Helicopter Altitude and Heading Considerations During a Hoist
Precision in helicopter positioning during a hoist is fundamental to mission success in Search and Rescue (SAR) operations. The aircraft’s heading, altitude, and approach to the hoisting area directly influence hoist effectiveness and efficiency. Optimal positioning is a deliberate compromise between competing factors, each weighted according to the environment, the dynamics of the hoist, and aircraft capabilities.
This post discusses key positioning elements SAR crews should integrate into their pre-hoist planning and hoist execution.
Altitude Trade-Offs
Altitude selection during a hoist requires balancing operational priorities. Higher hover altitudes generally improve obstacle clearance and offer increased safety margins in the event of a power loss, providing more fly-away options and greater separation from vessels, terrain, or survivors. Higher altitudes may also offer steadier, less disturbed air that enhances aircraft performance. Additionally, operating at altitude reduces the impact of rotor wash on survivors and vessels, and can place the aircraft above the milk bowl effect—a disorienting recirculation of mist, dust, or spray that impairs visibility of a horizon or midrange visual references and may decrease the stability of a hover, particularly under NVGs.
However, these benefits come with trade-offs. Increased altitude may lead to more pronounced cable swing, longer hoist times due to extended cable payout, and degrade near visual references for the pilot and hoist operator, especially in low-cue environments.
In contrast, lower hoist altitudes shorten hoist duration, improve visual cues in close proximity to the aircraft, and aid in cable management and device stability. But they increase rotor wash effects on deck or water surfaces, reduce obstacle clearance margins, and offer less time and space to continue flight in the event of a power loss. Additionally, mechanical turbulence caused by wind or rotor wash interacting with terrain or vessel structures can induce unpredictable drift and may challenge hover control at low altitudes.
Ultimately, hoist altitude should be selected by weighing these trade-offs and incorporating deliberate input from all crewmembers during the positioning phase.
Helicopter and Vessel Heading Trade-Offs
Helicopter and vessel headings during a hoist often reflect a compromise between aircraft stability, hover performance, visual references, and vessel ride characteristics. From the aircraft’s perspective, a heading into the wind is ideal—it enhances hover stability and performance. However, this orientation may conflict with the preferred heading of the vessel to minimize motion in seas, especially roll and pitch, which have a large impact on hoist precision and difficulty.
In dynamic seas, vessel heading should be optimized to reduce not only the magnitude of pitch and roll, but also the rate and acceleration of vessel movement. However, aircrews may need to sacrifice ideal ride quality to enable a hover heading that avoids obstacles such as masts, cranes, or rigging. In some scenarios, if feasible, the aircraft may accept a hover with a crosswind component to accommodate better vessel ride or obstacle clearance.
The relative heading between aircraft and vessel also affects the pilot’s sight picture. A hoist angle closer to 90 degrees between the helicopter’s heading and the vessel’s keel line allows more of the vessel’s length to be used as a hover reference. Conversely, a shallow (more parallel) angle limits the number of usable visual cues—particularly at higher hover altitudes or when hoisting to smaller vessels—making precise position-hold more challenging.
Final alignment should result from a calculated compromise, between necessary helicopter heading, vessel movement, and visual cues.
Ideal positioning during a hoist is an exercise in dynamic risk management. Optimization relies on astute judgment, clear communication, and shared situational awareness across the entire crew. Pre-hoist considerations and disciplined execution enable safe, effective hoisting under challenging SAR conditions.
