Helicopter Aerodynamics without Equations - HAI Heli-Expo
Transcription
Helicopter Aerodynamics without Equations - HAI Heli-Expo
Convention preview Register now at hai.rotor.org/registernow on i t ec n on on. C . i n t o a i t ir a p v s o In Inn . March 2–5 ½ Orlando Exhibits Open March 3–5 Orange County Convention Center North & South Halls Contents Preliminary Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Special Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Getting to HAI HELI-EXPO . . . . . . . . . . 22 Professional Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 2015 Exhibitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 HAI HELI‑EXPO. Innovation. Connection. Inspiration. Innovation. HAI HELI-EXPO attendees can count on seeing the latest in aircraft, avionics, and vertical-lift technology and services from 700+ manufacturers, suppliers, and vendors in Orlando, March 2–5. As the world’s largest helicopter trade show, HAI HELI-EXPO has everything you need — all under one roof. Connection. HAI HELI-EXPO is the place where the global helicopter community comes to meet. Connect face-to-face with current vendors and meet new suppliers. Take part in 14 HAI committee meetings and other forums, workshops, and town halls, where the industry tackles current issues. Visit with old friends and make new ones. Inspiration. Looking to reignite your career? HAI HELI-EXPO attendees participate in industry committees and working groups, take HAI Professional Education courses, sit in on free expert-led safety seminars, earn continuing education credits, renew their inspection authorization certificates, attend the HAI Helicopter Industry Career Fair, and more. HAI HELI-EXPO® is a production of Helicopter Association International (HAI) and is a registered trademark of HAI. Exhibit Hall Essentials Orange County Convention Center North and South Halls 9899 International Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Tuesday, March 3 10:30 am – 5:00 pm Wednesday, March 4 10:00 am – 5:00 pm Thursday, March 5 10:00 am – 4:00 pm 1 million sq. ft. of exhibit and meeting space International press exposure Numerous sponsorship opportunities 20,000 potential buyers 700+ competitive exhibitors 60+ helicopters on display 100+ education opportunities 2 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Attendee Profile Top 10 Reasons to Attend Top 10 Reasons to Attend HAI HELI‑EXPO We know there are 100 reasons why you should attend HAI HELI‑EXPO, but here’s our Top 10: 1. CONNECT with 700+ industry suppliers on our comprehensive show floor. 2. DEVELOP strategic connections with 20,000 industry professionals from more than 90 countries. 3. BUILD partnerships with industry peers through 14 HAI committee meetings and other member events. Position C-Level Management – 22% 4. ANTICIPATE the issues that will shape the future of the industry by attending workshops, forums, and other special events. Sales/Marketing/ Consultant – 41% 5. EXPERIENCE the latest the industry has to offer through hands-on demonstrations, including 60+ helicopters on the show floor. Operations/Maintenance/ Administration – 36% 6. ADVANCE your professional goals by attending HAI Professional Education courses in safety, pilot skills, maintenance skills, management skills, and career development. 7. EARN continuing education credits, including FAA-accepted courses for flight instructor refresher, inspection authorization renewal, and the FAA Safety Team’s AMT and WINGS programs. 8. RENEW your inspection authorization certificate at the Manufacturer Technical Briefings and selected Professional Education courses. 9. MEET desirable employers or top-notch candidates at the HAI Helicopter Industry Career Fair. 10. WORK SMARTER by attending the HAI Rotor Safety Challenge, 52 expert-led safety sessions throughout the show, all free to attendees and exhibitors. Origin U.S. Attendees – 79% International Attendees – 21% Who Attends HAI HELI-EXPO? Helicopter manufacturers Helicopter pilots, owners, operators, and students Aviation maintenance technicians and students Distributors of products and services for the helicopter industry Training schools and education institutions U.S. and international government, regulatory, and military agencies YOU! (Remember, your competition will be there!) international representation Canada – 30% Latin America – 14% Europe – 34% Middle East – 2% Asia – 12% Australia/New Zealand/Oceania – 7% Africa – 1% Orlando n March 2–5 heliexpo.rotor.org 3 HAI HELI‑EXPO Preliminary Schedule Friday, February 27 – Saturday, February 28, 2015 8:00 am –5:00 pm Professional Education Courses* – see pp. 23–32 for details Sunday, March 1, 2015 8:00 am –5:00 pm Professional Education Courses* – see pp. 23–32 for details 10:00 am –12:00 pm Helicopter Tour Operators Committee Meeting 11:30 am –6:00 pm HFI Scholarship Fundraising Golf Tournament* (Falcon’s Fire Golf Club) – see p. 6 for details Monday, March 2, 2015 This preliminary schedule is subject to change. Reconfirm dates, times, and locations on site; complete information will appear in the HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 Program & Exhibit Guide and the HAI HELI-EXPO show app. Don’t Miss Out: Take the 2015 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge! It’s free for HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 attendees and exhibitors. All Challenge events are marked RSC in the schedule at right; learn more, beginning on page 8. *Separate registration/ticket required. 4 Convention Preview 8:00 am –10:00 am HAI Safety Symposium: NTSB – Managing Risk in Public Helicopter Operations (RSC) 8:00 am –5:00 pm Professional Education Courses* – see pp. 23–32 for details 9:00 am –4:00 pm Technical Committee Meeting 10:30 am –12:00 pm Safety Directors Forum: Your Helicopter Crashed – Now What? Conversations with Senior NTSB and FAA Managers (RSC) 1:00 pm –3:00 pm Tour Operators Program of Safety 2:00 pm –4:00 pm Electronic News Gathering Committee Meeting 7:00 pm –8:30 pm HAI HELI-EXPO Welcome Reception – see p. 6 for details Tuesday, March 3, 2015 8:00 am –10:00 am HAI Annual Membership Meeting & Breakfast – see facing page for details 8:30 am –4:30 pm HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Sessions (RSC) – see pp. 8–17 for details 9:30 am –12:30 pm CFI Mentoring Program 9:30 am –12:30 pm ICAO Annex 14 Update Workshop 9:30 am –12:30 pm Voting for the HAI Board of Directors (for Regular Members Only) 10:00 am –11:00 am Introduction to HAI Accreditation Program of Safety and Overview of IS-BAO 10:00 am –12:00 pm Offshore Forum 10:00 am –12:00 pm Safety Committee Town Hall (RSC) 10:00 am –5:00 pm Manufacturer Technical Briefings – see p. 7 for details 10:15 am –10:30 am HAI HELI‑EXPO Opening Ceremony 10:30 am –5:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open 10:30 am –5:00 pm Helicopter Industry Career Fair 12:30 pm –1:30 pm HFI Pilot Mentoring Panel 1:00 pm –2:30 pm Finance and Leasing Committee Roundtable 1:00 pm –3:00 pm Air Medical Committee Meeting 1:30 pm –2:30 pm HFI Industry Outreach to Students Panel 2:00 pm –5:00 pm Utilities, Patrol, and Construction Committee Meeting 2:30 pm –3:30 pm HFI Maintenance Tech Mentoring Program 5:00 pm –7:30 pm Twirly Birds Annual Meeting HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Wednesday, March 4, 2015 8:00 am –10:00 am Flight Operations Committee Meeting 8:00 am –10:00 am Government Service Committee Meeting 8:00 am –12:00 pm IHST Regional Partner Panel 8:30 am –10:00 am Finance and Leasing Committee Meeting 8:30 am –10:00 am Safety Committee Meeting 8:30 am –5:00 pm HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Sessions (RSC) – see pp. 8–17 for details 9:00 am –10:30 am General Aviation Association CEOs Speak on Critical Issues 9:00 am –5:00 pm Manufacturer Technical Briefings – see p. 7 for details 10:00 am –12:00 pm Aerial Firefighting and Natural Resources Committee Meeting 10:00 am –12:00 pm Business Management Workshop 10:00 am –5:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open 10:30 am –12:30 pm Fly Neighborly / Environmental Committee Meeting 10:30 am –12:30 pm Training Committee Meeting 1:00 pm –3:00 pm Annual DOI/USFS Interagency Fire Briefing 1:00 pm –3:00 pm Business Management Committee Meeting 1:00 pm –4:00 pm Heliport Committee Meeting 8:00 pm –10:30 pm Salute to Excellence Awards Dinner*– see p. 6 for details Preliminary Schedule General Sessions HAI Annual Membership Meeting & Breakfast Tue., Mar. 3 8:00 am – 10:00 am n Hear the latest HAI reports and meet this year’s slate of candidates for election to the HAI Board of Directors. Make an informed voting decision: plan on attending this year’s meeting! Remember, associations are only as strong as the degree to which their members participate. General Aviation Association CEOs Speak on Critical Issues Wed., Mar. 4 9:00 am – 10:30 am n Join HAI President and CEO Matt Zuccaro and officials from other general aviation associations to learn about current issues facing our industry and how we’re working to address them. Be Heard! FAA Town Hall Thu., Mar. 5 9:00 am – 10:30 am n Thursday, March 5, 2015 8:00 am –11:00 am Affiliate Symposium 8:00 am –12:00 pm Chief Pilot Roundtable 8:00 am –12:00 pm Fatigue Risk Management 8:00 am –4:00 pm Fundamentals of IS-BAO Workshop* 9:00 am –10:30 am Be Heard! FAA Town Hall 10:00 am –4:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open 1:00 pm –2:30 pm Huey Owners and Type Certificate Holders Forum Friday, March 6 – Saturday, March 7, 2015 8:00 am –4:00 pm IS-BAO Auditor Accreditation Workshop* (Friday only) 8:00 am –5:00 pm Professional Education Courses* – see pp. 23–32 for details *Separate registration/ticket required. “HAI HELI-EXPO: the best place to network in all aviation.” – Ryan Marquez, mechanic Enforcement Aviation Services Orlando n March 2–5 Join us for an informative session with the regulators who oversee U.S. helicopter operations. FAA senior management will update attendees on issues affecting the helicopter community, and participants will be able to address questions directly to FAA panel members. Unmanned Aircraft Systems: Challenge or Opportunity? NEW! Time and date TBD At this forum, HAI will examine the challenges and opportunities presented by the integration of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) into the National Airspace System. These aircraft will affect us in rotorcraft the most, as we share the same operating space. If you are interested in participating or just want to know more about UAS, please attend! heliexpo.rotor.org 5 Learn more at heliexpo.rotor.org Special Events HFI Scholarship Golf Tournament Sun., Mar. 1 11:30 am – 6:00 pm Falcon’s Fire Golf Club in Kissimmee, Florida n n Start your HAI HELI-EXPO off with a round of golf. All proceeds will fund scholarships for deserving pilots and maintenance tech students. For more information or to register online, visit rotor.org/golf. $230*§ Ticket *Includes 2 mulligans. Mulligans will not be sold on site. § Or forget the mulligans and pay $210! The best source for HAI HELI-EXPO information is our website, heliexpo.rotor.org: HAI HELI-EXPO Welcome Reception Mon., Mar. 2 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm Hilton Orlando Attendee interactive floor plan — plan which booths to visit Attendee FAQs Housing information Exhibitor lists Travel information, including discounts on car rentals Schedules Join the HAI Board of Directors as they Registration information welcome attendees And MUCH more … and exhibitors to HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015. Connect with friends and make new industry contacts — everyone is invited! Invitations will be included with registration materials. If you arrive in Orlando too late to pick up your registration materials, your business card will admit you to the party. Salute to Excellence Awards Dinner Wed., Mar. 4 8:00 pm – 10:30 pm Hilton Orlando n n Sponsored by HFI Online Silent Auction Bid 24/7 at www.biddingforgood.com/HFI Tues., Feb. 10, 12:00 pm EST Thur., Mar. 5, 4:00 pm EST n The HFI Online Silent Auction reaches thousands of potential aviation enthusiasts and bidders. Please visit www.biddingforgood.com/HFI beginning Feb. 10. Bidders will be able to register and bid 24/7 throughout the auction period. Proceeds will go to HFI’s Scholarship Program — an important program for growing the ranks of future pilots and mechanics — as well as to support HFI’s efforts to preserve the history of the helicopter industry. Auction Donors Needed! Please consider making a taxdeductible donation: both items and monetary donations are welcome. The auction is a terrific way to show your support for HFI and the industry’s future. Learn more at helicopterfoundation.org or email auction@rotor.org. 6 Convention Preview For more than 50 years, HAI has recognized the outstanding achievements and exceptional merits of individuals and organizations through the Salute to Excellence Awards. This annual awards dinner is the premier event of HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015. Tickets can be purchased online when you register for HAI HELI‑EXPO or on site at Attendee Registration. If you are attending with a corporate group or friends, consider reserving your own table of 10. (Note: attendance at the Salute to Excellence Awards dinner is not included in your HAI HELI‑EXPO registration fee.) Individual Tickets Early-Bird Rate (by Jan. 16) Regular Rate (after Jan. 16) HAI Member $ 85 $ 95 Nonmember $100 $110 Early-Bird Rate (by Jan. 16) Regular Rate (after Jan. 16) HAI Member $765 $855 Nonmember $900 $990 Table for 10 HAI Heli-Expo 2015 at HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 There’s so many different ways to continue your professional development at HAI HELI-EXPO, we couldn’t fit them all on one page! Professional Education Courses . . . . . . . . . . p. 23 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge . . . . . . . . . . p. 8 IA Renewal . . . see below Manufacturer Technical Briefings . . . . . . . at right Manufacturer Technical Briefings These one-hour briefings by helicopter airframe and engine manufacturers give you the flexibility to earn credit hours between other show commitments. The 2015 schedule is provided below. Using Credit Hours Earned toward Renewal You can obtain your IA certificate of completion at HAI HELI-EXPO in three simple steps: Renew Your Inspection Authorization Certificate HAI HELI-EXPO offers a variety of education activities accepted by the FAA for inspection authorization (IA) renewal credit. Professional Education Courses If you prefer to earn credit hours before the show begins, then this is the option for you. Seven of the 2015 Professional Education courses are accepted toward IA renewal: Pick up an IA renewal worksheet at the Education Registration desk (Level III South, near room S321) At the conclusion of an eligible session or course, have the Technical Committee monitor or course instructor sign your worksheet to verify attendance After you have earned at least 8 hours of credit, return your worksheet to the Education Registration desk to receive a certificate of completion to submit to the FAA. Manufacturer Technical Briefings Tuesday, March 3 Airbus Helicopters EC145 10:00 am Sikorsky S-76 Airbus Helicopters EC120 11:00 am Sikorsky S-61 Airbus Helicopters EC135 12:00 pm Sikorsky S-92 AS350/AS355/EC130 1:00 pm MD 900/902 Turbomeca Arriel 2:00 pm MD 520N/600N Turbomeca Arrius/Makila 3:00 pm MD 500E/500F HUMS and HFDM: Helicopter Health, Usage, and Flight-Data Monitoring (8 credit hrs.) Sikorsky S-300C/S-333 4:00 pm Rolls-Royce M250 Public Aircraft (4 credit hrs.) AgustaWestland AW139 9:00 am Honeywell T53 Record Keeping and Regulatory Compliance (8 credit hrs.) AgustaWestland AW109/119 10:00 am Honeywell LTS 101 P&W PT6C-67 11:00 am Enstrom TH28/480, F28/280 P&W PW200/PW210 12:00 pm Lycoming Piston Engines P&W PT6T/PT6B-37A 1:00 pm Scott’s Bell 47 Bell 204/205/212/412 2:00 pm Rolls-Royce RR300 Bell 206B/206L/407 3:00 pm Robinson R66 Bell 222/230/430/427/429 4:00 pm Robinson R22/R44 Dealing with the Government (4 credit hrs.) Helicopter Maintenance Management (8 credit hrs.) Human Factors in Aviation (8 credit hrs.) Regulations 101: Law for the Aviation Professional (8 credit hrs.) Technical Committee–Sponsored Course Fatigue Risk Management. Offered Thu., Mar. 5, 8 am – 12 pm, this free course is accepted for 4 credit hours toward IA renewal. No advance registration is required: your HAI HELI-EXPO attendee or exhibitor badge will admit you. Consult your HAI HELI-EXPO Program & Exhibit Guide on site for location. Orlando n March 2–5 Wednesday, March 4 heliexpo.rotor.org 7 SPECIAL EVENTS / EDUCATION Education FREE to All HAI HELI-EXPO Attendees and Exhibitors Learn more at rotor.org/takethechallenge HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Sessions In Orlando, HAI will present 52 safety education events for HAI HELI-EXPO attendees and exhibitors: No advance registration is necessary; your HAI HELI-EXPO attendee or exhibitor badge will admit you to any session Many events eligible for FAA WINGS and AMT credit; register at faasafety.gov to receive credit Take the Challenge: attend at least six Rotor Safety Challenge events and receive a certificate of recognition. NEW THIS YEAR! Based on attendee feedback, we’ve added some features to this year’s Challenge: Replay sessions are repeated, giving you more opportunities to catch the sessions you don’t want to miss. In-Depth sessions are longer than 60 minutes, allowing some subjects to be covered in more detail. Check out the complete Rotor Safety Challenge schedule on pages 16–17 or browse the session descriptions below and at rotor.org/takethechallenge. Accident Causation and Prevention Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n Anthropometric Flight Safety Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n Presenter: Lance Hofmann, director of environmental health and safety, EagleMed, LLC Presenter: Robert Joslin, PhD, chief scientific and technical advisor for flight-deck technology integration, FAA Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit To design, develop, and implement an effective accident prevention program, an organization must first understand what causes accidents. This session describes a model for accident causation that addresses organizational features and conditions that may cause an accident. Anthropometry, the study of human body measurements and proportions, is an important tool used in industrial design to optimize products. This session will explore the regulatory anthropometric requirements for helicopter design, valid anthropometric databases, and case studies involving anthropometric flight safety. n Aeronautical Knowledge vs. What Pilots Should Know Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n Autorotations: Reality Exposed Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm n n Presenter: Scott Burgess, assistant professor, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University – Worldwide Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit This session offers an in-depth look at aeronautical knowledge, decision making, and understanding of limitations. This presentation is a combination of applying practical knowledge beyond the Helicopter Flying Handbook and the research of the International Helicopter Safety Team Analysis Team to identify ways to reduce risk. Ideal for all experience levels, this presentation evolved from extensive research for The Reality of Aeronautical Knowledge: The Analysis of Accident Reports Against What Aircrews are Supposed to Know. 8 Convention Preview Presenters: Industry professionals and representatives from the FAA and National Transportation Safety Board Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit The results of a collaborative effort by OEMs, operators, and federal agencies to uncover unique aspects of this maneuver and the mistakes most often discovered in accident investigations, this in-depth session provides a unique look at autorotations. Leaders in the helicopter instruction and training industry will present tips, tools, and techniques that will prepare you for a safe emergency procedure and ultimately prevent you from becoming an accident statistic! HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n n Presenter: Jason Quisling, aviation compliance evaluator for Air Methods Corporation and member of the U.S. Helicopter Safety Team Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit It has been said that there are no new accidents. So why do we continue to make the same mistakes? This session will use case studies and video to answer that question. In the process, participants will be introduced to human factors and error management theory. Aviation Law: What Pilots Need to Know Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n n Business and Safety Case for HUMS Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n Presenter: Lance Antolick, aerospace engineer, and Ken Speaks, CEO, of RMCI, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Utilizing the presenters’ experience supporting the business-case analysis for the U.S. Army’s ConditionBased Maintenance Program, this session will present a generic business case for the use of health and usage monitoring systems (HUMS) as it applies to civil helicopters. This session will also address the safety benefits of HUMS implementation. Electronics and Software Programs for Maintenance Management Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n n Presenter: Jon Kettles, attorney, The Kettles Law Firm Presenter: Rick Bisson, Tdata Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT program credit Pilots are expected to know and follow the Federal Aviation Regulations but have likely never heard about other important legal rights and responsibilities necessary to protect themselves professionally and financially. Using case studies, this session will educate participants about standards of conduct for pilots, determination of fault following an accident or incident, investigation procedures of the FAA and National Transportation Safety Board, insurance coverage requirements, legal relationships between pilots and employers, and other relevant issues. Bring your questions to ask an aviation lawyer. This session will review how electronic research and tracking can save time and money, including ways to research airworthiness directives, type certificate data sheets, service bulletins, and other regulatory information for all types of aircraft. Learn how to simplify your maintenance tracking with aviation-specific software programs. Big Data: SMS + FDM = Safety Assurance Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n n Presenter: Stuart “Kipp” Lau, U.S. Helicopter Safety Team and FDM systems manager, SkyTrac Systems Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Safety management systems (SMS) are the most effective approach to manage risk in modern flight operations. Both SMS and flight data monitoring/flight operational quality assurance (FDM/FOQA) programs are gaining popularity and are being adopted by a growing number of helicopter operators around the globe. The greatest challenge is to devise an implementation plan that effectively integrates the two programs. Forced Landings Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm n Presenter: Michael Becker, chief pilot and chief flight instructor, Becker Helicopters Pilot Academy When it all goes quiet, the helicopter pilot needs to react immediately and automatically. Entering autorotation is only one part of conducting a precautionary or full forced landing procedure. This session will work through the various scenarios and offer discussion on managing a forced landing and surviving a crash. Fuel: The Lifeblood of Your Aircraft Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n n Presenter: Walter Chartrand, Aviation Training Academy Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session will present a comprehensive seminar on fuel specifications, proper receipt procedures, and field Orlando n March 2–5 heliexpo.rotor.org 9 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Aviation Human Factors: Protecting Us from Ourselves quality-control tests to ensure that on-specification, clean, and dry product is delivered to your aircraft. Attendees will also learn about fuel specifications from ASTM International, along with standard industry practices for the receiving of aviation fuels. Pilots, mechanics, and facility operations personnel will come away with an understanding of the safety issues when working with and around aviation fuels. Helicopter HUMS Case Studies Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n Presenter: Murdock Welborn, field service engineer, Honeywell Aerospace Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT program credit Presenter: Michael Becker, chief pilot and chief flight instructor, Becker Helicopters Pilot Academy This session will present information on the history, implementation, and value of health and usage monitoring systems (HUMS), including analysis and findings of real case studies, the benefits of flight data monitoring on decision making, the impact of human factors, and the business case for improved maintenance and safety. Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Help! I’m the New Safety Officer The Full-Touchdown Auto Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n This session will cover the techniques and essentials for a full-touchdown instruction method. Get the Most Out of Your Training Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm n Presenter: Members of the HAI Training Committee Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session answers your questions on training for pilots, mechanics, and support personnel. Starting from what to expect from your flight or maintenance school through how to prepare for a job interview, the HAI Training committee will discuss the procedures and options to guide you on your career path and get the most out of your training. Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n n Presenter: Lance Hofmann, director of environmental health and safety, EagleMed, LLC Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit New safety officers are responsible for all risk management, safety management, and quality management programs throughout their company. But often, these individuals receive few tools to set up themselves — and the organization — for success. This session will help to place items and education in the hands of new and upcoming safety personnel. HFDM, Analysis, and ROI Outcomes Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n The Hazardous Attitudes Lurking within You Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n n Presenter: Daniel A. Doepker, chief instructor, Hillsboro Aviation and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Attendees will review the five hazardous attitudes identified by the FAA as negatively affecting pilot decision making: antiauthority, impulsivity, invulnerability, macho, and resignation. We’ll look at not only the rote definitions but also their practical application and manifestation in our daily operations. We will evaluate incident reports and real-life stories to find hazardous attitudes, which will be dissected to show that hazardous attitudes exist in us all and are trying hard to get out. The session will wrap up with a discussion on how to recognize and prevent these attitudes and the accidents they cause. Two chances to view 10 Convention Preview 1.5–2 hours long Presenter: Kim Bagnall, SkyTrac Systems Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session will focus on how your helicopter flight data monitoring (HFDM) program and data analysis will provide a return on investment (ROI) to your operation. Examples include increasing safety, lowering fuel costs, saving on maintenance costs, and improving the overall culture. Hope Is Not a Strategy Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n n Presenter: Bruce Webb, chief pilot, Airbus Helicopters, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit An examination of how humans (pilots) make decisions and the process by which we evaluate our decisions to determine the “goodness” of the decision. We will HAI Heli-Expo 2015 IIMC: Real Threat, Lethal Consequences, Realistic Interventions Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n n Presenter: Bryan Smith, Airborne Law Enforcement Association and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team; Rich Weber, chief pilot, Jacksonville (Fla.) Sheriff ’s Office Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Inadvertent flight into instrument meteorological conditions (IIMC) continues to be one of the leading lethal threats to helicopter pilots and their crew and passengers. Despite advances in aircraft and avionics, we continue to suffer IIMC-related fatalities year after year. This session will look at the unique aspects of IIMC and why it continues to claim so many lives. IIMC survival methods based on a safety management system approach, including training, crew resource management, policy suggestions, and survival techniques, will be discussed. Integration of UAS Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n Presenter: Charles (Cliff ) Johnson, general engineer and UAS task lead, FAA Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Learn about the latest developments in the integration of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) into the National Airspace System (NAS). The FAA continues to move aggressively toward the safe, timely, and efficient integration of UAS into the NAS, keeping in mind that safety is the FAA’s sole mission and authority. As part of the integration effort, the agency has been working with government partners to streamline the certificates of authorization procedures. International Helipad Database for Helicopters Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n n Presenter: Jonathan Godfrey, RN, CMTE, Children’s National Health System Hospital helipad information is cataloged by every operator, but it has rarely been shared, until now. This platform goes a step beyond only sharing by also storing Orlando n March 2–5 information like satellite maps, radio frequencies, weather, phone contacts, and more. In the future, this application may be useful for additional sectors, such as off-shore, international, and disaster relief. HAI Rotor Safety Challenge discuss: brain function and cognition; how the “frame” in which we receive information impacts our use of the information; rational versus irrational decision-making processes (emotional brain versus rational brain); and problem analysis versus decision making. Introduction to Just Culture Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n Presenter: Dudley Smith, associate executive director, Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This presentation will look at three human behaviors: simple errors, at-risk behavior, and recklessness, and discuss how we should deal with people in a fair and just way so that we may learn from the mistakes made. The session will also look at the duties we owe to each other and those owed to us as employees. iPad Takes Flight! EFB Challenge Edition Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n n Presenter: Charles Schneider, MyGoFlight Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit You have dumped the paper and now use your iPad. But have you made the transition from paper to paperless pay off? What can you do now that goes beyond paper chart replacement? What does it look like when you have mastered the use of the iPad in flight? We’ll look at the gotchas, tips, and tricks in the effective use of the iPad by pilots. Just Culture: Not as Simple as It May Seem Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n n Presenter: Sunshine McCarthy, director of training, Baldwin Aviation, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit To truly create and live a just culture, it’s essential for leaders to understand when an event is simply human error, unintentional at-risk behavior, or intentional reckless behavior. You may find that reckless behavior is very rarely present. In aviation law enforcement, our biggest area of concern is at-risk behavior: where the behavioral choice increases the risk, and where risk is not recognized or is mistakenly believed to be justified. The ability to overlook the outcome, no matter how undesirable, and focus only on the behavior is critical when applying just culture in the workplace. heliexpo.rotor.org 11 Just Culture: Responsibility vs. Accountability Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n Presenter: Katherine Hilst, Safety Design Consulting, LLC Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit The term just culture is often mentioned in the world of helicopter safety, but what does it mean? Creating a just culture requires time and effort. This session covers the basics of just culture and the steps in its development. Discussion will include defining accountability versus responsibility, as well as the organizational balancing act involved in developing and maintaining a just culture. Limited Power and Confined Areas Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n Presenter: Michael Becker, chief pilot and chief flight instructor, Becker Helicopters Pilot Academy Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Get the most out of your helicopter and understand how to manage its power and limitations during flight into and out of confined areas. We will cover how to develop a system for measuring available power and what the helicopter and the pilot can do with that power. Assessing unprepared confined areas and making subsequent approaches and departures will also be discussed. Learn how to make good piloting decisions for flights in these conditions, based on the information available at the time. Max Impact: A Story of Survival Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n n Presenter: Jonathan Godfrey, RN, CMTE, Children’s National Health System Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit A helicopter air ambulance crashed into the Potomac River Jan. 10, 2005, leaving two fatalities and a sole survivor. The session will present the events of the flight, lessons learned, and take-home points for flight crews. Mixing Aviation and Medicine Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n n This session will look at the similarities and difference between the worlds of aviation and medicine. Focus will be on sharing the medical side of air medical programs with those in the aviation world and will explain and address medical terminology, as well as the challenges and rewards of being in air medical transport. My Type A Is Better than Yours! Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n Presenter: Scott Burgess, assistant professor, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University – Worldwide, and Katherine Hilst, Safety Design Consulting Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit We have a problem when attitudes conflict with good decision-making. When we let Type A personalities get in the way when critical thinking and problem solving are necessary, the results can be catastrophic. This session will be an active debate about the good and bad decisions happening in our industry right now. Operation Cloud-Bound: Helicopter Instrument Proficiency Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n n Presenter: Steve Sparks, FAA and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit The notion of “use it or lose it” is certainly true when it comes to maintaining instrument proficiency. Because helicopters are predominately operated under visual flight rules conditions, and since most helicopters are not even instrument flight rules–certified, instrument skills in helicopter pilots tend to be marginal at best. Whether a particular mission involves training, an actual instrument cross-country, or a practical test, the pilot’s preparation is reflected in the overall results. It’s always better to over-prepare for an instrument flight than to be caught off-guard and fall behind the aircraft. A Pragmatic Approach to Results-Oriented Training Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n Presenter: George A. Santos, crew resource management instructor/examiner, Loben Consult Presenter: Dudley Smith, associate executive director, Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit “The proof of the pudding is in the eating.” Applying this well-known idiom to training suggests that theoretical principles can only be practically effective and 12 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 judgment with regards to your career. This presentation will get you thinking about your role in error prevention and creating a corporate culture conducive to aviation excellence. Primacy of Teaching Autorotations Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm Redefining the Safety Culture Concept for Rotorcraft n Presenter: David M. Bjellos, Flight Safety Foundation n Presenter: Philipp Wynands. flight standards manager, Bristow Academy, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit This must-attend in-depth session aims to educate rotorcraft certificated flight instructors on the progressive, scenario-based approach to teaching autorotations at the primacy level, integrating the principles of threat and error management and energy management. The content was developed in cooperation with the U.S. Helicopter Safety Team and the Orlando FAA Safety Team. Procedural Intentional Noncompliance (PiNC): Rule Breaking Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm n Presenter: Don Lambert, Air Methods Corporation Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Why do good employees violate procedure? What can we do about it? This session will cover what procedural intentional noncompliance (PiNC) is and why it happens, its prevalency and what happens when we do it, and how to prevent it. This session presents a tough-love approach to personal decision making and judgment. Professionalism: Beyond the Dirty Dozen Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 10:30 am n Presenter: Richard Komarniski, Grey Owl Consultants, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit As we progress in our careers, we realize that our profession is all about attitude, integrity, and accountability. Without these, we will not experience the professional fulfillment that we desire. Professionalism is not just having the skill to perform a task; rather it is a concept that encompasses your level of personal commitment, passion, knowledge, discipline, and Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session will present a high-level discussion of safety culture and examples of safety culture advances as they relate specifically to rotorcraft. The importance of proper mind-set and work ethic applied at all levels within the aviation function will be examined. Rotor Blade Preventive Maintenance Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 10:30 am n Presenter: Dana Kerrick, International Aviation Composites Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT program credit This is an interactive class where the subject material is designed to assist both novice and experienced pilots and mechanics in detecting and addressing rotor blade problems before they become safety issues. Safety Culture and Social Media Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm Mar. 4, 2015 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm n n Presenter: Elan Head, Vertical Magazine Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Helicopter operators are increasingly coming to appreciate the importance of safety culture in achieving their safety goals. Yet organizational culture is only one of the things that influences pilots’ attitudes toward safety — exposure to content on YouTube, Facebook, and other social media can also have a profound effect on what pilots perceive as acceptable behavior. This session will explore the positive and negative ways in which social media may be shaping the industry’s safety culture. Two chances to view Orlando n March 2–5 1.5–2 hours long heliexpo.rotor.org 13 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge appropriately evaluated when experiential knowledge acquired from normal operations shape the training process. The session will share how basic human factor and behavioral principles are employed to effectively train, with the purpose of ensuring that theoretical lessons learnt can and will habitually be put into operational practice by trainees. Safety Culture: How We Lead Safety through Flight Data Management Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Presenter: Tom Baldwin, senior safety and standards analyst, Air Evac EMS, Inc. Presenter: Keith M. Cianfrani, MAS, RSP, Florida Institute of Technology; Stephen Cusick, Director of FAA Center of Excellence for General Aviation for the FIT College of Aeronautics n Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit The development of a robust safety culture is advantageous to the success of any organization but is critical to the success of an air-medical organization. This presentation breaks down the core components of a successful safety culture in a way that everyone can understand and capitalize on, focusing on the role that leadership, safety management systems, and just culture, among others, plays in the development and maintenance of a safety culture. Real-life scenarios will be used to illustrate these concepts. Safety Data Analysis: Make It Actionable Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n n n Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Safety improvements in rotorcraft operations are greatly desired by the FAA; it is expected that flight data monitoring (FDM) and associated products and services can contribute significantly, subject to their widespread adoption and ongoing improvements made possible by engagement with the rotorcraft safety community and the availability of FDM data. A centralized database of deidentified rotorcraft FDM data for safety analysis by the FAA and other stakeholders would be of immense value. SMS and Technology: Do They Fit Together? Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n Presenter: Jeff Currin, manager of risk and safety analytics, Air Methods Corporation Presenter: Christopher Young, PRISM and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session will cover the basics of data analysis and provide numerous examples of how to analyze safety reporting data and most importantly how to interpret and utilize results. Research methods, data interpretation, and implementation of a data analysis program will also discussed. When we consider applying technology to aircraft operations, we must look at all aspects of the business process. This most certainly includes safety and, specifically, safety management systems (SMS). If utilized correctly, technology can significantly help with the SMS process. The goal should be to enable efficiencies that not only provide an uncomplicated user experience, but ultimately enhance the operator’s safety performance. Safety Ignited! Industry in Action Mar. 3, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n Presenter: HAI Safety Committee Members SMS for Small-Fleet or Private Operators Mar. 4, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm n Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit The HAI Safety Committee consists of members from nearly every helicopter mission segment, including air ambulance, law enforcement, offshore, tourism, and power-line construction and maintenance. In this interactive session, attendees will get a glimpse of several helicopter-supported industries as well as their current safety challenges. Join us to take the pulse of safety in the helicopter industry and engage with the HAI Safety Committee in an open forum where you will have an opportunity to communicate your safety concerns. Two chances to view 14 Convention Preview Presenter: Bryan Smith, Airborne Law Enforcement Association and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team (USHST), and Christopher Young, PRISM and USHST Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Despite the significant increase in safety that safety management systems (SMS) have provided large operations, some aspects of SMS create difficulties in implementation for smaller businesses or private operators. This session will offer an overview of new SMS information and tools that will allow smaller commercial and private operations to reap the same safety benefits large operators have come to enjoy. Several free SMS tools will be made available during this session. 1.5–2 hours long HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Mar. 3, 2015 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Mar. 4, 2015 8:30 am – 9:30 am n n Presenter: Nick Mayhew, general manager, Bristow Academy, Inc., and chair, U.S. Helicopter Safety Team Training Working Group; Mike Phillips, Frasca International Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This session presents a unique view of why and where training should be used to develop a culture of safety across the industry and reduce helicopter accident rates. It compares the success of various medical vaccination programs, such as polio and MMR, and suggests that training can act as the vaccination, with an initial “shot” (ab initio) and a “booster” (recurrent training) to “inject” an improved safety culture at all levels. We Are Not Finding New Ways to Crash Helicopters Mar. 4, 2015 11:30 am – 12:30 pm n Presenter: HAI Safety Committee Members Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit With each aircraft accident, we look for root causes to prevent it from happening again. The fact remains that we are not finding new ways to crash helicopters, even with the most advanced technology. There does not seem to be a common predictor as to why accidents occur. This course will introduce human factors and latent conditions that must be addressed to prevent the next accident. What the FRAT? Mar. 3, 2015 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mar. 4, 2015 10:00 am – 11:00 am n n Unlocking the Power of Your Safety Program Mar. 4, 2015 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm n Presenter: Sunshine McCarthy, director of training, Baldwin Aviation, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Safety management systems have been widely accepted in the helicopter community. As organizations move from the early stages to maturity, the focus turns to ensuring a continuous safe operation with an engaged team. This presentation will open the door to fully understanding how powerful a developed safety management program can be. Updates in FAA Medical Certification Mar. 3, 2015 2:15 pm – 3:15 pm n Presenter: Charles Mathers, MD, MPH, associate program director, UTMB/NASA Aerospace Medicine Residency and medical director, Aerospace Medicine Center Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit This session will review updates in FAA medical certification, including Conditions the AME Can Issue (CACI), the recent controversy surrounding the obstructive sleep apnea policy, and select aeromedical cases pertinent to helicopter operations. Orlando n March 2–5 Presenter: Bryan Smith, Airborne Law Enforcement Association and U.S. Helicopter Safety Team (USHST) and USHST SMS Committee members Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit A flight risk-assessment tool (FRAT) is a powerful risk management instrument that can create positive changes in safety and operational capability, and it will soon be required of many operators. Unfortunately, it is a misunderstood tool, often simply used to check off a box in a safety management system. Using information from the IHST/USHST FRAT Safety Bulletin, this session will help operators, from private to large fleets, use a FRAT to lower risk, increase operational capability, and meet regulatory requirements. Wildlife Hazards to Rotorcraft and Wildlife Strike Reporting Awareness Mar. 4, 2015 10:30 pm – 12:00 pm n Presenter: Brian E. Washburn, PhD, and Michael J. Begier, USDA Airport Wildlife Hazards Program Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit This session will provide attendees with an understanding of the nature and scope of the hazards that helicopter operations face when they interact with wildlife. The presenters will share an analysis of recently reported wildlife strikes in both civil and military rotary-wing aircraft and offer potential solutions that will increase the safety of your flight operations. Don’t miss this opportunity to increase your hazard awareness, develop skills to mitigate the risks associated with wildlife, and learn how to help others by participating in the data collection process. heliexpo.rotor.org 15 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Training: The Safety Vaccination Rotor Safety Challenge FREE to All HAI HELI-EXPO Attendees and Exhibitors Learn more at rotor.org/takethechallenge at HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 This schedule is subject to change. Please reconfirm dates and times on site or at rotor.org/takethechallenge. Register at faasafety.gov to receive FAA WINGS and AMT credit. March 2–4 n Orange County Convention Center, Level III South FREE safety education for registered attendees and exhibitors Seating is limited; first-come, first-served Full descriptions at www.rotor.org/takethechallenge Take the Challenge! Attend six Rotor Safety Challenge events and receive a certificate of recognition! In-Depth Session 1.5–2 Hours Long Replay Session 2 Chances to View Monday, March 2, 2015 8:00 am 10:00 am HAI Safety Symposium: NTSB – Managing Risk in Public Helicopter Operations 10:30 am 12:00 pm Safety Directors Forum: Your Helicopter Crashed – Now What? Conversations with Senior NTSB and FAA Managers Tuesday, March 3, 2015 Accident Causation and Prevention Lance Hofmann, 8:30 am EagleMed, LLC 9:30 am IIMC: Real Threat, Lethal Consequences, Realistic Interventions Bryan Smith, ALEA & USHST, & Rich Weber, Jacksonville (FL) Sheriff’s Office 8:30 am 10:30 am 10:00 am 12:00 pm 1:00 pm 2:00 pm 1:00 pm 3:00 pm 2:15 pm 3:15 pm Mixing Aviation and Medicine Dudley Smith, Jonathan Godfrey, CAMTS Children’s National Health System My Type A Is Better than Yours! Scott Burgess, Embry-Riddle, & Katherine Hilst, Safety Design Consulting Redefining the Safety Culture Concept for Rotorcraft David M. Bjellos, Flight Safety Foundation Safety Ignited! Industry in Action HAI Safety Committee Members Professionalism: Beyond the Dirty Dozen – Richard Komarniski, Grey Owl Consultants Safety Committee Town Hall Aviation Law: What Pilots Need to Know Jon Kettles, The Kettles Law Firm Helicopter HUMS Case Studies Help! I’m the New Safety Officer Murdock Welborn, Honeywell Aerospace Lance Hofmann, EagleMed Hope Is Not a Strategy Just Culture: Responsibility Bruce Webb, Airbus vs. Accountability Helicopters Katherine Hilst, Safety Design Consulting Max Impact: A Story of Survival What the FRAT? Safety Data Analysis: Make It Actionable Updates in FAA Medical Certification Bryan Smith, ALEA Jonathan Godfrey, & USHST; USHST Children’s National SMS Committee Members Health System Autorotations: Reality Exposed – Industry Professionals & Government Agencies (NTSB & FAA) Aviation Human Factors: Protecting Us from Ourselves Forced Landings Just Culture: Not as Michael Becker, Becker Helicopters Simple Pilot Academy as It May Seem Procedural Intentional Noncompliance (PiNC): Rule Sunshine McCarthy, Breaking Jason Quisling, Air Methods & USHST Big Data: SMS + FDM = Safety Assurance 3:30 pm 4:30 pm Stuart “Kipp” Lau, SkyTrac Systems & USHST 16 International Helipad Database for Helicopters Convention Preview Electronics and Software Programs for Maintenance Management Rick Bisson, Tdata Baldwin Aviation Don Lambert, Air Methods Fuel: The Lifeblood of Your Aircraft The Hazardous Attitudes Lurking within You Walter Chartrand, Aviation Training Academy Daniel A. Doepker, Hillsboro Aviation & USHST Safety Culture and Social Media Elan Head, Vertical Magazine iPad Takes Flight! EFB Challenge Edition Charles Schneider, MyGoFlight Jeff Currin, Air Methods Operation Cloud-Bound: Helicopter Instrument Proficiency Charles Mathers, MD, MPH, Aerospace Medicine Center, UTMB Training: The Safety Vaccination Nick Mayhew, Bristow Academy, Steve Sparks, FAA & USHST, & Mike Phillips, Frasca Int’l USHST HAI Heli-Expo 2015 1. Select safety events to attend. 2. Collect a token from the room monitor at the conclusion of each event. 