How do I actually hover in a Robinson helicopter

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 89

  • @lachangaustralia
    @lachangaustralia Год назад +8

    One of the best commentary on Hover! Thank you !!

  • @Truther00
    @Truther00 Год назад +9

    Your an excellent instructor 👍🏼

  • @spitfirekid1
    @spitfirekid1 10 месяцев назад +3

    Great video. Thanks for posting.
    Fixed wing pilot here. I had my first lesson in an R22 on 1/1/2024. Quite humbling but I had a few good moments. Had one solid and stable hover with cyclic, anti-torque, and collective after about 30 minutes of trying when I was looking in the distance. After putting it down and picking it up again I couldn’t get it back and was looking too close. After flying partial patterns with my instructor on with me I did a takeoff, flew a pattern and did the final approach down to about 20 feet and asked the instructor to take over. I still can’t get the smile off my face!

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  10 месяцев назад +1

      Great work, there nothing quite like the mental intensity it takes to begin with. As I think I alluded to in the video, I bet you were trying ‘too hard’ to hover the second time and overly focusing on it. If you try to distract your mind just a little and let your sub-conscious take over, you’ll find it will instinctively react faster that your conscious mind can, probably cause you to relax a bit and voila, you’ll be hovering again! Where did you just do your first flight?

    • @spitfirekid1
      @spitfirekid1 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@Anthelionhelicopters sorry for the late reply. The flight was at Clow airport in Bolingbrook, Illinois, United States. I went back for my second lesson last week, which was the first week of March, 2024. This time I managed to hover with all three controls in about 10 minutes. You are spot on with your analysis about concentrating too hard. If you’re thinking about it, you’re behind the aircraft. There’s no time to think, you just have to do. The instructor was on with me for my takeoff and as soon as we reached 65 kn and 1000 feet AGL he let me fly by myself. Before taking off we plotted a heading to take me in the general direction of my house. As soon as I saw the nearby water tower, I picked my landmark and flew the rest visually. I flew around my neighborhood twice and my coordination was surprisingly good. I then flew the reverse heading back to the airport and flew a couple patterns down to about 100 feet AGL before the instructor took over again for landing. I now I have 2.3 hours and my instructor claims that I’m doing as well as past students that had 10 to 15 hours of flight time. I may have a little talent, but I know he’s an outstanding instructor and that can make all the difference in the world.
      I’m going to start treatment for cancer next month so I’ll have to put flying on hold for a while but I’m going to try and get one more lesson in beforehand.
      You have a great channel! I know putting together these videos takes a lot of work and I just want to say thank you.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the feedback, it does sound like you are doing a fantastic job. I hope all goes well with your treatment and you're back up in the air soon.@@spitfirekid1

  • @Apothecary-qy8ed
    @Apothecary-qy8ed Месяц назад +1

    This illustrates perfectly that hovering is like so many other things (acting, playing an instrument, stand up comedy, etc.) in that it's all about relaxation. And, of course, relaxation comes when one is so practiced that they're no longer thinking... just doing.

  • @hassanlawal5579
    @hassanlawal5579 Год назад +5

    The best you tube video on how to hover. Excellent execution.... and very easy to understand explanations.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤. Absolutely brilliant instructing.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  Год назад

      Thank you so much, glad you could understand my accent! Hope your training is going well!

  • @bobbybabsonjr787
    @bobbybabsonjr787 Год назад +7

    Thumb on seat, with collective for precision.

  • @Rahhhhhnman
    @Rahhhhhnman Год назад +6

    I've never seen better instruction on this

  • @ceolter
    @ceolter 2 года назад +11

    This video was brilliant, thank you for making. I like the way you don't have a student in the helicopter, rather you are talking to the camera and explaining things clearly with clear voice and clear video of what you are doing. If you had a series of videos like this for more PPL sessions, that would be brilliant. I was attempting hover for the first time yesterday and after watching this video I'm eager to give it another shot with your help.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Niall, glad it was helpful. We will soon be releasing another one of me doing traffic patterns incorporating normal take off, correct scanning, radios and pattern altitudes along with a normal approach. I hope this will be useful. Where are you learning right now? Hovering is certainly very challenging to start with but its all part of the incredible journey!

  • @GeorgesCanadianVentures
    @GeorgesCanadianVentures Год назад +3

    Excellent - the hover 🚁 duration and commentary sets this lessons learnings above all! 👊🇨🇦

  • @BigJohnson1566
    @BigJohnson1566 Месяц назад +1

    Impressive skill set.

