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Go Vols! |
I can’t remember what one sounds like, but I think Border Patrol just flew over my house in one. Usually we hear the Coast Guard Dolphin which sounds quite unique too. This one sounded almost like someone gargling. | ||
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Member |
I think so...our National Guard will be doing their Thursday training flights shortly...and they take a sweet path over our place. ___________________________ "Those that can't laugh at themselves leave the job to others..." | |||
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Member |
If you've heard a Huey , then anything else does not feel like safety. Blackhawks are a little flatter on the thump. | |||
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Age Quod Agis |
Yes. They are loud. Really loud, deep and powerful. But fairly smooth due to 4 bladed rotor and 4 bladed tail rotor. If you are used to hearing "regular" police, news and med-evac helicopters, a 60 will sound like the second coming of Christ. "I vowed to myself to fight against evil more completely and more wholeheartedly than I ever did before. . . . That’s the only way to pay back part of that vast debt, to live up to and try to fulfill that tremendous obligation." Alfred Hornik, Sunday, December 2, 1945 to his family, on his continuing duty to others for surviving WW II. | |||
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Member |
Once you have heard it fly over close you will never forget it. CMSGT USAF (Retired) Chief of Police (Retired) | |||
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Lost |
I say yes. A few years back I was awakened to a powerful thrumming noise. Just a few hundred feet away was a pair of 'hawks hovering over the sloughway. I kept seeing them all over town for about a week afterwards, flying in and around SFO. | |||
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semi-reformed sailor |
We used to call theUSCG dolphin “whistling shitcan” Yeah the Blackhawk/Jayhawk has its own sound. They fly over Temple day and night because of ft hood "Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor.” Robert A. Heinlein “You may beat me, but you will never win.” sigmonkey-2020 “A single round of buckshot to the torso almost always results in an immediate change of behavior.” Chris Baker | |||
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Member |
It is one of those weird things how different helicopters sound from the inside vs on the ground. The inside has that high pitch whine of transmission/turbine, it is hard to hear the blades. __________________________ Keep your rotor in the green The aircraft in trim Your time over target short Make it count | |||
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Go Vols! |
We do have Chinooks fly over fairly often. I think they’re my favorite as far as copter sounds. | |||
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Legalize the Constitution |
One thing that I think is different about the 60 is that I don’t hear them from miles away, like you can with the UH-1 _______________________________________________________ despite them | |||
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Member |
Yeah the Hueys have a distinct sound amd the Blackhawks not aas much. I have flown on both and the Huey seems like you are flying in a beer can and feels like one when it's gusty out. The Blackhawks seem much more stable and are. The Blackhawks give you more of a confident feeling glying them than the "Wop Wop" of the Hueys. “Our actions may be impeded... But there can be no impeding our intentions or our dispositions. Because we can accommodate and adapt. The mind adapts and converts to its own purposes the obstacle to our acting. The impeding to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way.” ― Marcus Aurelius | |||
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E tan e epi tas |
ALL HELO’s make a distinct sound unto themselves. Blackhawks absolutely make a distinct sound and can be heard some distance off. "Guns are tools. The only weapon ever created was man." | |||
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Edge seeking Sharp blade! |
I was thinking old model Ruger Blackhawks and the three clicks. Yes they do. | |||
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Lost |
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Official Space Nerd |
We had some Hueys fly over the Air Force Academy this week. My brain noticed a difference from the usual blackhawks, but I didn't really notice they were Hueys until I actually saw them. They don't come by often, so I wasn't very familiar with them. The various choppers I've heard do have distinct sounds, and I imagine it wouldn't take one long to make the differences obvious. We have occasional flyovers by Blackhawks, Chinooks, Apaches, and Ospreys (VTOLS). Some even make occasional scheduled landings in the Academy Cadet area (I could actually go out and talk to the aircrew and drool over the M2s. . .). Now, the Ospreys REALLY sound different. Fear God and Dread Nought Admiral of the Fleet Sir Jacky Fisher | |||
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Member |
My first Army assignment was with the 101st at Fort Campbell. After a year or so, I had taught my wife to distinguish between Hueys, Kiowas, Blackhawks and Chinooks. Apaches weren't there just yet. _________________________________________________________________________ “A man’s treatment of a dog is no indication of the man’s nature, but his treatment of a cat is. It is the crucial test. None but the humane treat a cat well.” -- Mark Twain, 1902 | |||
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Raptorman |
I am directly under the flight path of the ANG and we get Blackhawks and those Osprey things beating our windows out several times a week headed up to Dahlonega. ____________________________ Eeewwww, don't touch it! Here, poke at it with this stick. | |||
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Political Cynic |
Yes they are very distinctive. I hear and see them just about every day coming in and out of DM | |||
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Low Speed, High Drag |
The H-60 is a pussycat, You should be on deck when a H-53 is landing I worked on 60's for 25 years, they do have an unique sound "Blessed is he who when facing his own demise, thinks only of his front sight.” Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem Montani Semper Liberi | |||
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Member |
Ranger School | |||
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