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Vubiant
23 Nov 09 12:28
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Date Joined: 02 Aug 04
| Topic/replies: 7,360 | Blogger: Vubiant's blog
Just saw this again on the tv - people emerging from a helicopter duck their heads as if they perceive a danger that they could be decapitated by the whirling blades.
FFS - have they not noticed that the blades are set at a safe height precisely for the purpose of avoiding multiple decapitations ?
Did they not observe this on their way in to the helicopter ? Or have they reason to think that the blades might have been surreptitiously lowered by a maniacal pilot as they flew ?

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Replies: 49
By:
Shaky
When: 23 Nov 09 12:32
maybe they arent 100% sure that they didnt grow an extra 3ft during the flight.
By:
Vubiant
When: 23 Nov 09 12:35
Tbf - if the helicopter wheels punctured on landing , 8ft circus freaks might have reason to be a tad apprehensive.
By:
Doyler1987
When: 23 Nov 09 12:38
Natural reaction. Have you ever been on one?
By:
Desmond Orchard
When: 23 Nov 09 12:39
Not quite. The rotor blades are at the height that they are not to avoid decapitating anybody, but rather that the top of the craft is the best place for them. Early choppers did have the rotors underneath, but had an unfortunate habit of not flying.
Ducking on exit is a practice that dates back to the latter 19th century, when Abraham Lincoln famously had the top of his stovepipe hat sliced off on exiting the presidential chopper.
Since the late 1990s, stovepipes have gone out of fashion, however, 'Doing a Lincoln', is still consider the de rigeur method for exiting a helicopter.
By:
Ken Masters
When: 23 Nov 09 12:41
I suppose you could have hours of fun by not actually landing but hovering an inch above a trampoline.
By:
madsimon
When: 23 Nov 09 12:43
anyone remeber that woman who did a parachute charity jump straight into a helicopters propellers?
By:
Ken Masters
When: 23 Nov 09 12:46
Hazel Blears wasn't it?
By:
speedypro
When: 23 Nov 09 12:49
Sit forward 10" to get closer to the windscreen when it's foggy. Visibility might be 40m but that extra few inches all help??
By:
Joe Jordan
When: 23 Nov 09 12:49
Desmond Orchard 23 Nov 13:39
Early choppers did have the rotors underneath, but had an unfortunate habit of not flying.
====================
And chopping off the Passengers + Crews legs as they alighted !! :0 :0
By:
Vubiant
When: 23 Nov 09 12:51
Never been on one .
Yes , I accept it's a ''natural reaction'' and I would probably do the same myself -although now that I'm aware of it I would strive to emerge while standing avowedly erect at my full height ( a modest 5'9.)
However -I like to stand back and view the flux of human behaviour from a distance and see how many of our actions are silly , pointless or comical .

Briefly -another one . High handicap golfers buy top of the range golf balls which are not not inexpensive. The point is that they haven't the technique to get any of the benefit built in to the ball . Pointless waste of money .
It would be like an eighty year old woman buying a Ferrari racing car and driving it around at 40 mph.
The hackers no doubt do it for reasons of showing off but real golfers would be just laughing at them for their pretentiousness.
By:
niceone
When: 23 Nov 09 12:55
Gamble
By:
Shirl_the_girl
When: 23 Nov 09 12:58
Ducking on exit is a practice that dates back to the latter 19th century, when Abraham Lincoln famously had the top of his stovepipe hat sliced off on exiting the presidential chopper

Probably looking up to see what it was as helicopters were fairly rare in the 1800s
By:
Slippy Blue
When: 23 Nov 09 13:00
Start clapping when the plane lands, that really gets on my nerves.
By:
HRH The Lager Khan
When: 23 Nov 09 13:04
I think that is acceptable if a drunken David Blunkett is the pilot.
By:
aziraphale
When: 23 Nov 09 13:04
Look at their watch when you ask them where they're going on holiday

(© Peter Kay)
By:
slimfast
When: 23 Nov 09 17:09
Sit in a bath of baked beans. For charidee
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:14
you're supposed to duck your head when leaving a chopper, there was a reason for it but can't remember what

yea I don't get the clapping thing when aeroplanes land either?

does anyone clap me for doing my job? nuh they want to strangle me more like, even though what am doing is for the good of everybody
By:
Max Cady
When: 23 Nov 09 17:18
well, you definitely shouldn't jump out of a helicopter
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:26
wae a parachute let off right enough
By:
Tevez is God
When: 23 Nov 09 17:28
why do women who are feeling tearful wave their hand up and down in front of their face? always puzzled me, that one :|
By:
Big Charlie
When: 23 Nov 09 17:31
A lot of atheists tend to turn to religion if a plane enters a crash dive.
By:
Sir Denis Eton-Hogg
When: 23 Nov 09 17:35
surely people duck when alighting from a helicopter due to the wind from the rotor blades??
By:
spyker
When: 23 Nov 09 17:35
People who bid too much for things on ebay - been looking at mac minis which you can get for £449 'buy it now' - somebody bid £453 in an auction from the same seller. Only a few quid this time but seen plenty more where people pay more on ebay than you can get elsewhere - do a bit of research it aint always cheaper!
By:
Sir Denis Eton-Hogg
When: 23 Nov 09 17:37
does anyone else remember a story from years ago about a father who greeted his little son by throwing him up in the air and his head was chopped off by the blades!! is this an urban myth??
By:
martin_593114
When: 23 Nov 09 17:40
happened in a supermarket with a fan was on the national news!
By:
Sir Denis Eton-Hogg
When: 23 Nov 09 17:46
aah thanks for that, im glad there was a grain of truth in it and i wasnt going completely mad!
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:48
well thats weird because fans have a motor where if you put your finger to it, then the fan would stop suddenly
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:49
even though the motor can spin fast, but its extremely weak
By:
Tevez is God
When: 23 Nov 09 17:49
yeah, thank god it happened!
By:
Viva Las Vegas
When: 23 Nov 09 17:49
Sir Denis Eton-Hogg 23 Nov 18:37
does anyone else remember a story from years ago about a father who greeted his little son by throwing him up in the air and his head was chopped off by the blades!! is this an urban myth??

Sir Denis Eton-Hogg 23 Nov 18:46
aah thanks for that, im glad there was a grain of truth in it and i wasnt going completely mad!


FFS
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:51
probably an urban myth, because the chances of a father throwing a baby as high up as a supermarket ceiling its very low, also the fact that the fan is faulty is extremely low, and also the fact that fans have protection from people throwings at it making the chances even lower

so the chances of that happening is 0000001 to 1

but possible of course
By:
punterfleecer
When: 23 Nov 09 17:53
all in all, that story is a load of fυcking sh!t
By:
Vubiant
When: 23 Nov 09 18:01
Sheer fan-tasy I'd say .
By:
Visible Cords
When: 23 Nov 09 18:03
The actor Vic Morrow wasn't too keen on helicopters :(

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vic_Morrow
By:
doubleagent
When: 24 Nov 09 03:35
0000001 to 1.So you mean even money?
By:
positively4thsteet
When: 24 Nov 09 04:41
so-called good golfers taking the p.iss out of bad golfers for having a dream.

imo
By:
mittheimp
When: 24 Nov 09 05:41
i remember the story aboyt the father accidently killing his child by lifting him/her up into the helicopter blades. anbout 10 years ago is my guess. Alas!
By:
Joel
When: 24 Nov 09 05:47
Jack Newton
By:
The Snake
When: 24 Nov 09 07:50
Women that raise the right or left leg when they hug... why?!
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