  • @namnamngomium
    @namnamngomium 2 года назад +8

    Useful lesson. Smooth control input is relaxing indeed.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад

      Thankyou 👍 glad you enjoyed it

    • @Novadean1
      @Novadean1 2 года назад +1

      Thank you Super explanation, appreciate.
      I'm from Germany, did my Training in Bell 47 was awesome ( Springfield,Mo. 1987 and 1990 ).

  • @shawqijabarin3101
    @shawqijabarin3101 Год назад +3

    VERY HELPFULL, THANKS CAPT.

  • @realadammason
    @realadammason 2 месяца назад +1

    Had my first lesson, I did pretty well on the hover thanks to you!

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 месяца назад

      @@realadammason great. Congratulations 🍾🎉 so happy I could help!

  • @SamuelTrepanier
    @SamuelTrepanier 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm just starting to fly now, 1h logged in and I was shocked how little feeling I got in the hovering exercise 😅 Nice tips in your video, I'm already looking forward to try them and just be patient as it will come by itself. Thanks for the content, very good 👍

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  10 месяцев назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed it, stick with it and it will all suddenly make sense!

  • @kathytripp1684
    @kathytripp1684 2 месяца назад +1

    I appreciate your technics.

  • @markschmidt3529
    @markschmidt3529 2 года назад +7

    Great video and very useful info, I admire your calm demeanor.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад

      thankyou, glad you found it helpful

    • @mikecppro
      @mikecppro Год назад

      I'm learning now and finally loosening my grip on the controls, lol I hope first time flyers don't think it's as easy as you are doing it. But your videos are excellent. Thank you

  • @ericrobert5296
    @ericrobert5296 Год назад +2

    Such a great instructor.

  • @michaelaylward635
    @michaelaylward635 2 года назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant

  • @mojutammutlane4194
    @mojutammutlane4194 2 года назад +4

    nice teachings, very important

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад

      Thank you for your feedback, I', glad you enjoyed it. Please check out our other training videos. We'll also be adding another one very soon.

  • @jasonshaw4820
    @jasonshaw4820 2 года назад +4

    Fantastic video,very clear.well done.

  • @juan2r
    @juan2r 2 года назад +3

    Thank you so much, great explanation!

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад

      Fantastic, glad you enjoyed it. Hope it helped with your training!

  • @jamesrahn8339
    @jamesrahn8339 Год назад +2

    Awesome!

  • @overbank56
    @overbank56 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for all this. Learned a few more things about flying a helicopter

  • @haiderk3246
    @haiderk3246 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for anther great video 🇨🇱

  • @agile006
    @agile006 2 года назад +4

    I know that PAd well. It took me about 15 hours to learn how to hover properly. But I was flying three days every month. So the first time was always like crawling back in the helicopter for the first time. Also, I had a lot of anxiety so that didn’t help LOL. Now if I can just get my landings down. As far as another video, would love to see a normal approach all the way to the set down. Safe flying…

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  2 года назад

      Thanks for the feedback, yeah its really tough flying infrequently when you're starting out. Where are you training now? Will have a look into doing the normal approach to a set-down for next time

  • @raulnava5874
    @raulnava5874 5 месяцев назад +1

    LO MEJOR QUE HE VISTO Y OIDO SOBRE APRENDER A SENTIR EL HELICOPTERO FLOTANDO Y SER PARTE DE SU SISTEMA , MUY BIEN

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  5 месяцев назад

      Thankyou , I'm glad it was useful! Good luck with your training.

  • @jaalaj6610
    @jaalaj6610 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for this! I had my first attempt at a hover in the R22 uesterday and it was exactly as you described. I was all over the place 😆 But this has put my mind at ease, thank you! 😊

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  5 месяцев назад

      Great, just stick with it, relax and it will suddenly all make sense when you least expect it!

  • @dannydaw59
    @dannydaw59 Год назад +1

    Nice camera angles. I'm going to attempt to fly one of these in a couple days.

  • @MarianneLindberg
    @MarianneLindberg Год назад +2

    Strong work
    I am Marianne from Sweden.
    I have tried this with an R44 Raven 1.
    I think I managed 3 seconds of hovering.
    The most difficult thing with an helikopter is not flying it, it is geting in an out. I am only 153 cm, but I am not going to let that stop me.
    Sorry for my bad english.
    Best Regards.
    Marianne

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  8 месяцев назад

      Hi Marianne, no apologies necessary, your English is actually very good! How has your training been progressing in Sweden? Yes, we have some smaller students too and they have the same challenges, especially when reaching the pedals!

