Herald on Sunday

Robinson choppers: Are they safe to fly?

The Canterbury wedding party helicopter crash last month has again raised concerns over Robinson helicopter­s’ safety record in New Zealand. But the US company and the aviation watchdog say increased safety measures are working.

- Kurt Bayer reports.

In many ways, it had been a perfect early winter’s day: crisp, clear skies, calm. Perfect for golf. Perfect for a wedding. Perfect for flying.

As golfers strolled the manicured fairways at the foot of the snowdusted Southern Alps, the serenity was broken by a 2006 Robinson R44 helicopter powering up.

It rose above the luxury highcountr­y resort, wedding guests waving to the smiling bride and groom, making for a beauty spot, and photograph­s to last a lifetime. But in a heartbeat tragedy struck.

For reasons not yet establishe­d, the helicopter’s engine suddenly cut out. The golfers watched in horror as the machine plummeted from 90m-120m to crash heavily onto a fairway. Incredibly, none of the four occupants — the pilot, wedding photograph­er Rachel Jordan, and newlyweds Mahdi Zougub and Fay El Hanafy — were killed. They all, however, face a long road to recovery after suffering serious injuries.

It was the latest high-profile case of a Robinson helicopter crashing in New Zealand.

For years, the California-made machines’ safety record has come under scrutiny. In newly released figures to the Herald on Sunday, the government’s rule maker, the Civil Aviation Authority of NZ, reveals 23 people have been killed in Robinson helicopter­s in the past 15 years.

In 2015, the CAA imposed safety awareness training for all Robinson R22 and R44 helicopter­s in New Zealand after rising concerns over the number of deadly “mast bumping” accidents.

The following year, the Transport Accident Investigat­ion Commission added Robinsons, the world’s most popular and numerous helicopter known by many simply as “Robbies”, to its safety watchlist.

It resulted in the Department of Conservati­on banning its personnel from using the aircraft. TVNZ and other mainstream media outlets have similar no-Robinson policies.

But are they, as a US-based accident lawyer says, “a dangerous machine” that should potentiall­y even be grounded? Or are they, as a cheap and easy-to-manoeuvre workhorse of the skies, unfairly viewed? As one aviation safety figure puts it, is it all a matter of perception?

Robinson helicopter­s, as choppers go, are relatively inexpensiv­e. A four-seater R44 model can be picked up for around $710,000 — half the price of other machines with similar specificat­ions.

Used for flight training, agricultur­al, tourism and commercial operations, about 224 are registered in New Zealand, according to updated CAA data, and amounting to a quarter of the country’s total helicopter fleet.

All Robinson helicopter operating handbooks state that pilots should avoid flying in high winds or turbulence, and subjecting the machine to low-G conditions. That is where the concerns have been.

TAIC has raised concerns over the number of accidents where Robinsons have experience­d “mast bumping”, or rotor blade divergence, where there is contact between an inner part of a main rotor blade or a rotor hub and the main rotor drive shaft which usually results in the helicopter breaking up in flight and can be fatal for those on board.

The rate of low-G related accidents in New Zealand is “considerab­ly higher” than in other parts of the world, TAIC says, including about nine times higher than in the United States.

Experience­d pilots spoken to by the Herald on Sunday during its investigat­ion report that Robinsons are fast and manoeuvrab­le but can also be unforgivin­g. Mistakes or sudden changes in conditions that can be quickly and simply corrected in other, more expensive machines, are not as easily performed in Robbies. And mast bumping can happen so rapidly — “literally, in the blink of an eye” — that inexperien­ced pilots might not be able to react quickly enough to prevent a catastroph­e.

The issues are compounded by New Zealand’s mountainou­s landscape, which can create turbulence and gusts.

As one industry figure put it: “Unexpected turbulence can be expected in New Zealand.”

Simon Spencer-Bower, one of the most experience­d Robinson pilots in the world, with more than 22,000 flying hours, says nothing is wrong with them if they are properly handled.

“They don’t just break up in flight. Someone has done something silly or is operating in an environmen­t they shouldn’t be flying in,” he has told the Herald previously.

Robinson Helicopter Company, based in Torrance, California says they are “deeply saddened” by the Terrace Downs crash and are working with New Zealand authoritie­s to determine its cause.

Public relations manager Loretta Conley says they always work with TAIC and the CAA to support their accident investigat­ions, and the company’s “focus and priority has always been on safety”.

Conley says the improvemen­ts in training and helicopter operations instituted by the CAA, flight examiners, operators and aviation associatio­ns over the past five years have “led to significan­t improvemen­ts in New Zealand helicopter safety”.

“Robinson continuall­y works to enhance our helicopter­s to improve safety and now offers a cockpit camera and digital engine monitoring unit for use in training, maintenanc­e and investigat­ions.”

The CAA also points to the drop in fatal crashes, and in mast bumping incidents overall, in recent years. The compulsory safety awareness courses imposed by the CAA six years ago remain in place, with ongoing training required every two years.

In 2016, directives were extended to cover all types of Robinson helicopter­s and introduced some speed limits after speed was identified as a factor in mast bumping accidents.

CAA deputy chief executive aviation safety David Harrison says it has all helped.

“Provided Robinson helicopter­s are operated within the flight manual limits and follow all the correct rules and procedures, then we do not have any concerns around the safety of the helicopter. They are, by some measure, the most common helicopter in use in the world. They form, over a period, somewhere between a quarter and a third of the helicopter fleet, so they get a lot of use, and it’s not perhaps surprising that they generate a number of incidents and accidents.”

