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NASA Just Simulated The Crash Of A Marine Helicopter - And Studied The Results

Oct 7, 2014, 02:09 IST

On October 1, NASA researchers tried to simulate a helicopter crash.

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Researchers gathered at the space agency's Langley's Landing and Impact Research facility alongside representatives from the military, as well as national and international government agencies, to drop a former Marine helicopter 30 feet to the ground.

The NASA drop test featured a Boeing CH-46 fuselage outfitted with almost 40 cameras inside and out, along with an additional 350 data channels recording the movement of aircraft.

Inside the helicopter were a further 13 crash-test dummies equipped with monitoring instruments, along with two non-instrumented manikins. The purpose of the test - which lasted only three seconds but took more than three years to prepare - was to aid in developing helicopters that are safer and more efficient, and to closely study the physics and dynamics of a common crash scenario.

The October 1 test drop is the successor to a nearly identical CH-46 drop that occurred in August 2013. In the most recent drop, NASA added a specially developed energy-absorbing passenger floor, as well as new seats and restraints.

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NASA filmed the drop from a multitude of angles to document the test and to gather additional data. Here are some of the highlights.

The Boeing CH-46 was dropped from 30 feet in the air to a soil base.

Soil was purposefully chosen- the majority of helicopter crashes land on organic materials and not manmade surfaces such as concrete or asphalt.

To provide additional information beyond the sensors within the fuselage, the CH-46 was painted white with black polka dots. These dots allow cameras filming the event at 500 images-per-second to see exactly how the aircraft's structure responded to the crash.

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Thirteen of the 15 manikins within the aircraft were outfitted with sensors, recording how they fared during the helicopter's crash landing.

The full video is below.

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