Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Why do helicopters fly over the Thames?
I work at Canary Wharf and I regulary see helicopter's flightpaths follow the Thames. This is understandable for tourist trips but not the military/commercial flights.
Suggestions are that they avoid Police and Air Ambulance helicopters which can go anywhere and that they have to stay a certain distance from buildings.
Thanks.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Actually... having flown into Heathrow over the years I've observed numerous single engine aircraft at that airport. I don't think they could get there without flying over densly populated areas... could be wrong, though. Here in the U.S. aviation rules are called Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR) in the U.K., they are called, I believe, Rules of the Air Regulations (RoA) and Air Navigation Orders. ANO #129 talks about flight over "congested areas" and its application to helicopters. It requires, as I suspected, adherence to a "specified area" when flying over central London. The specified area for rotorcraft in the vicinity of Heathrow is over the Thames.
While airplanes can glide quite a long distance in the case of an engine failure, helicopters do not have this luxury. So, for the safety of persons on the ground, they are limited to flight over the river for that event. If you could see them up close, you would notice rather squared of "boxes" on top of each landing skid (most don't have wheels). This is filled with a "float" that blows up in the case of a water landing so the machine (and its occupants) doesn't sink like the proverbial man hole cover...
While airplanes can glide quite a long distance in the case of an engine failure, helicopters do not have this luxury. So, for the safety of persons on the ground, they are limited to flight over the river for that event. If you could see them up close, you would notice rather squared of "boxes" on top of each landing skid (most don't have wheels). This is filled with a "float" that blows up in the case of a water landing so the machine (and its occupants) doesn't sink like the proverbial man hole cover...
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