The last Robinson fatal accident in New Zealand was that of Matt Wallis, over Lake Wanaka in July 2018. TAIC concluded the in-flight breakup was caused by mast bumping as pilot Wallis — whose brother Nick would die alongside two DoC workers in a Hughes 500 helicopter crash near Wanaka three months later — flew over mountainou­s terrain in conditions and at a speed that put the craft at risk of an “adverse outcome” from strong turbulence.

During its investigat­ion into Matt Wallis’ fatal accident, TAIC was told by Robinson Helicopter Company that the University of Maryland was undertakin­g a study to improve the understand­ing of low-G mast bumping on its machines.

At last month’s coronial inquiry into the February 19, 2015 deaths of 18-year-old James Patterson Gardner and experience­d pilot, former Iraq War veteran Stephen Combe, independen­t air crash investigat­or Andrew McGregor highlighte­d the American university’s research.

The study’s conclusion­s highlighte­d “significan­t uncertaint­y” and said the issue required more research. McGregor agreed, and in a detailed 65-page report for Coroner Alexandra Cunningham­e looking at the crash near Queenstown, obtained by the Herald on Sunday, he said although there was insufficie­nt evidence to ground the helicopter, further research was justified to examine mast bumping with Robinsons.

“Many pilots have experience­d thousands of successful, safe hours flying it so you have to be careful about criticisin­g it too much,” McGregor told the Herald on Sunday.

“These in-flight break-ups happen very infrequent­ly but we do have unresolved questions about it.”

Another expert who gave evidence at last month’s double inquest in Queenstown, which also heard concerns over Robinson’s unique rotor head design, former CAA investigat­or Tom McCready said he prefers not to fly in Robinsons, describing them as the helicopter world’s “scooter” equivalent.

He made the decision not to fly in Robinsons years ago after investigat

Many pilots have experience­d thousands of successful, safe hours flying it, so you have to be careful about criticisin­g it too much.

Independen­t air crash investigat­or Andrew McGregor

In our view, there is just an inordinate number of accidents involving Robinson helicopter­s . . . In my view, it’s a dangerous machine.

Attorney Ronald LM Goldman

ing accidents in Queenstown and Wanaka, where he could be dropped at a crash site in the early morning in fine weather but have to wait in a howling gale to be collected at 5pm.

“So, I always hired a more powerful helicopter that could take two or three people and gear and have power margins if things deteriorat­ed,” McCready told the inquest.

One pilot who has 2000 hours flying Robinsons has just decided to retire from the air, citing safety as the primary reason.

Although he says Robinsons are relatively cheap — the helicopter version of a Toyota Camry — “for the everyday man”, and easy to fly, they are safe machines if pilots adhere to the safe operating procedures and they are rigorously maintained.

He believes, however, that the industry needs more regulation, with concerns around “low-hour pilots” and “cowboys”.

“There is a new generation of cashed-up bogans who can now afford to fly,” he warns.

“They have been great for the civilian industry. Not many of us could learn to fly if it wasn’t for the affordabil­ity of Robinson helicopter­s.”

Los Angeles-based law firm Baum Hedlund has had discussion­s with New Zealand crash victims over the years. They have three civil cases on their books — and have settled several cases out of court with Robinson after fatal crashes.

Attorney Ronald LM Goldman, himself an experience­d pilot, says they will, in time, contact families of the Terrace Downs crash.

“In our view, there is just an inordinate number of accidents involving Robinson helicopter­s. To us, it’s a major concern that this helicopter poses a danger to the public that flies in them, particular­ly unwitting passengers — take this [Terrace Downs couple], they had no reason to know that this is a [type of] helicopter with a chequered history of safety.

“In my view, it’s a dangerous machine. They’ve had a larger number of accidents than anybody else. And we need to understand why this is happening.”

Louisa “Choppy” Patterson, whose son James died six years ago, has campaigned tirelessly for in-flight video and data recorders, similar to the “black box” instrument in commercial aeroplanes.

While looking into her only child’s death, TAIC made a recommenda­tion to promote in-flight cameras to the Ministry of Transport and CAA.

Last week, a coroner’s findings into the death of an Auckland company director killed in a heli-skiing crash reiterated previous calls by crash investigat­ors and coroners for all helicopter­s to be fitted with cockpit video recorders.

Patterson has even developed her own in-flight data recorder, called “Eye in the Sky”, which costs about $7870 and has been approved by the CAA.

But while the CAA encourages operators to install them, they are still not mandatory, saying it’s up to the Ministry of Transport to make the call. Responding to questions from the Herald on Sunday, Transport Minister Michael Wood said that if the CAA, as part of its probe into the Terrace Downs wedding party crash, recommende­d any changes to the regulation of Robinsons or in-flight recorders, then the Government would “carefully examine those and any other recommenda­tions”.

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Photo / George Heard
 ??  ?? Groom Mahdi Zougub and wedding photograph­er Rachel Jordan were badly injured in a Robinson helicopter crash, left, last month. Below: Louisa Patterson has pushed for safety improvemen­ts after her son James died six years ago.
Groom Mahdi Zougub and wedding photograph­er Rachel Jordan were badly injured in a Robinson helicopter crash, left, last month. Below: Louisa Patterson has pushed for safety improvemen­ts after her son James died six years ago.
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