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Helicopter Safety Review Report

Home Forums General General Board Helicopter Safety Review Report

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  • #6630
    barrowmafia
    Participant

    Hi Guys,
    I have attached the steering group’s report findings.

    Please Read.

    Cheers

    John

    hssg_qa__caa_review_162.pdf
     Filename: hssg_qa__caa_review_162.pdf

    Download

    #35065
    James McLauchlan
    Participant

    It appears this report has been aired by way of hoping to alleviate the concerns of the helicopter commute bound offshore workforce. The report seems not to address one of the main safety concerns, i.e. at the time of an crash landing onto the sea too many passengers are without direct access to an escape window or door. It seems that the proposed solution is to add even more safety equipment (Cat A or B re-breather equipment of which are only defined in draft format at present!) into the cabin in what is already a pretty tightly packed passenger compartment. No matter what further training is given adding more equipment in a space where their is already barely elbow room at best will only create more issues in time of emergency IMHO.

    In other words.. Re-breather equipment may give a person a few more breaths (only if there is sufficient time to deploy it and it stays functional on impact) but it will not get them any closer to an escape hatch/door.

    Clearly, the safest/quickest solution is to ensure that all passengers have direct access to an escape hatch/door at all times. This would very simple to implement instantly – as in tomorrow! – and would require no extra safety equipment nor training costs. A simple instruction to the helicopter operators could be in force from that moment onwards. Job done!
    However, this would cause a permanent 40% reduction in seating capacity thus incurring a financial penalty at a level that is seems somewhat unpalatable to those that cover the cost of such flights in the UKCS.

    #35066
    Sit Rep
    Participant

    Just had a thought, feel free to develop it!

    How about an escape pod?

    Fitted with EPIRBS, flotation, independent air supply, fire suppression (or re-route fuel and lube/hyraulic oil) and air braking/parachute, self-righting. All fitted within a carbon fibre/Kevlar enclosure.

    Any issue with airworthiness, the pilot issues an alert, presses the jettison button and away you go!

    At the moment we are at the mercy of the airframe/aircrew and I’m not blaming anybody but a testable/survivable module should help to reduce casualties and eliminate any fears.

    Think of the fun at your next Bosiet, dropping from a parachute tower into a basin of water!

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