Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/03/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hey Jim good on you! :-) If I'd any engine failures I'm sure I'd have remembered also. But my exciting moments always had the engine still going, well one of them sort of. ;-) Although in 1957 I did a full auto-rotation into the arctic ocean due to some stupid flying on the part of the pilot. We were in a small "dragon fly" bell of those days with door off as I'd been shooting, so we had lots of water come in. No injuries but bloody cold and wet! Not to mention scared near to death! :-( The machine had to be crane lifted onto the deck of the ice breaker, it never flew again until we returned south to Montreal where it under went over haul. Another chopper in the arctic, a Huey this time, had a fire in the heater and we had to put down on the ice in the middle of nowhere about 50 below zero. One might say a bad scene for a few moments. However, we managed to get the plane OK, then had to fly another hour without any heat.. COLD? Lord Jesus lad I thought I'd die before we arrived at the Decca station we were flying to. :-( By then a "rescue plane," so to speak, arrived so our helicopter was left for a week until repair parts came up on the next re-supply flight. The fun thing about the rescue plane, an Otter on skis, the heater had crapped out while it was enroute to where we were! We weren't happy campers flying for about two hours back to the main base camp A couple of other flying incidents along the way, but I always managed to walk away, so I suppose that's paramount in any "touch and stay!" ;-) ted