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re: Aircraft down in GOM (Dec 29, 2022)

Posted on 1/3/23 at 10:08 am to
Posted by Sweep Da Leg
Member since Sep 2013
926 posts
Posted on 1/3/23 at 10:08 am to
LINK

All bodies have been recovered now but no identification except for the one passenger already known. Praying for all those along with their families and friends
Posted by bbarras85
Member since Jul 2021
2008 posts
Posted on 1/3/23 at 10:25 am to
quote:

Ever transferred from a rocking boat to a platform?


We build swing ropes and escape ropes. Crazy that they are still being used as safety conscious this industry is.
Posted by TigerinPurgatory
Picayune
Member since Dec 2014
471 posts
Posted on 1/3/23 at 10:36 am to
Posted by signalflow
Gretna, LA
Member since Dec 2018
9 posts
Posted on 1/4/23 at 1:25 pm to
eh. I have to fly with RLC into that same area tomorrow.
Posted by LSUBogeyMan
Member since Oct 2021
1181 posts
Posted on 1/4/23 at 1:27 pm to
quote:

have to fly with RLC into that same area tomorrow.


Probably super safe until they get relaxed again.
Posted by signalflow
Gretna, LA
Member since Dec 2018
9 posts
Posted on 1/4/23 at 2:31 pm to
ha kinda what i was thinking too!
Posted by Sweep Da Leg
Member since Sep 2013
926 posts
Posted on 1/6/23 at 12:45 pm to
Bump. Anymore news on survivors names or cause, etc?
Posted by redstick13
Lower Saxony
Member since Feb 2007
38640 posts
Posted on 1/6/23 at 1:13 pm to
There were no survivors.
Posted by Sweep Da Leg
Member since Sep 2013
926 posts
Posted on 1/6/23 at 6:13 pm to
Sorry didn’t mean to say survivors. Those that we lost
Posted by 3deadtrolls
lafayette
Member since Jan 2014
5756 posts
Posted on 1/14/23 at 11:56 pm to
Just saw this update:

- NTSB issue the preliminary report into the fatal accident involving Rotorcraft Leasing Company LLC (RLC) Bell 407, N595RL, that occurred on December 29, 2022, at the West Delta 106 (WD106) Offshore Installation, Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana:

On December 29, 2022, about 0834 central standard time, a Bell 407 helicopter, N595RL, was substantially damaged during takeoff from an offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico. The pilot and 3 passengers were fatally injured. The helicopter was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 135 flight.

On the morning of the accident, about 0748, the helicopter departed the Rotorcraft Leasing Company LLC base located at South Lafourche Leonard Miller Jr. Airport (GAO), Galliano, Louisiana, for a visual flight rules (VFR) passenger flight to the West Delta 106 (WD106) offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico. The direct flight path to WD106 was 51.6 nautical miles (nm) to the southeast of GAO. About 0825, the helicopter landed at WD106. Based on several, but not all passengers that disembarked, the pilot landed on a southeast heading. The 4 passengers exited the helicopter and proceeded below the helipad where they had a short discussion with the platform workers that were scheduled to return to the mainland on the helicopter. Then 3 platform workers boarded the helicopter before it departed.

There were no eyewitnesses or surveillance video of the helicopter’s departure from the WD106 helipad; however, there were several individuals who reported hearing the helicopter operating while on the helipad. These individuals noted that the helicopter’s engine continued to run after it landed on the helipad, and that they heard the engine noise increase for takeoff and then the sound of items hitting the platform. They immediately went outside and saw the helicopter fuselage floating inverted in the water with the tail boom separated but adjacent to the fuselage. The landing skids were separated from the fuselage and the emergency skid floats were inflated. Several individuals on the platform then boarded and launched the platform’s emergency escape capsule, but the helicopter fuselage sunk before they could render assistance to the four occupants who remained inside the fuselage.

The WD106 platform is equipped with a 24 ft by 24 ft helipad, as shown in Image 1. The helipad was constructed of recently repainted metal and was surrounded with a chain link perimeter skirt. Eight lights outlined the perimeter of the landing pad. The stairwell leading down from the helipad was recently painted red. The helipad was located on the southeast corner of the platform and about 100 ft above the water.

Examination of the helipad revealed the red paint of the stairwell was gouged and scratched near the southwest end, nearest the skirted area. The skirt near the stairwell was damaged with metal posts bent and broken and the skirt wire damaged and torn, as shown in Image 2a. One perimeter light, on the southwest corner separated from the helipad and was not recovered. An adjacent perimeter light, located at the center of the west edge of the helipad, was damaged and separated from the helipad, as shown in Image 3a. The light’s blue glass globe was shattered, and shards were found on the deck below the helipad. The remaining perimeter lights appeared undamaged. There were two areas of the landing pad surface with gouges in the paint. One area was located on the western area of the aiming circle and consisted of 3 linear gouges and 2 circular gouges into the paint. The other area consisted of 9 linear gouges in the paint.

