Birdstrike
Atlantic City
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2002
- Posts
- 13,334
The post below is from the Just Helicopters BB. Interesting observation; this guy has had 100 birdstrikes in 45 years of flying. "Course being lower and slower in helos probably accounts for much of that. My worst was a turkey buzzard embedded on my upper wire strike cutter that just missed the windshield during training in Alabama. Anyone had any bad experiences? Which places are the worst?
"...Don't know of empirical data...just personal experience with bird strikes. Have seen birds come thru glass. Have seen them come thru plastic. I've had numerous birds come thru the plastic into the cockpit with me in both airplanes and helicopters. I've had them glance off my helmet and left feather oil smears on the side of it. I know of one incident, that I took pics of, when a pelican came thru the glass of a P2V out of NAS North Island during takeoff/departure. The CP ducked and the bird went thru the wall into the radio compartment and the crew had to kill it with a fire ax!
I've had pigeons, ducks, hawks, and pheasants come in for a visit. Saw what happened when a tern came into the cockpit of an R-22 near Palo Alto at night. Lucky there were no injuries to CFI or student. Sure was messy though. Got pics of that too. A duck came into the cockpit of my Hiller 12ET and when it got over the initial shock, began flying around in the cockpit. I was only about 5'agl at the time on a spray run. Was able to knock it down into the chin bubble where it stayed until I could land and patch the hole. Best guess is I've had probably 100 bird strikes in 45 years of flying. In my opinion, its more a matter of how/where the strike takes place regardless of glass or plastic. For my part, I'll take the helmet any day, or night!..."
"...Don't know of empirical data...just personal experience with bird strikes. Have seen birds come thru glass. Have seen them come thru plastic. I've had numerous birds come thru the plastic into the cockpit with me in both airplanes and helicopters. I've had them glance off my helmet and left feather oil smears on the side of it. I know of one incident, that I took pics of, when a pelican came thru the glass of a P2V out of NAS North Island during takeoff/departure. The CP ducked and the bird went thru the wall into the radio compartment and the crew had to kill it with a fire ax!
I've had pigeons, ducks, hawks, and pheasants come in for a visit. Saw what happened when a tern came into the cockpit of an R-22 near Palo Alto at night. Lucky there were no injuries to CFI or student. Sure was messy though. Got pics of that too. A duck came into the cockpit of my Hiller 12ET and when it got over the initial shock, began flying around in the cockpit. I was only about 5'agl at the time on a spray run. Was able to knock it down into the chin bubble where it stayed until I could land and patch the hole. Best guess is I've had probably 100 bird strikes in 45 years of flying. In my opinion, its more a matter of how/where the strike takes place regardless of glass or plastic. For my part, I'll take the helmet any day, or night!..."