Black Hawk rotor fails more than a mile high; pilots land safely

okikuma

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Going back eight years, a South Carolina National Guard UH-60 with a rotor blade failure was able to land safely.

Unfortunately there are some errors written within the article because of ineffective proof reading


Black Hawk rotor fails more than a mile high; pilots land safely
By Kyle Jahner
December 10. 2014

[RotaryForum.com] - Black Hawk rotor fails more than a mile high; pilots land safely


U.S. Soldiers from the S.C. Army National Guard work to prepare a UH-60 Black Hawk from Detachment 2, Company F, 1-171st General Support Aviation Battalion, S.C. Army National Guard, for sling-load movement to McEntire Joint National Guard Base, Eastover, S.C. Dec. 7, 2014. The Black Hawk made an emergency landing in an open field Dec. 3, 2014 due to a main rotor blade malfunction in Columbia, S.C. The Black Hawk was released by the Accident Review Board for recovery and was being transported via sling-load under a S.C. Army National Guard CH-47 Chinook helicopter from Detachment 1, B-Company, 2-238th General Support Aviation Battalion, ÊS.C. Army National Guard Army Aviation Support Facility in Greenville, S.C. The cause of the main rotor malfunction remains under investigation. (Photo by Sgt. Brian Calhoun/Released)

Three South Carolina National Guard helicopter pilots walked away from a harrowing Dec. 3 emergency landing in which their UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter reportedly plummeted 6,000 feet in less than a minute after a main rotor failure.

The two pilots (the third pilot was a passenger) managed to land the helicopter in a field not far from a water treatment plant, a school and residences near I-77 just a couple miles southeast of Columbia, South Carolina, not far from Fort Jackson.

Four days later a CH-47 Chinook helicopter sling-loaded the downed aircraft to McEntire Joint National Guard Base in Eastover, South Carolina.

An investigation into the cause of the malfunction is ongoing; because of that, Guard spokeswoman Maj. Cindi King said by policy the Guard could not name the three pilots or make them available for an interview. She said the investigation could take up to six months.

Lt. Col. Andrew Batten, the state aviation officer for the Guard, said "we anticipate it was a mechanical issue" that caused the malfunction.

He also said the pilots' training functioned when the rotor ceased to.

"The nature of the emergency required them to take emergency action steps," Batten told Army Times. "In certain emergencies they are required to respond without hesitation. The steps are kind of beaten into us in our training, from flight school to advanced training on particular aircraft."

After a loud bang during the instrumentation flight, a vibration began and quickly escalated; it turned out that the motor had died.

[RotaryForum.com] - Black Hawk rotor fails more than a mile high; pilots land safely


The Black Hawk was transported under a South Carolina Army National Guard CH-47 Chinook from Detachment 1, B-Company, 2-238th General Support Aviation Battalion, Army Aviation Support Facility in Greenville, South Carolina. Photo Credit: Sgt. Brian R. Calhoun

Batten said the pilots assigned to Detachment 2, F Company, 1-171st General Support Aviation Battalion quickly responded with autorotation. That allows the blades to spin with their existing momentum from the then-failed motor, and conserve that momentum by angling them so air flows through them rather than directly against them.

They targeted a cornfield as a landing site, and maneuvered to streamline the descent, then maximize air resistance, caused by remaining momentum of the blades, against the fall by pitching upward at the end.

Batten said putting the aircraft down in the open landing space helped spare injury, collateral damage and more damage to the aircraft. So did the soft, saturated muddy ground at the time of the incident.

[RotaryForum.com] - Black Hawk rotor fails more than a mile high; pilots land safely

Soldiers prepare the Black Hawk for transport out of a cornfield in South Carolina on Sunday, Dec. 7. The cause of the main rotor malfunction remains under investigation. Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Roberto Digiovine

After the landing, the Guard set to gathering evidence from the scene and preparing the Black Hawk for transport. The rotor blades — some shown in photos to be badly damaged — were taken off and transported separately. Gas was removed from the tank, some of it sampled as evidence.

The frame's structural integrity was tested to ensure it could make the trip dangling from the Chinook without falling apart.

Eventually the helicopter was sling loaded under the Chinook, which was accompanied by a UH-72 Lakota flown in from the National Guard Army Aviation Support Facility in Greenville, South Carolina.

King said traffic on the highway backed up for miles as people who had seen the crash stopped to see what was going on.

She also said the investigation could take up to six months.
 
That seems to have been a very fortunate ending for what must have been a rather hairy situation.

Wonder if they would qualify for a Broken Wings Award.
 
That seems to have been a very fortunate ending for what must have been a rather hairy situation.

Wonder if they would qualify for a Broken Wings Award.
I see what you did there 😂. That blade appears to have hair coming from it.
 
Crazy picture of those blades. Reminds me of a story I was told of a blade delamination on an R22 in Australia. Upon investigation they discovered that logbooks were being cooked and the rotor blades actually had something like 7500 hrs on them. 😧
 
The story says the reason for the emergency landing was that "the motor died". It mentions blade damage, but the suggestion seems to be that this occurred on landing (?). Has anyone seen the final report?
 
I've never seen a blade strike rip off the TRAILING edge of a blade, while leaving the leading edge undamaged and apparently not bent back at all.
 
Hello Tyler,

The author of the article was neither an aviator nor had experience within Army aviation. The report I read was delamination of the rotor blade.. Unfortunately, I cannot find a digital copy of that report on the net.

Wayne
 
Ya, a military guy would never say, "the motor died". "Experienced an engine failure" would be the go-to term. :)

Thinking of these sort of semantics/euphemisms, have you ever noticed that pilots are never "killed" in crashes?
"Fatally injured", yes, but never killed...
 
Even better (i.e. more confusing) terminology used by the lay observer would be "the motor stalled."

Raises more questions than it answers.
 
Yes - I recall hearing that an airplane "bellied up, did a nose dive, and then a tail spin". Or for those witnessing a normal glider off-field landing, "he crashed landed over there, so I guess the wind must have quit on him".
 
I've never seen a blade strike rip off the TRAILING edge of a blade, while leaving the leading edge undamaged and apparently not bent back at all.
The improper prepping, adhesive selection/mixing, improper/unfollowed bonding procedure, or expired shelf-life of raw materials.
 
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