Further examination of the platform revealed composite debris scattered throughout multiple decks below the helipad. Most of the scattered debris was consistent with the materials used to construct the main rotor blades. A six-foot-long portion of a main rotor blade came to rest on a metal handrail located on the deck below the helipad, as shown in Image 2b. The handrail exhibited a downward bend near the location of the main rotor blade. Three pieces of lead weight, consistent with blade weights, and multiple pieces of dark tinted acrylic, consistent with the cockpit overhead windows from the helicopter, were found on the same platform deck as the main rotor blade. The acrylic shards exhibited red paint transfer consistent in color with the red paint of the stairwell. The upper hydraulic servo cover, normally located above the cockpit, also exhibited the same red paint transfer, as shown in Image 3b. Fragments of tail rotor blades were found on the deck below the helipad. There was impact damage to the left landing skid-to-aft crosstube interface.

On January 2, 2023, the helicopter fuselage and separated tail boom were located submerged in the water near the platform, recovered, and transported to a secured facility in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The engine control unit (ECU) was removed from the helicopter and shipped to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Vehicle Recorder Laboratory for data extraction. The flight control servo actuators were removed from the helicopter and retained for further evaluation. The Appareo Vision 1000 cockpit image recorder installed in the helicopter was not found at the platform or in the recovered wreckage; however, there was extensive fuselage damage in the area that the cockpit image recorder is normally mounted.
Posted by supatigah
CEO of the Keith Hernandez Fan Club
Member since Mar 2004
87569 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:03 am to
so the rotors hit the pad and stairwell and flipped over the side
what terrible way to die

RIP gents
Posted by Obtuse1
Westside Bodymore Yo
Member since Sep 2016
25933 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:08 am to




Link to NTSB preliminary report in PDF form:

LINK
Posted by SEClint
New Orleans, LA/Portland, OR
Member since Nov 2006
48769 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:10 am to
quote:

frick helicopters
I was in one during a severe thunderstorm once
Posted by TutHillTiger
Mississippi Alabama
Member since Sep 2010
43700 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:14 am to
I did that trip plenty of times
Posted by TutHillTiger
Mississippi Alabama
Member since Sep 2010
43700 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:16 am to
That’s terrible basically guys looking forward to getting home, probably haven’t been home since around Christmas and are killed right off the damn rig. Prayers sent
Posted by Penrod
Member since Jan 2011
39980 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 5:03 am to
quote:

Watching Kobe Bryant, the LSU student and her billionaire dad, and a ton of police/government well-maintained helicopters fall from the sky doesn’t give me any confidence in them. It’s may be ridiculous but you’ll never catch me in one.

What about watching Dale Earnhardt die in a car? What Kobe was doing was at least as dangerous as racing cars. Scudding below low clouds, in hill country, is extremely dangerous, and no commercial operator would allow that.

We had another anecdote in this thread about a 24 year old pilot having to jerk the aircraft sideways to avoid a potential crash. Sounds bad. But how many times has that happened in a car? Two dozen for me? I’ve worked in the oilfields of the GOM, and taken hundreds of flights, with no safety instances.

Helicopters are extremely safe. They can land almost anywhere, even if they lose their engine(s). The one caveat I have is that the aircraft, like any aircraft, should have two pilots.
Posted by LSU7096
Houston
Member since May 2004
2503 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 9:36 am to
I worked in that field for 3 years did swing rope multiple times per day.

What is sketchy is when you have to drive your own boat to the platform & swingrope. I had to put the boat in reverse against the landing, then tie off to the platform.
Transfer work gear to boat landing, then kill the engine before I couldswing rope to the platform.

EAST BAY, 2000-2001
This post was edited on 1/18/23 at 4:41 pm
Posted by notiger1997
Metairie
Member since May 2009
58325 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 9:45 am to
The only thing that stands out to me with this latest update is that there were no cameras set up for the helipad. That seems like something all facilities would have
Posted by matsuflex
Louisiana
Member since Feb 2009
1524 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 11:19 am to
Usually only cameras on ships or some bigger deep water helipads. Tiny helipad like this would just be a hazard to hit your skid on. Which more than likely was the cause of this accident on the lights on the edge ( which serve no purpose, because it’s way too small for any nighttime rescue helicopter to land on).
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