    • @MarianneLindberg
      @MarianneLindberg 5 месяцев назад +1

      Sorry that I have taken so long to answer Your E-mail.
      The day before Yesterday 24/6 I took my fifth helicopterlessen in present time and my sixth altogether.
      My instructor (poor thing) says that my knowledge is improving for every lessen.
      Flying an helicopter is not The easiest thing to do.
      Hovering (don't mention it).
      Have a nice summer.
      Best regards
      Marianne, Sweden.
      ​@@Anthelionhelicopters

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  5 месяцев назад

      @@MarianneLindberg Good to hear that things are going well, good luck!

  • @PeterRowcliffe-e8p
    @PeterRowcliffe-e8p Год назад

    Very good training advice I will be watching more of your flight training videos, Peter,

  • @ElahiRahman-r8e
    @ElahiRahman-r8e Месяц назад

    While camping from one place to another by helicopter, cooking is definitely necessary but the question is whether gas cylinders can be carried in the helicopter.

  • @stephenward3468
    @stephenward3468 Год назад +1

    In my area we have quite a few R 22 as well as R44 and R66 chopper activity distinct sound

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  Год назад

      Yep 2 bladed systems are very distinct. Pretty fun listening to the difference between the 44 and 66 from a distance and seeing how soon you can spot the difference between the turbine vs piston engine!

  • @helicopterovirtual-msfs6254
    @helicopterovirtual-msfs6254 Год назад +1

    Perfeito

  • @MichealMJF
    @MichealMJF 5 месяцев назад +1

    Got 5 hours - 4 in an R-22 and the last hour in an R-44. Tried to hover the 22 without any success, I was looking like the Yogi Bear cartoon when he ended up upside down! Didn't even try in the 44 (instructor said, nothing near the ground) though I did a good straight & level using the instruments to turn and change altitude (had never used instruments before). You gave great instruction on how to maintain a hover, but I was hoping to see more of getting to the hover from the ground, being light on the skids and how much collective is needed to get there and how much left pedal is needed while ascending (and then adding a little right). When you reach altitude it looks like you have to back off on the collective to maintain it. Hovering a helicopter is like rubbing your stomach & patting your head while tap dancing!. I don't fly enough to really get a chance but just curious if you can elaborate on getting there from the ground - thanx.

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  5 месяцев назад

      There is another video on Pick-ups and Set-downs , which addresses that and should help you!

    • @MichealMJF
      @MichealMJF 5 месяцев назад

      @@Anthelionhelicopters Thanx for the reply, I'll probably never get to try it but I'll check it out just for fun!

  • @rasc-images
    @rasc-images 6 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video!

  • @monkeyboy8424
    @monkeyboy8424 Год назад +2

    Great video, thanks. You took your hand off the collective at the end. Presumably, the collective remains in the last position. Is this true of all helicopters?

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  Год назад +1

      Yes, on the majority of helicopters the inherent mechanical friction on the collective keeps it from moving. Other than that there is a manual friction that can be actuated when needed to maintain position. In fact only the R22, in my experience actually requires it’s friction to be added to maintain position as it’s basic mechanical friction is not enough usually and it tends to sink without your hand there. Hope that helps

    • @monkeyboy8424
      @monkeyboy8424 Год назад +1

      @@Anthelionhelicopters
      Thank you very much for the clear explanation. Safe flying.

  • @gamedevai
    @gamedevai Год назад +1

    I noticed that imost nstructors dont mention the benefits in practising at home using a flight simulator to gain experience and save money. 😮

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  Год назад +1

      The majority of learning when starting out is derived from the ‘feel’ of the aircraft through the various controls and learning to apply theory and instinct to successfully manipulate them. While simulators can provide some value in giving insight into what the controls do and how they interact with each other, ultimately new students need to spend far more time in the actual aircraft. That’s not to say that there is not value but I would be cautious about saying they save money. Perhaps in instrument ratings they could give you a good step up but for new pilots doing their private license they have limited value for the most part.

  • @DoddyOnee
    @DoddyOnee 11 месяцев назад

    Isn't hovering in a R44 2 putting too much stress on the engine components and other mechanical stuff? What I mean is this healthy for the helicopter if we are doing it too much?

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  11 месяцев назад +1

      All helicopters are designed with tolerance design limits. To get mechanical and structural fatigue you would have to be purposely operating outside of the performance limitations of the aircraft. What we are doing here is well within the normal operating range of the aircraft and does not place undue stress on any components.

    • @DoddyOnee
      @DoddyOnee 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Anthelionhelicopters thanks for the response!!

  • @dwightmcqueen5771
    @dwightmcqueen5771 8 месяцев назад

    Hope u all are still alive lol

    • @Anthelionhelicopters
      @Anthelionhelicopters  8 месяцев назад

      That's why good, comprehensive, and thorough training is important.