@[email protected] to World NewsEnglish • 1 year agoJapan 'concerned' US continues to fly Ospreys despite grounding requestwww.reuters.comexternal-linkmessage-square25fedilinkarrow-up157arrow-down13
arrow-up154arrow-down1external-linkJapan 'concerned' US continues to fly Ospreys despite grounding requestwww.reuters.com@[email protected] to World NewsEnglish • 1 year agomessage-square25fedilink
minus-square@Poem_for_your_sproglinkEnglish2•1 year agoRead all the links, it’s nothing unique to the V-22. All rotorcraft suffer from the same condition. Pilots just have to be careful while descending with low forward velocity.
minus-square@derangerlinkEnglish2•edit-21 year agoI repeat - tiny heavily loaded rotors are the wrong tool for the job thus making it a bad design
Read all the links, it’s nothing unique to the V-22. All rotorcraft suffer from the same condition.
Pilots just have to be careful while descending with low forward velocity.
I repeat - tiny heavily loaded rotors are the wrong tool for the job thus making it a bad design