3. Take your 6 tokens to the HAI Safety Committee booth (#1115) to receive your certificate. Wednesday, March 4, 2015 8:30 am 9:30 am 8:30 am 10:30 am 10:00 am 11:00 am 10:30 am 12:00 pm 11:30 am 12:30 pm 1:00 pm 2:00 pm Aeronautical Knowledge vs. What Pilots Should Know Scott Burgess, EmbryRiddle Aviation Law: What Pilots Need to Know Business and Safety Case for HUMS Jon Kettles, The Kettles Lance Antolick & Ken Law Firm Speaks, RMCI Hope Is Not a Strategy Bruce Webb, Airbus Helicopters Aviation Introduction to Just Human Culture Factors: Protecting Dudley Smith, CAMTS Us from Ourselves iPad Takes Flight! EFB Challenge Edition Jason Quisling, Air Methods & USHST Charles Schneider, MyGoFlight Aeronautical Knowledge vs. What Pilots Should Know Big Data: Fuel: The SMS + FDM Lifeblood of = Safety Assurance Your Aircraft Scott Burgess, EmbryRiddle Stuart “Kipp” Lau, SkyTrac Systems & USHST Anthropometric Flight Safety The FullTouchdown Auto Walter Chartrand, Aviation Training Academy Operation Cloud-Bound: Robert Joslin, PhD, FAA Michael Becker, Becker Helicopter Instrument Helicopters Pilot Academy Proficiency Electronics and Software Programs for Maintenance Management Max Impact: A Story of Survival Safety Data Analysis: Make It Actionable What the FRAT? Jonathan Godfrey, Children’s National Health System SMS and Technology: Do They Fit Together? We Are Not Finding New Ways to Crash Helicopters Christopher Young, PRISM & USHST HAI Safety Committee Bryan Smith, ALEA & Jeff Currin, Air Methods USHST; USHST SMS Committee Members A Pragmatic Approach to Results-Oriented Training George A. Santos, Loben Consult Safety Culture: How We Lead Safety through Flight Data Tom Baldwin, Air Evac Management The Hazardous Attitudes Lurking within You Daniel A. Doepker, Hillsboro Aviation & USHST SMS for SmallFleet or Private Operators EMS Keith M. Cianfrani & Bryan Smith, ALEA, Stephen Cusick, Florida USHST, & Christopher Inst. of Technology Young, PRISM, USHST Help! I‘m the New Safety Officer HFDM, Analysis, and ROI Outcomes Mixing Aviation and Medicine Lance Hofmann, EagleMed Kim Bagnall, SkyTrac Systems Dudley Smith, CAMTS Safety Culture and Social Media Elan Head, Vertical Magazine Primacy of Teaching Autorotations – Philipp Wynands, Bristow Academy Get the Most Out of Your Training – HAI Training Committee Lance Hofmann, 4:00 pm EagleMed 5:00 pm n Nick Mayhew, Bristow Academy, USHST, & Mike Phillips, Frasca Int’l Wildlife Hazards to Rotorcraft and Wildlife Strike Reporting Awareness – Accident Causation and Prevention Orlando Sunshine McCarthy, Baldwin Aviation Brian E. Washburn, PhD, & Michael J. Begier, USDA Airport Wildlife Hazards Program Rick Bisson, Tdata 2:30 pm 4:30 pm 2:30 pm 4:30 pm Training: The Safety Vaccination Rotor Blade Preventive Maintenance – Dana Kerrick, International Aviation Composites Steve Sparks, FAA & USHST 2:30 pm 3:30 pm Just Culture: Not as Simple as It May Seem March 2–5 IIMC: Real Threat, Lethal Consequences, Realistic Interventions Bryan Smith, ALEA, USHST, & Rich Weber, Jacksonville (FL) Sheriff’s Office Integration of UAS International Helipad Charles (Cliff) Johnson, Database for Helicopters FAA Jonathan Godfrey, Children’s National Health System Limited Power and Unlocking the Confined Areas Power of Your Michael Becker, Becker Safety Program Helicopters Pilot Academy Sunshine McCarthy, Baldwin Aviation heliexpo.rotor.org 17 HAI Rotor Safety Challenge Take the HAI Rotor Safety Challenge: 6 Tokens = Certificate of Recognition! Save Today! Register Today at hai.rotor.org/registernow Start your HAI HELI‑EXPO experience with these easy steps: 1. REGISTER by Jan. 16 to receive discounted rates. 2. JOIN HAI and attend at the member rate. Learn more at rotor.org/join or email mbr@rotor.org. Save $$ by registering before midnight, Jan. 16, 2015! 1. Register for HAI HELI‑EXPO online, by fax, or by mail. Online: Visit hai.rotor.org/registernow. Fax: Complete the registration form at hai.rotor.org/registernow and fax it to 703-683-4745. Mail: Complete the registration form at hai.rotor.org/registernow and mail it to — Helicopter Association International Attn: Attendee Registration 1920 Ballenger Avenue, Alexandria, VA 22314-2898 Note: HAI will not accept faxed or mailed registration forms after the early-bird deadline of Jan. 16, 2015. You can obtain additional registration forms at hai.rotor.org/registernow. 2. Attendees residing within the United States who preregister by Friday, Jan. 16, 2015, will receive their badge by mail in mid-February. Attendees residing outside of the United States and those who register after Jan. 16, 2015, must pick up their badge at on-site registration, located in the main registration area of the Orange County Convention Center. On-site attendee registration, including self‑registration counters, will be open the following hours: Mon., Mar. 2 Tue., Mar. 3 Wed., Mar. 4 Thu., Mar. 5 3. 8:00 am – 4:30 pm 8:00 am – 4:30 pm 8:00 am – 4:30 pm 8:30 am – 3:00 pm Once you are registered, make your hotel reservations at rotor.org/housing. Discounts expire Jan. 23, 2015. Then glance through heliexpo.rotor.org and design your HAI HELI‑EXPO experience. Questions? Call HAI at 703-683-4646. Policies regarding cancellations, substitutions, student registration, and more can be found at heliexpo.rotor.org. Your Three-Day Registration* Includes — 18 Free admission to HAI Rotor Safety Challenge events, Mar. 2–4 Invitation to the HAI HELI-EXPO Welcome Reception, Mon., Mar. 2, 7:00 pm Entrance to the exhibit hall, Mar. 3–5 Admission to all HAI committee meetings, forums, symposia, and workshops Admission to Manufacturer Technical Briefings and free inspection authorization renewal opportunities One HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 tote bag Convention Preview HAI publications and DVDs: HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 Program & Exhibit Guide Winter 2015 ROTOR magazine Helicopters: A Day in the Life Many more! A one-year subscription to ROTOR magazine HAI Members Only: 10% off coupon (one-time use) for purchases at HAI gift shop * When you purchase a one-day registration, you receive access to the above activities on that day. HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Attendee/Education Registration Form ONlINe hai.rotor.org/registernow | FaX 703-683-4745 | MaIl haI, attn: attendee registration, 1920 ballenger ave., alexandria, Va 22314-2898 Registration Name (If atteNdINg a professIoNal educatIoN course, please prINt your Name exactly as It should appear oN your certIfIcate of completIoN.) NIckName (to appear oN badge) job tItle compaNy address cIty / state / ZIp or maIl code / couNtry phoNe emaIl spouse NIckName (to appear oN badge) JOB FUNCTION COO/CEO Director of Operations Maintenance Supervisor/ Chief Mechanic Marketing/Sales Manager Director of Purchasing Chief Pilot Safety Officer Pilot Mechanic Student Consultant Military Hospital Administrator Other: _______________________ Type OF OperaTION Manufacturer or Service Provider Commercial Operator (Part 135) Gen. Aviation Operator (Part 91) Government Services Operator HaI MeMBersHIp Are you a member of Helicopter Association International (HAI)? Yes No HAI Member No: _________________ (leave blank if unknown) MIlITary sTaTUs Are you a member of the military on active-duty status? This applies to the military of any nation. Yes No HOw DID yOU Hear aBOUT HaI HelI-eXpO HAI HELI-EXPO website HAI HELI-EXPO postcard Convention Preview Email ROTOR Magazine RotorNews Internet search engine Exhibiting company website Invitation from exhibiting co. Word of mouth Advertising in other industry pub. I aways attend HAI HELI-EXPO rOTOr MagazINe I want to receive / continue to receive ROTOR magazine free of charge. Yes No aMerICaNs wITH DIsaBIlITIes aCT INFOrMaTION Pursuant to the ADA, do you require specific aid or services? Audio Visual Mobility Details: _______________________________________ regIsTraTION Fees prOFessIONal eDUCaTION COUrses Course Name Fee / Which Day to Attend HAI HELI-EXPO? 1. _________________________________________________________________ 2. _________________________________________________________________ 3. _________________________________________________________________ 4. _________________________________________________________________ For each course registration, indicate which day you want as your one complimentary day pass to HAI HELI-EXPO. (Note: this does not apply to free courses.) You may consider buying additional day passes. The course registration fee is nonrefundable within 30 days of the course; however, substitutions are welcome at any time and are based on availability. MeTHOD OF payMeNT Check to HAI, U.S. dollars credIt card # exp. date cardholder’s Name sIgNature caNcellatIoNs must be made in writing by January 16, 2015, to receive a refund (minus $20 processing fee). Email all cancellation requests to heliexpo@rotor.org. photo/VIdeo release: By registering for HAI HELI-EXPO, attendee acknowledges that HAI or its agents may take photographs and video at HAI HELI-EXPO and agrees, by attending HAI HELI-EXPO 2015, that he or she may be so photographed or recorded. Attendee further agrees that HAI may use his or her name, likeness, and biographical information in connection with its use of such photographic images or video footage in educational, news, and promotional materials, whether in print, electronic, or other media, including but not limited to the HAI website or other websites, at no charge to HAI. Orlando n March 2–5 early-bird rate (by 1/16/15) regular rate (after 1/16/15) 3-Day registration HAI Member or Military* $170 $300 ________ Nonmember $270 $470 ________ Spouse $100 $175 ________ Student* $60 $60 ________ 1-Day registration – Tue., Mar. 3 HAI Member or Military* $85 $145 ________ Nonmember $130 $210 ________ Student* $30 $30 ________ 1-Day registration – wed., Mar. 4 HAI Member or Military* $85 $145 ________ Nonmember $130 $210 ________ Student* $30 $30 ________ 1-Day registration – Thu., Mar. 5 HAI Member or Military* $85 $145 ________ Nonmember $130 $210 ________ Student* $30 $30 ________ salute to excellence awards Dinner – wed., Mar. 4 HAI Member – Ticket $85 $95 ________ Nonmember – Ticket $100 $110 ________ HAI Member – Table $765 $855 ________ Nonmember – Table $900 $990 ________ prof. education Course registrations ________ ▶ TOTal aMOUNT eNClOseD $ ________ *Proof of status required at on-site registration. heliexpo.rotor.org 19 Housing The Hilton Orlando will be the headquarters hotel for HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015. We recommend that you make your reservations as early as possible as room blocks sell out quickly! There are 18 other hotels that also offer discounted HAI HELI‑EXPO rates. See the table on the opposite page for a complete list of HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 hotels and rates. International Drive To receive the discounted rate, you must make your HAI HELI‑EXPO reservations through Connections Housing, the official housing and reservations coordinator for HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015. For detailed information on each hotel and its amenities, maps, group and individual reservation forms, visit the Hotel & Travel section at heliexpo.rotor.org and click on Housing. Please be aware of your individual hotel’s cancellation policy. Cancellations for groups of 10 or more must be made by Jan. 16, 2015. 4 17 18 1 7 5 11 19 14 15 12 13 2 10 16 6 8 3 9 20 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 The HAI HELI-EXPO discount for hotel The HAI HELI-EXPO discount reservations expires Jan.for 23.hotel reservations expires Fri., Jan. 23, 2015. HOUSING Reserve now! now! Reserve rotor.org/housing rotor.org/housing Reserve Your Room Today! Online rotor.org/housing Phone 877-254-HELI (4354, toll-free in the U.S.) 1‑404‑842‑0000 (international) 9:00 am – 6:00 pm EST, Mon. – Fri. Mail Connections Housing 950 Scales Rd. Bldg. 200, Suite 201 Suwanee, GA 30024 Email heli‑expohousing@connectionshousing.com Fax 404-601-7442 Map Key Hotel Single/Double Rates Distance to Convention Center 1 Avanti Resort $ 99 / $ 99 1.3 miles 2 Clarion Inn & Suites International Dr. / Convention Center (Standard Room) $119 / $119 0.5 mile 3 Doubletree by Hilton at SeaWorld $168 / $168 1.0 mile 4 Embassy Suites – International Dr. / Jamaican Ct. $170 / $170 1.9 miles Embassy Suites – International Dr. / Convention Center (1-BR King Suite) $209 / $209 Embassy Suites – International Dr. / Convention Center (1-BR Double/ Double Suite) $229 / $229 6 Extended Stay America – Westwood Blvd. South $109 / $109 1.2 miles 7 Extended Stay America – Point Orlando $119 / $119 1.1 miles 8 Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham Orlando Convention Center $133 / $133 1.1 miles Hilton Grand Vacation Club at SeaWorld International Center (Queen Suite – 2ppl) $139 / $139 Hilton Grand Vacation Club at SeaWorld International Center (1-BR King Suite – 4ppl) $169 / $169 Hilton Grand Vacation Club at SeaWorld International Center (2-BR Suite – 6 ppl) $308 / $308 10 Hilton Orlando – Headquarters Hotel $262 / $262 0.6 mile 11 Homewood Suites by Hilton – International Dr. $149 / $149 1.3 miles 12 Hyatt Regency Orlando $289 / $289 0.9 mile 13 Rosen Centre Hotel $235 / $235 0.6 mile 14 Rosen Inn at Pointe Orlando $105 / $105 1.3 miles 15 Rosen Plaza Hotel $225 / $225 1.1 miles 16 Rosen Shingle Creek Orlando $245 / $245 2.1 miles Sonesta ES Suites Orlando (1-BR Suite – 4 ppl) $159 / $159 Sonesta ES Suites Orlando (2-BR Suite – 6 ppl) $189 / $189 The Castle Hotel, Autograph Collection $159 / $159 Westin Orlando Universal Blvd. (Standard Room) $259 / $259 Westin Orlando Universal Blvd. (1-BR Suite) $299 / $299 5 9 17 18 19 Orlando n March 2–5 1.3 miles 2.0 miles 1.4 miles 1.3 miles 0.4 mile heliexpo.rotor.org 21 Getting to HAI HELI‑EXPO Airport Taxis Orlando International Airport (MCO) is located within 15 miles (30 minutes) of the Orange County Convention Center. Taxis can be found at the Hilton Orlando and the Convention Center, adjacent to Halls SA and SB. Orange County Convention Center Parking Need a car in Orlando? HAI members can receive up to 25 percent off by using the HAI Discount Program code CDP#1993559. Combine your CDP# with promotional offers available online at www.hertz.com/hai for added savings. Visit www.hertz.com/hai or call Hertz at 800-654-2200. The Orange County Convention Center operates on-site vehicle parking. Depending on the event, valet parking may also be available. Parking rates vary upon location, vehicle size, and the entry time. Event parking is $15.00 per day with no overnight parking or in-and-out privileges. Orlando Transit The Central Florida Regional Transportation Authority’s LYNX and I-Ride Trolley systems offer visitors quick, convenient shuttle service between several hotels and the area’s world-class tourist attractions, dining, shopping, and convention facilities. Visit golynx.com and iridetrolley.com for more information. Shuttle Buses HAI will provide complimentary shuttle service