Polar Bear Cartridge

Helicopters never break down, no need to spread nasty rumours.

Yeah, right ;). If I'd have known that I would have told the pilot of our Enstrom to get lost when he asked us to bleed the air out of the rotor hydraulics so that we could fly ;).

There's something vaguely unsettling about pumping the rotors while your pilot taps the hydraulic reservoir with a little hammer prior to firing up the machine. :runaway:
 
Yeah, right ;). If I'd have known that I would have told the pilot of our Enstrom to get lost when he asked us to bleed the air out of the rotor hydraulics so that we could fly ;).

There's something vaguely unsettling about pumping the rotors while your pilot taps the hydraulic reservoir with a little hammer prior to firing up the machine. :runaway:

I'm of the admittedly ill-informed opinion the Enstroms are rare for a reason. I'm interested in trying most helicopters, that one hasn't made the list.
 
I'm of the admittedly ill-informed opinion the Enstroms are rare for a reason. I'm interested in trying most helicopters, that one hasn't made the list.

Very smart move! Then again, is there any piston helicopter that an intelligent person is happy to fly in, in places where even the smallest of screwups can be your last?
 
Very smart move! Then again, is there any piston helicopter that an intelligent person is happy to fly in, in places where even the smallest of screwups can be your last?

The R44II, probably the toughest little machine on the market. Good friend and coworker who's flown up to the 214 and KMAX says of it, "Only machine that hasn't tried to kill me." Was the only machine I know of with a decently long history that had no Airworthiness Directives on it to boot, now there's a blade one, but the new blades will phase that out. If you're ever riding in one, be afraid of the pilot, not the machine- they're aerial tractors and sound like it. :)
 
Nice bear! How did you have it mounted?

It is a wonderful bear at 10 1/2 feet and I had him life mounted front feet up on a block of ice looking out over his domain. One mistake I made was "mouth closed" when it should have been "open slack" not snarling or roaring but I figured out after the fact that polar bears very seldom close their mouths. They always seem to be open a couple of inches.
 
The R44II, probably the toughest little machine on the market. Good friend and coworker who's flown up to the 214 and KMAX says of it, "Only machine that hasn't tried to kill me." Was the only machine I know of with a decently long history that had no Airworthiness Directives on it to boot, now there's a blade one, but the new blades will phase that out. If you're ever riding in one, be afraid of the pilot, not the machine- they're aerial tractors and sound like it. :)

I've flown in Robinsons. We used them in Nicaragua. Never for serious field work. Mostly for touristy 5hit like flying people over the minesites during analyst tours.

At low altitude I like a 500. Old school, lots of grunt at low altitude, short rotors so your pads can be small and toe-ins are safer and the high skids means no unpleasant main rotor through the head incidents when working on uneven ground.
 
It is a wonderful bear at 10 1/2 feet and I had him life mounted front feet up on a block of ice looking out over his domain. One mistake I made was "mouth closed" when it should have been "open slack" not snarling or roaring but I figured out after the fact that polar bears very seldom close their mouths. They always seem to be open a couple of inches.

Sounds great, would it be possible for you to post a pic?
 
What a trophy room!

Neat stuff cbfmi

WL


Ah WL, it is in a total state of disarray right now with animals all over the floor and crap everywhere. I'm just in the process of packing them all up to move them south to my other residence where my new trophy room is now finished and ready for "the boys". But thanks regardless. It once was a nice trophy room but has been out grown for about 15 years now. My new one is 32 X 48 with a 22 foot open ceiling, should be enough room to last out my hunting days now.
 
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