Upon his retirement as a non-routine flight operations captain from a fractional operator in 2015, Dr. Veillette had accumulated more than 20,000 hours of flight experience in 240 types of aircraft—including balloons, rotorcraft, sea plans, glides, war birds, supersonic jets and large commercial transports. He is an adjunct professor at Utah Valley University. In June 2023, he won the prestigious Bill Gunston Technology Writer of the Year Award.
Sometimes MEL restrictions make sense, but sometimes they produce little-considered “gotchas.” Recently one reader flew a passenger trip into Napa, California. The captain’s windscreen heat was MEL’d and the operational notes instructed crews to keep it off and remain clear of freezing conditions.
An undistorted view of the outside world isn’t a luxury for pilots, it’s an absolute necessity for obvious reasons. Yet sections of the aircraft manual describing the proper windshield care are usually buried in an obscure chapter that doesn’t receive much attention in ground school training.
It was a grim undertaking as we three accident investigators with the U.S. Forest Service started combing through the twisted metal of a Bell-Soloy 47 strewn across the side of a steep mountain in Utah. The helicopter operator had been contracted by the Forest Service to disburse grass seed over hillsides that had been badly burned months earlier in the summer of 1996. To accomplish this, the operator used a specially designed seeding bucket suspended by cables beneath the turbine-powered helicopter.