between the Orange County Convention Center and hotels within the HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 housing block (see page 21 for listing) from 7:30 am to 6:30 pm on the show days of March 3–5. Hertz Car Rentals Visas for International Attendees If you already have a U.S. visa, please check the expiration date to make sure your visa will not expire before or during your travel dates. If you do not possess a U.S. visa, you may need a visa to enter the United States. The following U.S. State Department website can help determine whether or not a visa is required: http://travel.state.gov/ content/visas/english.html If you should require a visa, contact the U.S. embassy consulate section in your country to determine visa processing times, or visit the “Visa Appointment and Processing Wait Times” page of the U.S. State Department website (http://travel .state.gov/visa/temp/wait/wait_4638 .html). Advance travel planning is “As a transitioning active-duty service member, HAI HELI-EXPO was by far the most beneficial and fruitful career step I’ve made as professional pilot.” important, because visa applications are subject to a greater degree of scrutiny than in the past. To assist in your visa application, you may request a letter of invitation to attend HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015. Please complete the letter of invitation form available online at the HAI HELIEXPO website: click on International Visitors under the Hotel & Travel section at heliexpo.rotor.org. A letter of invitation does not guarantee the issuance of a visa. The decision to issue a visa is the judgment of the local U.S. embassy or consulate. HAI is unable to assist with actual visa processing. HAI cannot provide financial support for travel, registration fees, or local expenses. Children and Strollers Registration for children age 14 and under is free. However, children must wear a youth badge, which can be picked up in Attendee Registration. All children (anyone under 18) must be accompanied by an adult. Children are only permitted inside the exhibit hall during show hours; no one under the age of 18 is allowed on the exhibit floor during move-in/move-out times. HAI HELI-EXPO has a strict policy concerning child/infant strollers: strollers are not allowed in the exhibit hall at any time. No exceptions will be made. Please make arrangements to leave strollers in the coat/bag check area. – Aaron Green, pilot U.S. Coast Guard 22 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Register at Register at rotor.org/takeacourse rotor.org/takeacourse Professional Education Courses Career Development Maintenance skills Heli-Success Career Development Seminar Dealing with the Government Mar. 1, 2015 Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 12:00 pm MAINTENANCE SKILLS 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Career Development n HAI Member $55 n n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 HAI Member $85 $75 $105 $275 Instructor: Lyn Burks, Owner, Rotorcraft Pro Magazine This seminar offers an opportunity for learning and networking to helicopter professionals who may be in a transition phase of their careers. This course is also for young pilots looking for information that may give them a competitive edge in the helicopter industry hiring process. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will understand — The basics of the helicopter industry and career paths within that industry What it takes to be a helicopter professional How to stand out during the hiring process Important techniques for building a professional network. Military to Civilian Transition Workshop Mar. 2, 2015 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm Career Development n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 FREE FREE FREE FREE This Course Is Free, but Registration Is Required. Seating Is Limited. There are several things you need to know now in your military career in order to prepare for a successful career after retirement or ETS. Benefit from advice, aviation career mentorship, and guidance on important attributes you can cultivate now that will make your aviation career a success in the future. This seminar will focus on assisting aviation soldiers transitioning from the military and will include — Information about valuable FAA certifications and the Federal Aviation Regulations Essential networking, résumé writing, and interview tips for the future Common stumbling points for aviation soldiers entering the commercial helicopter industry. Orlando n March 2–5 Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $410 $385 $575 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! n n Instructor: Sarah MacLeod of Obadal, Filler, MacLeod & Klein, PLC Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT program credit As a certificated entity, dealing with the government, particularly the FAA, is inevitable. Building a good relationship with government officials in good times will help keep the bad times at bay. The course will also review best practices for handling FAA audits and investigations. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will leave with — Tools and tips to ensure a professional relationship with government oversight officials Best practices for handling FAA audits and investigations Updated awareness of relevant FAA regulations. Helicopter Maintenance Management Feb. 27 – Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MAINTENANCE SKILLS n HAI Member $880 n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $1,320 $1,155 $1,650 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Brandon Battles and Gary Potochnik, Conklin & de Decker Associates, Inc. Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT program credit This four-day course has two primary purposes for the manager in a maintenance organization. First, it gives managers critical, yet often overlooked skills to control a complex issue that confronts every organization: limited resources to accomplish its objectives. Second, the course reinforces the required technical proficiency that managers must maintain by offering an in-depth regulatory review. heliexpo.rotor.org 23 Transportation / Professional Education HAI HELI‑EXPO At the conclusion of the course, attendees will — Learn management principles and techniques Gain a better understanding of different types of costs and how to control them Learn aspects of financial management and accounting, as well as the importance of budgets — and how to develop them. Public Aircraft HUMS and HFDM: Helicopter Health, Usage, and Flight Data Monitoring Instructor: Marshall Filler of Obadal, Filler, MacLeod & Klein, PLC Mar. 1–2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MAINTENANCE SKILLS Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT program credit n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Rick Barnett, Amanda Roberts, and Doug Shaw of Bristow U.S., LLC Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT program credit Sponsor: Bristow U.S., LLC This course will provide attendees with an overview of HUMS (health and usage monitoring systems) and HFDM (helicopter flight-data monitoring), including an introduction to analysis of helicopter flight and health/ vibration data. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will — Be able to make informed decisions regarding the establishment of HUMS and HFDM programs Know the benefits of HUMS and HFDM and guidelines for administering these programs Be familiar with HUMS and HFDM terms and acronyms Understand the basics of HUMS and HFDM data analysis. 24 Convention Preview Mar. 2, 2015 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm MAINTENANCE SKILLS n HAI Member $275 n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $410 $385 $575 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! This course covers the basic requirements for an aircraft to be operated as a public aircraft on behalf of federal, state, and local governments, including the difference between government-owned and government-leased aircraft, what constitutes an eligible governmental function, and the practical implications of using the same aircraft to conduct both civil and public operations. It also discusses the recent FAA policy regarding operations conducted under contract for a government entity. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will understand — FAA guidance governing public aircraft Eligibility requirements for operating public aircraft. “Everyone we work with – manufacturers, suppliers, financiers, insurers, auditors – are all in one place!” – Joel Van Brunt, director of safety and standardization Paradise Helicopters HAI Heli-Expo 2015 This schedule is subject to change. Please reconfirm dates and times at registration or at rotor.org/takeacourse. Feb. 27 – Mar. 7, 2015 Course hours are 8 am – 5 pm, except as noted. Course Title 27 28 1 2 3 4 5 6 Registration Fee by Jan. 16 7 Registration Fee after Jan. 16 HAI NonHAI NonMember member Member member Career Development Heli-Success Career Development Seminar Military to Civilian Transition Workshop $55 $85 $75 $105 1–5 FREE FREE FREE FREE 8–12 $275 $410 $385 $575 Maintenance Skills Dealing with the Government Helicopter Maintenance Management $880 $1,320 $1,155 $1,650 HUMS and HFDM: Helicopter Health, Usage, and Flight Data Monitoring $450 $670 $575 $850 $275 $410 $385 $575 $450 $670 $575 $850 $450 $670 $575 $850 Public Aircraft 1–5 Regulations 101: Law for the Aviation Professional Management Skills Effective Leadership in Business Aviation Helicopter Operator Management $1,650 $2,475 $2,100 $3,150 Advanced Helicopter Operator Management 1–5 Record Keeping and Regulatory Compliance $975 $1,475 $1,225 $1,850 $355 $530 $465 $685 $275 $410 $385 $575 FREE $640 FREE $750 Flight Instructor Refresher Course $185 $290 $275 $375 Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Pt. 1 $475 $725 $600 $900 Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Pt. 2 $475 $725 $600 $900 Helicopter Aerodynamics without Equations $450 $670 $575 $850 $575 $850 $715 $1,070 $450 $670 $575 $850 $355 $530 $465 $685 Fundamentals of Helicopter Accident Investigation $450 $670 $575 $850 Human Factors in Aviation $575 $850 $715 $1,070 Operational Risk Management $450 $670 $575 Safety Management Systems $670 $990 $825 $1,140 Safety Culture and IS-BAO Stage 3 SMS $325 $500 $415 $625 UAS and UAV: Applications and Awareness for the Rotorcraft Industry $375 $550 $475 $700 Residual Values in Helicopter Leasing Finance and Leasing Seminar: Essentials of a Helicopter Acquisition Pilot Skills Introduction to Vertical Reference Long-Line and Train the Trainer Short Haul, Hoist, Congested-Area Planning, and Utility Rigging Mountain/High-Altitude Flying Ground School 1–5 Safety $850 Course dates appear in green; HAI HELI-EXPO exhibit dates appear in blue. Orlando n March 2–5 heliexpo.rotor.org 25 Professional Education Professional Education Schedule and Fees Regulations 101: Law for the Aviation Professional Mar. 1, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MAINTENANCE SKILLS n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Marshall Filler and Sarah MacLeod of Obadal, Filler, MacLeod & Klein, PLC Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT program credit This one-day course will cover the basic FAA requirements associated with making day-to-day decisions on purchasing, designing, manufacturing, operating, maintaining, or selling civil aviation products and parts. It will address the Federal Aviation Regulations and FAA guidance material relating to 14 CFR parts 1, 13, 23, 25, 27, 29, 33, 34, 35, 36, 39, 43, 45, 61, 65, 67, 91, 119, 121, 125, 129, 133, 135, 137, 145, and 183. Attendees will learn about — The rulemaking process and FAA organization Government reports and audits Part 39, 91, and 119 aircraft operations Maintenance by Part 43, 65, and 145 certificate holders FAA enforcement issues. management skills Effective Leadership in Business Aviation Mar. 1, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: C. Daniel Prather, Aviation Training Solutions Professional Development Credit: NBAA PDP credit Become a more effective leader or prepare for a new leadership role. This course is designed to assist executives, managers, and supervisors of helicopter operations with the important task of exercising leadership. Attendees will learn important leadership concepts and approaches for being a role model, empowering personnel, building effective teams, promoting the exchange of information, and making sound decisions that result in goal achievement and the promotion of corporate objectives. In this course, participants will enhance their knowledge in regard to — Effective leadership qualities, styles, and strategies Differences among moral, ethical, and legal behavior Effective communication in interpersonal and group discussion Changes that take place when transitioning into a management role Motivation, mentoring, and understanding behavioral styles. “HAI HELI-EXPO is a great place to make in-person contact with existing clients, meet potential new clients, and keep up with the latest developments and products in the helicopter industry. If you’re involved with helicopters in any way, HAI HELI-EXPO is a must.” – Paul Magno, president Worldwide Helicopter Solutions, LLC 26 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 “HAI HELI-EXPO provides answers. You can speak directly with company representatives. There is no better alternative to this industry event.” Feb. 27 – Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n HAI Member $1,650 n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $2,475 $2,100 $3,150 Professional Education Helicopter Operator Management – Richard Schuller, president Schuller Aerospace Services INTERNATIONAL LTD Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Bill de Decker, Conklin & de Decker Associates, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit Attendees will learn advanced management tools and techniques for — Managing assets and costs Measuring, analyzing, and improving productivity Developing pricing strategies Analyzing financial statements and data Developing a marketing plan. This intensive course focuses on business, operations, and management subjects that commonly fall outside the experience of technically oriented helicopter management personnel but are critical to the successful management of these companies. This course is built around the development of a business case for a typical helicopter operator. Record Keeping and Regulatory Compliance Attendees will learn — The basic principles and concepts involved in managing a helicopter operation The value of a safety management system The costs and finances involved in running and managing a helicopter operation How to market services How to develop a business plan for a helicopter operation. Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $975 $1,475 $1,225 $1,850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Bill de Decker, Conklin & de Decker Associates, Inc. Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS and AMT programs credit This intensive course builds on the concepts introduced in the Helicopter Operator Management course and provides new and current managers of civil helicopter operations with the advanced management knowledge and skills they need for continued success in today’s highly demanding and complex operating environment. n March 2–5 HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $355 $530 $465 $685 Professional Development Credit: IA renewal credit; FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit; 0.7 continuing education units (CEUs) n HAI Member Orlando Nonmember Instructor: Prof. Scott Burgess, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Mar. 5, 2015, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm Mar. 6–7, 2015, 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n HAI Member Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Advanced Helicopter Operator Management n This course is designed for rotorcraft flight department personnel who will use accepted industry practices to establish or maintain a record-keeping system that will document and maintain regulatory compliance and initiate appropriate action within the department. Upon completion of this course, attendees will have gained knowledge regarding — Techniques and systems for record keeping and data analysis Industry practices and standards Audit requirements Aviation department regulations requirements, for example, FAR; DOT; DHS; OSHA; IRS; EEOC; FCC; EPA; ICAO – Chicago Convention Annex 2, 6, and 9; and federal, state, and local laws Monitoring change to guarantee continued compliance Industry-driven standards and practices that are not controlled by regulation. heliexpo.rotor.org 27 Residual Values in Helicopter Leasing pilot skills Mar. 1, 2015 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $275 $410 $385 $575 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Sharon Desfor, ASA, MRICS, and Jason Kmiecik, ASA, of HeliValue$, Inc. Are you leasing a helicopter? Considering a sale or leaseback? Your lessor requires a residual value projection to determine your lease rate. How do you know whether the quoted residual value is appropriate for your helicopter? Sharon Desfor and Jason Kmiecik from The Official Helicopter Blue Book® will teach you residual value calculations from the ground up: who needs them and why, what they are, and how to cross-check them. Come learn what’s going on inside your lease. At the end of the course, participants will be better able to — Define a residual value and assess when, why, and how it is used Calculate equipment residual values Recognize common errors in residual values and learn how not to calculate them Assess other considerations involved in aircraft valuation, such as different depreciation rates, lease return provisions, and use of personal judgment. Finance and Leasing Seminar: Essentials of a Helicopter Acquisition Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm MANAGEMENT SKILLS n Mar. 1–2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $185 $290 $275 $375 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Gary Young and Randy Rowles, Performance Instruction Services Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit; flight instructor certificate renewal Sponsor: Bell Helicopter This helicopter-only course will cover the latest updates in regulations and helicopter flight instruction techniques from leading industry professionals. The curriculum meets FAA requirements for nationally scheduled, industry-conducted flight instructor refresher courses (AC 61-83G). This course is for flight instructors who wish to renew their instructor certificates under FAR Part 61 and flight instructors who wish to maintain their qualifications as chief instructors or assistant chief instructors for pilot schools certificated under FAR Part 141. Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Part 1 Mar. 1, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 FREE $640 FREE $750 HAI Members: Registration Is Free but Required. Nonmembers: Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Members of the HAI Finance and Leasing Committee Join this panel of experts as they share the ins and outs of various finance and leasing scenarios and answer your questions about helicopter acquisitions. The day will include lively, interactive discussions about the essentials of these transactions: When and how to lease, loan, or fund a helicopter — and why Purchase agreements Loan and lease documentation Appraisals and inspections: what they are looking for Preparing your financial package Taxes, title, and escrow: what you need to know. 28 Flight Instructor Refresher Course Convention Preview HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $475 $725 $600 $900 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Robert Feerst, Utilities/Aviation Specialists Sponsor: Magellan Aerospace Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit; completion of this course (Part 1) and Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Part 2 satisfies the BC Hydro requirement of 495 and 507 training, its prerequisite for many flight assignments. This course introduces the basic awareness that utility crews must have to work safely in the wire environment. The importance of crew resource management, the roles of each individual, and working as a team with clear in-flight communications are covered at length. The dynamics of working in the wire and obstruction environment, including situational awareness, exposure and risks, crew responsibilities, visibility engineering, and the accident chain, are reviewed. HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Helicopter Aerodynamics without Equations Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 pm – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n n n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $475 $725 $600 $900 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Robert Feerst, Utilities/Aviation Specialists Instructor: Shawn Coyle, Eagle Eye Solutions, LLC Sponsor: Magellan Aerospace Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit; completion of Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Part 1 and this course (Part 2) satisfies the BC Hydro requirement of 495 and 507 training, its prerequisite for many flight assignments. This course expands on the basic awareness of the wire environment covered in Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Part 1 and goes into much greater detail as to how and why wire and obstruction-related helicopter accidents happen to experienced flight crews. After a review of the material covered in Part 1, this course expands flight crew skills by addressing other flight-critical issues such as human factors, decisionmaking on patrol, and accident causation in the wire and obstruction environment. Professional Education Flying in the Wire and Obstruction Environment – Part 2 In this course, Shawn Coyle will present difficult and often misunderstood helicopter aerodynamic concepts, removing the equations, ambiguity, and myth. This course has something to offer for anyone in the helicopter industry. Attendees will receive four personalized electronic books: Helicopter Aerodynamics Volume 1 by Ray Prouty Helicopter Aerodynamics Volume 2 by Ray Prouty Cyclic and Collective by Shawn Coyle The Little Book of Autorotations by Shawn Coyle. Attendees will learn about — Hover, vertical, and forward flight Maneuvering Static and dynamic stability. “HAI HELI-EXPO has more fascinating helicopters, helicopter information, classes, and helicopter people than you will find in one place anywhere in the world!” – Linda-Marie Koerner, owner Linda’s Aviation Orlando n March 2–5 heliexpo.rotor.org 29 Introduction to Vertical Reference Long-Line and Train the Trainer insights into human external cargo, short haul, hoisting, congested-area planning (CAP), and best rigging practices. Mar. 1–2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 $575 $850 $715 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $1,070 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Robert Libby, Advanced Helicopter Training Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Sponsor: Marenco Swisshelicopter Without mentoring and monitoring, becoming a vertical reference long-line pilot can take an individual down a long, difficult path; getting there unassisted can be dangerous to yourself and others. Breaking into the long-line division of a company can be difficult; this course will go a long way in preparing you for the day that opportunity presents itself. The course will provide you with a new language, debunk myths, and start your journey into the long-line culture. The Train the Trainer portion will take you a step further by providing the best information available to initiate and maintain professional training programs. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will be familiar with — The long-line mission and building a long-line team The steps in acquiring this skill set Proper cargo-load rigging and aircraft checks How to set up, command, and manage work zones Strategies for managing risks and hazards for this environment. Short Haul, Hoist, Congested-Area Planning, and Utility Rigging n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Bob Cockell, Air Rescue Systems; Jeff Gordon, Southern California Edison; Michael J. Gelskey, Sr., CEO, Lift-It Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit This course is organized by Robert Libby of Advanced Helicopter Training and takes attendees into the working world of external cargo, providing valuable guidance and 30 Convention Preview Mountain/High-Altitude Flying Ground School Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n HAI Member n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $530 $465 $685 $355 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Carl Gray and Francisco Vega, RAVCO Professional Development Credit: FAA WINGS program credit Sponsor: RAVCO Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm PILOT SKILLS n Attendees will learn from and get their questions answered by experts: Bob – a global advanced helicopter response, training, and equipment specialist, and a hoisting and short-haul expert Jeff – an expert at congested-area planning with 1500+ CAP plans under his belt Michael – a seasoned industrial rigging instructor who understands the demands of the helicopter lift sector. