• @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    Place the seats in sleds out the front, and attach them to reins on one of the missiles in the battery.

    It can’t be any more dangerous than being in a helicopter that’s decided today’s the day.

    • skulblaka
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      31 year ago

      Major Mindbleach made local headlines today as he drove a Santa Claus-esque sleigh attached to an AARGM directly over the heads of local combatants. Spectators say that instead of dropping gifts like his holiday counterpart, Mindbleach was dropping dook as he shit his pants repeatedly moving at speeds of Mach 2+ attached to a ballistic missile. The final status of Mindbleach is unknown. More information as the story develops.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Boeing adamantly insisted this not count toward any statistics on the reported dangers of their aircraft, as the system was working as intended at the time of the pilot’s exit. All questions about subsequent events should be directed to the manufacturer of the missile.

  • @[email protected]
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    291 year ago

    Oh boy I love it when death is multiple choice!

    1. Fiery explosion
    2. Cuisinart of Doom
    3. Squeezing your brain into hips
    4. 9mm of lead therapy
    5. Other: __________
  • Codex
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    181 year ago

    Who would win?

    Two human skulls 💀💀

    One twirly boi 🚁

  • @[email protected]
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    501 year ago

    Attach the ejector seat TO the helicopter blades so that they both eject and you get a cool propeller and can fly around and it can shoot lasers and stuff too.

  • Ekky
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    1001 year ago

    Just detach the blades. You can always re-attach them when you’ve landed.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Sus. I watched AirWolf, and Magnum P.I. AND I’ve studied Leonardo di Vinci. Helicopters are next-gen tech and they don’t crash.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    So basing off another comment. Have the Ejection seat tied to the rotor and shaft (not in a way that the chair spins. Duh)

    Then (as long as rotor hasn’t disintegrated) you can eject the seat with the rotor, thus minimizing filet chances… Whilst also floating to the ground softly like those whirly paper helicopter things you played with as a kid

    Boom. Parachute free ejection seat

    • @[email protected]
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      261 year ago

      Nah, just do it like they did in WW1; synchronize the ejection to the rotor blades so you fly through the gap, clean as a whistle.

      (Please don’t ask about our experiments with the earlier WW1 method of “Fuck it, just shoot the propeller sometimes, it’ll be fine”. Turns out that doesn’t work so great when you replace bullets with people.)

      • _haha_oh_wow_
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        31 year ago

        Didn’t they also put some sort of armoring on the propellers back then?

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          Some planes did, but early on they mostly just freeballed it. Turns out propellers are really big and heavy, and they can take a few bullets without breaking. Armour actually makes it more likely that fragments of bullets will fly back at the pilot.

          • _haha_oh_wow_
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            31 year ago

            Yeah, spall was my first thought when I read they just shot the propellers.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              It’s very rare that a bullet strikes the blade anyway. Bursts were short because ammo was very limited (twenty round strips were common in early biplanes), and the percentage of the space in front of the nose that is propeller is absolutely tiny compare to the percentage that is not propeller. To us its all a blur but to a bullet those blades are basically standing still.

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    I think i heard one time that helicopters can jettison the rotor so you dont get chopped up

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Several models of helicopters have ejectable blades, this article mentions a few, and has a diagram of the blade severing system.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 year ago

      Unfortunately, that won’t stop the blades from spinning, meaning the danger isn’t averted.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 year ago

        The Kamov does it.

        The individual rotor blades are separated from the center with an explosive charge and their centrifugal motion carries them laterally away from the vehicle as the seat rockets straight up.

        • skulblaka
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          41 year ago

          As a bonus, whoever was close enough to shoot you down is about to get at least one heavy steel javelin flung terrifyingly close to their direction at high speeds.

          I’m assuming here that impact with a long range SAM is probably something you’re not about to eject from.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            In cases like that I’d imagine you’d try and eject prior to being hit, though I don’t know enough to know how much warning time there is.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 year ago

          Mainly just copium for the pilots. Helicopters aren’t like airplanes where you have glide time and altitude to decide what to do after something bad happens. If you watch fixed winged ejections there’s usually about 30 seconds to a min after something goes wrong before the pilot decides to bail. Helicopters go from everything being fine, to a debris field in seconds.

          • @[email protected]M
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            91 year ago

            It’s more about altitude than the ability to glide. Helicopters can do what’s called Auto rotation, which means they actually can glide. If the blade seize up however, they can’t autorotate. Helicopters fly a lot lower than most airplanes though, so they can’t glide as far.

              • @[email protected]M
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                1 year ago

                Wow. I’d be nuts to fly one of those things. 6000 VVI sounds like suicide

                With the collective firmly held down on the bottom stop, things happen very fast. The helicopter is descending in a hurry, as in 4,000 – 6,000 feet per minute. Do the math, if you are at 1,000 feet and the descent rate is 4,000 feet, you have one quarter or a minute – 15 seconds – to find a place to land.

                • @[email protected]
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                  31 year ago

                  Yeah, helicopters are the apex predators of soldiers and rich people. Even if you pull off the perfect autorotation, the glide ratio is still only a maximum of like 3:1.

                  I think I remember reading a report somewhere that more people have been killed by practicing autorotation than have actually pulled it off in the wild.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          Now you have blades shooting away from the helicopter at a high speed which could kill someone.