in the wake of Hurricane Harvey. Upon dumping a record 51 inches of rain on the area, massive flooding left tens of thousands of citizens trapped and in need of rescue. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryHuman Interest categoryHelicopter Sectors



Nov
20
2017

Helicopters and Airports: Can We Land Anywhere?

Posted by Admin

I was talking to a local helicopter pilot that had recently obtained his private pilot helicopter certificate. We were chatting about his experience during his checkride. He said, “I was surprised that the DPE asked so many questions on airport signage when we’re able to land just about anywhere on the airport.” That comment caused me to to pause and consider: Is his perception of helicopter operations at airports accurate? [Read More...]



Categories: categoryTraining categoryRegulatory



Nov
14
2017

Becoming A Good Role Model - My Two Cents - Randy Mains

Posted by Admin

Mr. Philip Carey sent me the following email after reading my last column titled “Are You a Good Role Model?” in the July/Aug. issue of Rotorcraft Pro where I discussed ‘The GoPro Set’ purposefully flying into the clouds as if trying to prove something to themselves and others. I found Mr. Carey’s story compelling in that we can all learn from his experience. Here is what he wrote: Randy, your article struck a nerve in me because of an incident that nearly caused me to lose my life recently in an OH 58 flying from Orlando to Sarasota. Looking back, my actions were selfish and dangerous and could have deprived my 5-year-old of her daddy and my wife the tragic loss of her husband. I’d checked the TAF/METAR for Orlando, Lakeland Regional, and Sarasota and noted there was broken mist that seemed to be clearing and Sarasota was clear. After I took off it immediately became apparent the mist was thickening. I soon I found myself VFR on top. I remember being a little perturbed by the mist but I was comforted by the fact I had selected an altitude that kept me clear of obstacles and I was referencing the Garmin 696 regularly. [Read More...]



Categories: categorySafety



Nov
14
2017

Word on the Street - A safety message from NEMSPA - Primary Aircraft to Backup Aircraft

Posted by Admin

Considering the complexities of the air medical industry, completely removing all risk is a challenge. The road to progress, if not traveled in a deliberate manner, could lead to bad outcomes—this industry has seen far too many outcomes of that type. Although many factors can lead to bad outcomes in HAA, some unfortunate events can be attributed to the very thing that gives our industry its name—helicopters. They are labor-intensive machines that have regularly scheduled maintenance. However, from time to time well-maintained helicopters simply break. Pilots spend most of their time in one primary aircraft. When maintenance issues dictate, they swap to their backup aircraft. Herein lies the problem. [Read More...]



Categories: categorySafety categoryHelicopter Sectors



Nov
07
2017

Hurricane Irma Can't Keep Bayflite Down

Posted by Admin

As with everything else in the Sunshine State, Hurricane Irma temporarily benched west-central Florida’s Bayflite air ambulance service. It wasn’t just the unflyable hurricane-force winds that grounded Bayflite’s three H135s. Irma’s unpredictable storm path also kept this air medical service (AMS) and its parent company Air Methods guessing as they tried to prepare for the storm. “Well in advance of Irma’s landfall, Air Methods set up an emergency operations/control flight center in Fort Myers (also in west-central Florida) at its LeeFlight base,” said Matt Turner, Air Methods’ area manager for Central Florida. Air Methods used the LeeFlight AMS base to stage resources brought in from outside of Florida, for deployment in the state pre-storm and post-storm. A fixed-wing Pilatus aircraft was also brought in to help transport patients before Irma hit. “Irma then turned west and was headed directly at us, so our regional leadership quickly decided to change direction even as we were in the middle of implementing our plan,” said Turner. “So we evacuated all our local assets, because no-one knew whether Irma was going to go up the east coast, west coast, or right up the middle of the state.” [Read More...]

Bayflite_BackofAmbulance.jpg  Bayflite_BayfrontHospitalPad.jpg  Bayflite_Cockpit.jpg  Bayflite_CrewLunchTable.jpg  Bayflite_LandingZone.jpg  Bayflite_OverDowntown2.jpg  Bayflite_SceneCall_Enroute.jpg  Bayflite_SceneCall_PatienTransfer.jpg  Bayflite_SpecialtyTeam_IsoletteLoad.jpg  Bayflite_SpecialtyTeam_Overhead.jpg  Bayflite_StJosephs_HospitalPad.jpg 

