Low-flying helicopters and power lines don’t mix well

A French rescue helicopter was involved in a training exercise when it had an unfortunate encounter with low-hanging power lines.

Very fortunately, no-one was hurt this time.

The helicopter was equipped with a wire-cutter, ringed in the photograph below (a screen-capture from the video above).

That may have helped prevent a crash, by deflecting or cutting the wires before they could get tangled in the rotor.  However, I imagine all on board had a brown-trouser moment!

Peter

7 comments

  1. I’m not sure on that. That looks more like a guillotine firing than a power line, and it occurs right at the head of the winch, with the cable falling immediately. Glad it was not higher, that could have left a mark…

  2. Part of the problem was the pilot was probably distracted by the winching/rescue situation. Was he planning on just dropping them on the beach for rescue speed?

    I think the training plan was wrong. Moving while winching adds potential safety problems, even without running into overhead lines. I would expect most rescue scenarios to not be right off the beach like that, so training for a sub-set of potential rescues simply adds hazards and complexity to what should be kept as simple and safe a format as fits the majority of expected situations.

  3. When the AH64 first came out, they had a power line accident. So the military asked for a cutter and made the contractor prove the wire cutter would work to prevent accidents.
    The system was installed. The helicopter suspended with a cable. Then the heli was allowed to swing into the power line. Keep in mind the cutter is razor sharp, and the heli weighs thousands of pounds. It will cut a exceedingly large diameter cable. Whether the cable is deflected towards the top or bottom cutters are high and low.
    That was a cool video.

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