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HM-15 delivers aid to Sabang on the island of Sumatra following the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake / Tsunami. HM-15 aircraft ferry water from the offshore flotilla, 15 January in support of relief operation after the 2010 Haiti earthquake. HM-15 is the first U.S. Navy squadron to combine and consolidate training requirements between the USN and ...
A crash test of the Honda Ridgeline by the NHTSA Frontal small-overlap crash test of a 2012 Honda Odyssey 2018 Dodge Grand Caravan being struck by a mobile deformable barrier at 62 km/h 2016 Honda Fit striking a wall head-on at 56 km/h Driver-side oblique crash test of a 2017 Honda Ridgeline Jeep Liberty undergoing routine impact testing at Chrysler's Proving Grounds NHTSA research crash test ...
Also added was a new automatic flight control system. [7] The digital flight control system prevented the pilot from overstressing the aircraft. [6] YCH-53E testing showed that it could lift 17.8 short tons (16.1 t) (to a 50-foot (15 m) wheel height), and without an external load, could reach 170 knots (310 km/h) at a 56,000 lb (25 t) gross weight.
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HM-14 was established at NAS, Norfolk, on 12 May 1978 as the world's first fully self-contained Airborne Mine Countermeasures (AMCM) squadron. The squadron was outfitted with eight RH-53D aircraft from HM-12 and with Vietnam War legacy minesweeping equipment from AMCM Unit Alpha, including five Mk-105 sleds.
Data from EASA Type certificate and Airbus Helicopters website General characteristics Crew: 2 Capacity: 12-18 pax Length: 18.06 m (59 ft 3 in) rotors running 15.68 m (51 ft) nose to tail rotor disc Height: 5.34 m (17 ft 6 in) to tail rotor tip Empty weight: 4,603 kg (10,148 lb) Gross weight: 7,500 kg (16,535 lb) Max takeoff weight: 7,800 kg (17,196 lb) Fuel capacity: 2,710 L (720 US gal; 600 ...
Samuel W. Alderson (October 21, 1914 – February 11, 2005) was an American inventor best known for his development of the crash test dummy, a device that, during the last half of the twentieth century, was widely used by automobile manufacturers to test the reliability of automobile seat belts and other safety protocols.
At the pilot's direction, the system will bring the aircraft to a stable hover 50 feet (15 m) above a selected object. This is an important safety feature in darkness or inclement weather. Selected search patterns can be flown automatically, freeing the pilot and copilot to concentrate on sighting & searching the object.