04-05-2013, 08:23 AM
One can talk theory but on Kauai a few years back several tourists drowned when a helicopter made a forced water landing.
I once asked the pilot who flies seaplane tours on Oahu whether he could land in the open ocean. I was fantasizing about spotting fish from the air, then landing and fishing for them. He said not really because of the roughness of the water. I had to admit that there had been times that I was trolling at 8 knots and getting my teeth loosened. On much of this coast the helicopter would immediately get rolled by the waves when it touched down. The occupants would then have to fight their way out of an upside down chopper, swim to shore, and climb cliffs while being repeatedly sucked off then violently reapplied to the rocks. Compare that to a successful auto-rotation on dry land, which you can walk away from.
I once asked the pilot who flies seaplane tours on Oahu whether he could land in the open ocean. I was fantasizing about spotting fish from the air, then landing and fishing for them. He said not really because of the roughness of the water. I had to admit that there had been times that I was trolling at 8 knots and getting my teeth loosened. On much of this coast the helicopter would immediately get rolled by the waves when it touched down. The occupants would then have to fight their way out of an upside down chopper, swim to shore, and climb cliffs while being repeatedly sucked off then violently reapplied to the rocks. Compare that to a successful auto-rotation on dry land, which you can walk away from.