RC Helicopter Safety Tips
1. Whenever you start your helicopter,
whether it’s a nitro, gasser or electric, always hold the blade grips
tightly. If your throttles not all the way down, or there’s a glitch,
your heli can spin out of control and cause serious damage.
2. Always stand a minimum of 5 – 10 feet away from your helicopter
and never fly towards yourself. Similarly, don’t fly around other
people or pets.
Blade tips can be spinning in excess of 250 miles per hour and a
carbon fiber rotor at those speeds can do some serious damage and even
cause death.
3. Always disconnect your battery / motor before trying to adjust anything on your heli.
4. If a blade separates during in flight, it can fly in excess of 100ft, so make sure your nuts / bolts are tight.
5. Perform a quick pre-flight check to make sure everything’s as
it’s supposed to be. Make sure nuts, bolts and screws are tight,
linkages aren’t loose, and your batteries are charged.
6. Don’t fly alone if it can be avoided and always have a cell phone or other means of communication available.
7. Don’t fly near trees, power lines or other obstacles.
8. Use common sense.
9. Avoid flying your RC heli in close proximity to another heli to avoid contact and a potentially fatal crash.
10. Don’t fly any non-electric RC heli indoors. The fumes are toxic and not good for your health.
11. Practice new moves on a simulator first for safety and your wallets sake.
12. When flying on windy days, always fly upwind from your RC
helicopter so a gust doesn’t blow it towards you. Better yet, don’t fly
when it’s windy out.
13. Don’t adjust the radio when your heli is powered. If you accidentally reverse the throttle bad things can happen.
14. Avoid flying your RC helicopter at head heights. If something
comes loose or there’s a glitch (electrical or human) you’re less
likely to loose an eye.
15. If you want to manually slow down the blades do so by adding
friction to the button and keep loose clothing and other bodily parts
away from them.
16. When walking towards your heli, make sure that the throttle hold switch is on, on your transmitter.
17. Only use hardened bolts for any bolt that has a load being placed on it. If possible, stick to stock parts.
18. Program failsafe settings into your receiver if possible.
19. If you’re new to RC helicopters, make sure that an experienced
heli pilot checks out your helicopter and radio setup prior to your
first flight.