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Subject: The Kopp-Etchells Effect
When helicopters pass through dust storms, contact of the particles with the rotating blades produces either sparks or static electricity. The phenomenon has been observed during combat operations in Afghanistan. Michael Yon has documented the effect and has named it after two U.K. soldiers who died there, Koop and Etchells.
When operating in sandy environments, sand hitting the moving rotor blades erodes their surface. This can damage the rotors presenting serious and costly maintenance problems.
The abrasion strips on helicopter rotor blades are made of titanium, which is very hard, but not as hard as sand, so when a helicopter is flown near to the ground in desert environments, abrasion occurs and at night there is a visible corona or halo around the rotor blades caused by the sand hitting the titanium and causing it to spark and oxidize.
Source: http://www.michaelyon-online.com/




Some credits here: the breathtaking pictures were taken by http://www.michaelyon-online.com/
UK Heli log posted this last year http://heli.brixtonjunkies.com/2009/09/08/kopp-…
…and the German rc heli news site modellhelinews reposted the pics with permission by Michael Yon last September, too. http://www.modellhelinews.de/2009/09/der-kopp-e…