Categories: categoryCompany Profiles



Oct
30
2017

Executive Watch - DAVID MAST: CEO, Precision Aviation Group

Posted by Admin

Upon graduation, the young man came very close to working in banking and finance. “The guy that ran NationsBank in Dallas said something to me that really changed my career path. I was very outspoken back then, and he told me that in the corporate world, 50 percent of the job is political. He told me that if I wasn’t prepared to play that game, then banking and finance wasn’t the place for me. That struck me and I realized my heart was in aviation.” After Mast realized his plainspoken, direct nature wasn’t tailored for bankers in Brooks Brothers suits uttering politically correct bromides, he returned to his first love and to the company that had helped him pay his college bills. AvGroup’s Ed Tomberlin had a job for the returning graduate that required neither political maneuvering nor silk over-the-calf banking hosiery. Nevertheless, Mast was expected to wear clothes. “He offered me $2,000 a year more than my banking job and $500 so I could buy some clothes,” Mast chuckles. “Ed was truly a brilliant man and entrepreneur. I was fortunate to learn the ins and outs of the industry under his tutelage.” Yes, Mast found employment in an industry that he loved and that fit him better than banking. Parts and components don’t care what you say or wear. Aviation is all about “mission accomplished.” [Read More...]



Categories: categoryCareer Development categoryHelicopter Sectors categoryCompany Profiles



Oct
23
2017

Bell 407 of the National Police: Hawks that Watch the Colombian Cities

Posted by Admin

Colombia historically has been a country full of security challenges. For more than five decades, its military and police forces were engaged in a bloody fight against armed terrorist groups and drug trafficking organizations that claimed more than 220,000 lives. These armed organizations such as FARC (in English, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia) unfortunately brought Colombia an international reputation for high levels of violence and cocaine production. The extended internal conflict in this South American country has led to improvements in military and police capacity and equipment. Colombian armed forces once lagging behind in technology and operational readiness are now strong, trained, and global benchmark institutions in the fight against terrorist organizations and illegal drug trafficking. The National Police of Colombia’s Police Air Service is an integral part of this transformation. Since its founding in 1958 with a few Cessna 206 aircraft to control crime, this unit attached to the Anti-Narcotics Directorate has boosted its capabilities and exponentially increased its aircraft fleet. Thanks to the help of the United States, the Police Air Service currently has in its inventory 80 helicopters and 60 airplanes that record a total of about 42,000 flight hours annually to support police operations in both rural and urban missions. [Read More...]

Copy-of-Colombia--PD-01.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-02.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-03.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-04-v.2.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-05.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-06.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-07.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-08.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-09.jpg  Copy-of-Colombia--PD-10.jpg 

Categories: categoryHelicopter Sectors categoryCompany Profiles categoryTraining



Oct
16
2017

Ten Lessons Learned From Hurricane Harvey

Posted by Admin

The following is a sidebar of Rotorcraft Pro's story on Hurricanes Hit - Helicopters Rise that outlines ten valuable lessons learned from the first responders that were on the ground in the days following Hurricane Harvey. 1. Think about roles and responsibilities in advance, and put safety first. “People can get into these disasters…and they start to take risks they wouldn’t take elsewhere,” Tom Baldwin, Air Evac Lifeteam safety manager said. Put an immediate stop to any of that. Debrief after every shift. [Read More...]



Categories: categorySafety categoryHelicopter Sectors



Oct
16
2017

Hurricanes Hit - Helicopters Rise

Posted by Admin

Facing a mind-boggling 122,000 victims who needed to be rescued across 182,000 acres of flooded neighborhoods, air rescues were especially critical to the massive effort to save lives when Hurricane Harvey struck the Gulf Coast Aug. 25 then stalled and dumped a record 51 inches of torrential rain in three days. The federal government deployed more than 21,000 staff to the hurricane area in late August, but that wasn’t enough. Alongside volunteers, private industry was essential to search & rescue as well as recovery efforts – especially air operations that could spot and rescue people in areas that were inaccessible from the ground. Everyone worked together under the same incident command system. Hundreds of helicopters performed a variety of simultaneous missions in the worst of conditions and somehow avoided accidents. Crews cut through roofs to hoist people stranded in attics, flew patients in critical condition out of flooded hospitals, and repaired major transmission lines. [Read More...]

A_Hurricane_Harvey_59_TickMarks.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_Air2_UtilityWork_2.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_AirEvacLifeteam_JointPatientLoad.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_AirMethodsCrew_Prepping.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_CHI_Aviation_PatientTransport.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_CoastGuard_CarriesBoy.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_CoastGuard_DropOff.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_CoastGuard_TeamWork.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_Haybales_Cattle.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_JointOperatoinsCenter.jpg  A_Hurricane_Harvey_USAirForce_NightShot.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_Air_Evac_Lifeteam_Support.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_AquaticRescueTeam_Cockpit.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_AquaticRescueTeam_HoistingDown.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_CoastGuard_Support.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_USCustoms_OnScene.jpg  Hurricane_Harvey_USNavy_Humanitarian_DogRescue.jpg 

Categories: categoryHuman Interest categoryHelicopter Sectors categoryCompany Profiles


1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 ... 59