Thursday 26 July 2007      


Magazine Home » Uncategorized

Helicopter Crash off Takatu Road

[26 July 2007] [209 views] [No Comment]

At approximately 11.00am this morning a helicopter crashed on a ridge just off Takatu Road, Tawharanui, Rodney District.

The pilot was the only occupant of the helicopter and has been very fortunate to sustain only minor injuries.

No other details are known at this stage on whether there has been a mechanical fault etc.

The Civil Aviation Authority has been notified and will be carrying out an investigation.




                       

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.



Sikorsky Firefly: An Electric Helicopter.

It’s at nearly gross weight before the pilot steps in and can only fly for 15 minutes, but that’s not the point. Sikorsky Innovations sees the Firefly as a testbed for the technologies that may make for a real electric helicopter.

Jetstar adds international destinations to AKL.

New direct flights to Melbourne and Cairns taking off – plus more Jetstar domestic services to Wellington. All in a days work for the budget airline flying in New Zealand.

Jetstar boost WLG-AKL competition.

Jetstar has announced a permanent addition to its flying schedule between Wellington and Auckland, making Jetstar’s trademark low fares available 24 times per week starting from 31 October 2010.

The caa.govt.nz website goes offline.

If you have been trying to load the CAA’s website this week you’d either been served an error message or have a “Not found” error or a “Connection error.”

‘Father of Boeing 747′ Wins Award.

Legendary Boeing aeronautical engineer Joe Sutter, credited with leading the development of the iconic 747 jetliner, won the inaugural Flightglobal Lifetime Achievement Award.

CT-156 Harvard II Training Aircraft.

Canada’s student pilots prove their mettle in the CT-156 Harvard II. This agile turboprop trainer is the aircraft of choice for the early stages of the NATO Flying Training in Canada (NFTC) program.




Advertisement