This is a real video of a helicopter in flight. I'm sure most readers will immediately pick up on how it stays aloft, but it initially caught me off guard. Click play, or go to the Link [metacafe] to see the video.
This is a real video of a helicopter in flight. I'm sure most readers will immediately pick up on how it stays aloft, but it initially caught me off guard. Click play, or go to the Link [metacafe] to see the video.
Rather, it's a helicopter slowly descending, with rotors stopped. The rotors are lift surfaces, after all.
IE, this is analagous to a 747 'flying' with its engines off. It can't, neither can this helo, they're just both in descents affected by control surfaces.
I do, literally have in front of me the Official Rotorcraft Fying Handbook. Although it's made 7 years ago, physics doesn't change. In section 11-10, it says, under Low Rotor RPM and Blade Stall, "...However, if you let rotor r.p.m. decay to the point where all the rotor blades stall, the results is usually FATAL, especially when it occurs at altitude. The danger of low r.p.m. and balde stall is greatest in SMALL helicopters..."
Now, there is something called "autogyro" or Autorotation, in which there is limited power to the rotors, but in which they KEEP SPINNING.
So, me being the RC heli geek that I am, have seen MANY crashes to gear slipping and shaft failures, I can safely say that there is now way this is a real video. Although it may be a camera trick. But what you explained is impossible, and I'm sure millions of high school physics text books agree with me.
P.S. I actually do own the Rotorcraft Flying Handbook... I don't know why... (FAA-H-8083-21)
For example, the frame rate might be 30fps, and the rotor might be spinning at 6 rotations per second. Since there are 5 blades, if the alignment were exact it would appear that the blades weren't moving.
On another note, that is an old, Soviet Hind helicopter. I've always had a thing for them because they looked like they were created by aliens.
"Stupid Russians, can't even afford spinning blades!"
I want that camera! =]
And boy, do I love those Mi24 Hinds, fav chopper all times!
And Shograt... man you made me laugh =]
It must be fake
The blades are standing still and there is no way that the frame rate of the camera would perfectly match a multiple of the rpm of the blades for suck a long time.
"I’m pretty sure Jesus is the co-pilot."
That makes no freaking sense whatsoever, and isn't even funny. Talk about delusional.
If the blades really weren't spinning the craft would drop from the sky like a stone immediately.
BTW, its not called an "autogyro" (which is a combination of aircraft / rotorcraft), its an autorotation, defined as "a method of keeping a pilot's hands and feet occupied as he plunges to his death."
v/r Gordon
It's a toy helicopter on a string.
And Gordon, wow, I checked out the history of the Kuriles, so are you Japanese?
My snot-nosed guess is that its a Czech Hind, judging by the paintjob and nose gun layout, which would make it a "Mil Mi-24V Hind-E" (Mi-35 for export.. want one?)
Couldnt find it's rotorspeed though...
did someone say Muybridge?
I still want that camera btw =]