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will be familiar with — Hoisting and short-haul equipment, mission execution, and team matrices The CAP document process, and FAA and local government concerns and involvement Utility cargo rigging, rigging configurations, tools for the job, load angle calculations, equipment selection, and management of the hazardous work environment. Flying in the mountains is a different experience from flying in any other environment. Reduced engine power, decreased lift, hypoxia, terrain, and treacherous winds and weather all pose serious challenges to pilots. This ground school will provide attendees with the fundamental and advanced concepts necessary to fly safely in the mountain and high-altitude environment. At the conclusion of the course, attendees will — Understand mountain flying concepts and techniques Know the unique hazards faced when operating in this environment because of terrain, altitude, and airflow Be able to implement risk management strategies. HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Fundamentals of Helicopter Accident Investigation Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY n n HAI Member $450 Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Jack Cress, Vortechs Helicopter Analytics Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit The course will briefly introduce National Transportation Safety Board and International Civil Aviation Organization reporting requirements and discuss the history and primary categories of U.S. and international helicopter accident causal factors. The focus will be on aerodynamically oriented causes, including hover performance, downwind effects, forward flight transition, rotor system characteristics, high-speed phenomena, descent issues (vortex ring state and autorotation), and ground issues (rollover and resonance). Turboshaft engine factors will also be addressed, as class progress permits. Case studies will be frequently included. Notebook and CD provided. At the completion of the course, attendees will understand — Common causal factors involved in helicopter accidents or incidents Performance considerations for helicopter rotor systems Procedures and techniques for investigating an accident or incident. Human Factors in Aviation Mar. 1–2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $575 $850 $715 $1,070 associated costs, to create a corporate culture conducive to human-error prevention, and to develop realistic and immediate safety nets. The course uses case studies to illustrate topics covered, which will help participants identify and mitigate human error to enhance an organization’s safety. Attendees will learn — The “Dirty Dozen”: human factors that affect an individual’s decision-making process How safety nets, or countermeasures, are used to prevent incidents and accidents caused by human error Regulations that focus on professionalism and error reduction. Operational Risk Management Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $450 $670 $575 $850 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Dan Deutermann and Chris Andres, The Squadron This course addresses the life cycle of risk, from initial risk assessment through the analysis of post-flight risk assessment data. The instructors will go step-by-step to identify and quantify hazards and risk factors and how to mitigate those risks through the use of a flight riskassessment tool. Attendees are then taught to use the data to identify trends of risky behaviors and to develop effective risk management strategies. At the end of the course, attendees will — Be able to pass on operational risk management strategies to their organization Understand and demonstrate the characteristics of an effective risk manager Develop a risk assessment tool for their particular mission set Be able to provide relevant feedback following an incident or mishap investigation. Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Richard Komarniski, Grey Owl Aviation Consultants, Inc. Professional Development Credit: Complies with Transport Canada, FAA, and EASA 145 and IA renewal requirements; approved for NBAA PDP credit for Human Factors PM9 “The Professional Education classes at HAI HELI-EXPO ensure we are tracking along with other companies within our industry.” – Joel Kain, director of safety TEMSCO Helicopters The objective of this course for aviation flight crews, technicians, and managers is to reduce errors and their Orlando n March 2–5 heliexpo.rotor.org 31 Professional Education safety Safety Management Systems Safety Culture and IS-BAO Stage 3 SMS Feb. 28 – Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY Mar. 2, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY n HAI Member $670 n n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 HAI Member $990 $825 $1,140 $325 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Craig Geis, California Training Institute Professional Development Credit: FAA AMT and WINGS programs credit This course assists those responsible for managing or supervising organizational safety programs to preserve human and material resources through the prevention of damage and injury by utilizing a safety management system (SMS). The most effective SMS is the one you build, implement, and manage, and by the end of this class, we provide students with all of the tools necessary to build their SMS. We will cover in detail the four standardized pillars of SMS and its 12 basic components. This course meets FAA, HAI, ALEA, ICAO, and EASA requirements. At the completion of the course, attendees will — Understand the requirements for an SMS program as they pertain to their governing agency and the benefits provided by implementing an SMS Understand the components of an effective SMS Learn how to identify potential or actual humanerror problems and determine strategies for reducing human error Be able to perform an SMS gap analysis Be equipped to develop an implementation strategy for their organizations Understand their role as change agents in managing their organizations’ safety culture. n Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $500 $415 $625 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructor: Jason Starke, International Business Aviation Council This course describes how operators can advance their safety cultures and improve safety performance by ensuring widespread employee involvement and visible leadership by top management. This is a course for operations with mature safety management systems (SMS) programs. Upon completion of this course, attendees will be able to — Provide guidance to an aviation team seeking to achieve IS-BAO Stage 3 SMS Describe what a safety culture survey should include Explain how an operator’s positive safety culture raises the performance of its safety risk management. UAS and UAV: Applications and Awareness for the Rotorcraft Industry Mar. 1, 2015 8:00 am – 5:00 pm SAFETY n n HAI Member Nonmember HAI Member after Jan. 16 Nonmember after Jan. 16 $375 $550 $475 $700 Register by Midnight, Jan. 16, and Save! Instructors: Dr. Brent Terwilliger and Prof. Scott Burgess, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University This course is designed to familiarize attendees on new applications and emerging technologies of unmanned aerial systems (UASs) and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and their possible impact on the rotorcraft industry, both from an economic standpoint as well as operating and safety considerations. Attendees will, by the end of the class, be more familiar with — Categories and platforms Applications Operations and regulations Safety in the operating environment Collaborative teaming between manned and unmanned systems. 32 Convention Preview HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Exhibitors This information is current as of Oct. 20, 2014. Visit heliexpo.rotor.org for the most current list. 135 Air Carrier Management Able Aerospace Services Accelerated Media Tachnologies Accurate Accessories, LLC ACES Systems Acme Aerospace ACR / ARTEX Actron Manufacturing, Inc. ADAC HEMS Academy GmbH Advanced Composite Structures, Inc. Advanced Cooling Technologies, Inc Advanced Helicopter Services Advanced Torque Products Advantage Aviation Technologies, Inc. AEM Corp Aero Dynamix, Inc. Aero Products Component Services Aero Seats & Systems, Inc. AeroComputers, Inc. AeroLEDs Aerolite Max Bucher AG Aeromaritime America Inc. Aerometals Aerosafe Risk Management Aerospace Optics Inc. AeroVan Industries Aeroweld, Inc. Aerox Aviation Oxygen Systems, Inc. Agape Precision Manufacturing Ag-Nav Inc. AgustaWestland AIC Title Service, LLC Air Ambulance Technology Air Comm Corporation Air Dallas Instruments, Inc. Air Parts & Supply Company (APSCO) Air Rescue Systems (ARS) Air Shunt Instruments, Inc. Air Technology Engines Inc. Airborne Engines Airborne Law Enforcement Assn. (ALEA) Airbus Helicopters Aircraft Appliances and Equipment Limited Aircraft Component Design Aircraft Electric Motors, Inc. Aircraft Maintenance Systems Orlando n March 2–5 Airglas, Inc. Airmark International Airwolf Aerospace LLC Alabama Economic Development Allies Alaska Structures All-System Aerospace Intl, Inc. Alpine Aerotech LP American Aerospace Controls (AAC) Americase Ametek Ameron - Mass Systems Amphenol PCD AmSafe AMSTAT, Inc. AOPA Insurance Services Appareo Systems Applied Composites Engineering Applied Video Imaging, LLC Arc-Tronics, Inc. ARGUS International, Inc. Armour of America, Inc. Army Aviation Assoc. of America Arrow Aviation Co. LLC ArrowCopter Aspen Avionics Associated Spring Astronautics Corporation of America Astronics Corporation Atec, Inc. ATP Aureus International Avalex Technologies AV-DEC Aventech Research Inc. Avia Press Associates Aviall, a Boeing Company Aviation Battery Systems LLC Aviation Instrument Services, Inc. Aviation Partners Group Aviation Personnel Aviation Plus, Inc. Aviation Products Inc. Aviation Specialties Unlimited AVIATRIX, INC. Avicopter Co., Ltd. AvidAir International Avidyne Corporation AVINCO sam Avinet Avion Power Avionic Instruments LLC Avlite Systems Avpro, Inc. AvQuest Insurance Service Division of Shaw Aviation Insurance AvStar Media, LLC Axnes Aviation BAE Systems Baldwin Aviation Safety &Compliance Barfield Inc. Barry Cordage Ltd. BBA Aviation plc Bearing RTS By PAS MRO Becker Avionics Belfort Instrument Company Bell Helicopter, a Textron Company Bemsco Inc. Berkley Aviation BETA AIR Blackhawk Composites Inc. BLR Aerospace Blue Sky Network Borescopes-R-Us Bose Corporation Brady Corporation Breeze-Eastern Corporation Bristow Academy Inc. Bristow Group, Inc. Broadcast Microwave Services, Inc. Cadorath Group CAE California PopTop CAMTS Canadian Helicopters an HNZ Company Cannon Aviation Group, Inc. Casher CEROBEAR Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung Chappell Supply & Equipment Chopper Spotter Company (J.B. Knowles, Inc.) Church & Dwight Co., Inc. The ArmaKleen Company Churchill Navigation ClearSpan Fabric Structures CMS/ATC Cobra Systems, Inc. Columbia Helicopters, Inc. Columbus Jack/Regent CommInnovations, Inc. Component Control Composite Helicopters International Computer Training Systems Concorde Battery Corporation Conklin & de Decker Consolidated Aircraft Supply Company, Inc. Consolidated Turbine Specialists Control Products Corporation CORRIDOR Aviation Service Software Creative Tent International, Inc. Crestwood Technology Group Custom Control Concepts Dakota Air Parts International Inc. Dallas Airmotive, Inc. Dallas Avionics Inc. Daniels Manufacturing Corporation DART Aerospace Ltd. datatoys David Clark Company Inc. Dayton-Granger, Inc Denison Industries DeVore Aviation Corporation of America DFW Instrument Corporation Digital Airware Dino-Lite Scopes (BigC) Donaldson Aerospace & Defense Dynamic Solutions Systems, Inc. Dynatech International LLC Dytran Instruments, Inc. EAA (Experimental Aircraft Association) Eagle Copters Maintenance Ltd. EaglePicher Technologies EAM Worldwide Eastern Aero Marine East/West Industries, Inc. Eastman Chemical Company ECAS Inc. Eckhart Helicopter Sales ecms Aviation Systems GmbH EIT Avionics Elbit Systems Electro Enterprises, Inc. ELITE Simulation Solutions Elytron Aircraft Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Univ. EnerSys ENSCO Avionics, Inc. Enstrom Helicopter Corporation heliexpo.rotor.org 33 2015 Exhibitors HAI HELI‑EXPO 2015 Era Helicopters LLC ErectaStep Erickson Incorporated Essex Industries Esterline CMC Electronics Inc. Esterline Control & Communication Systems Esterline Power Systems Euless Aero EuroAvionics EuroTec Vertical Flight Solutions Executive Instruments, Inc. Express Calibration Services FAA Wildlife Strike Database Falcon Crest Aviation Supply Inc. Falcon Insurance Agency of Ca., Inc Fastening Systems International Inc FDC/aerofilter FEC Heliports Federal-Mogul Systems Protection Ferno Aviation, Inc. Firan Technology Group Fischer + Entwicklungen Flexible Lifeline Systems Flight Display Systems Flight Light, Inc. Flightcell International Ltd FlightSafety International Floats & Fuel Cells Inc. ForeFlight Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport Frasca International, Inc. Freedom Aero Service Inc FreeFlight Systems Gables Engineering, Inc. Gallagher Aviation - Insurance Garmin International GE Aviation Genesys Aerosystems Gibson & Barnes GKN Aerospace Glenair, Inc. Global Aerospace, Inc. Global Aviation Helicopter LLC Global Turbine Parts Gold Coast Helicopters Gradient Lens Corporation Green Country Aircraft Greenwich AeroGroup Guidance Aviation Gulf Coast Avionics Gyronimo LLC H.E.R.O.S. Inc. H.W. Farren LLC Aerospace & Aircraft Transportation H+S Aviation Ltd. Hangar One Avionics Inc. 34 Convention Preview HARCO Hartwig Aircraft Fuel Cell Repair Hazebuster Optics HBR HEICO heli efb GmbH HeliBuyer Europe Helicomb International, Inc. Helicopter Academy.com, LLC BoatPix.com contract Helicopter Accessory Service Inc. Helicopter Association Int’l Helicopter Association of Canada Helicopter Helmet.com Helicopter Maintenance Magazine Helicopter Services of Nevada, LLC Helicopter Specialties, Inc. Helicopter Technology Company Helicopters International Shipping Services, LLC HeliLadder Heli-Mart Inc. Helimission International HeliMods Pty Ltd Helinet Technologies Helinetwork International Heli-One HeliOps Magazine Heli-Parts Nevada HELIPOOL GmbH HELIRUSSIA Helitech International Reed Exhibitions Ltd HELI-TECH, Inc. Helitools, Inc. Helitowcart (Vanair Inc.) Helitrades, Inc. HeliTrak HeliValue$, Inc. HELIWAGON heliweb Heliwelders Canada Ltd. an HNZ Company Helopak Herber Aircraft Service, Inc. Hickok & Associates, Inc. Hillaero Modification Center Hillsboro Aviation, Inc. HiRel Connectors, Inc. HNZ Topflight Honeywell Howell Instruments, Inc. HQ Aero Management Inc. HRD Aero Systems, Inc. Hutchinson Aerospace Hydro Engineering HYE-Tech Manufacturing, LLC ICL Performance Products LP “In every way, if you own or operate a helicopter, attending HAI HELI-EXPO is a must!” — Joe Drummelsmith, chief pilot USB Corp IMT Indra Systems Inc. Infinite Therapeutics Instrument Technology, Inc. Interactive Safety Products, Inc. Alpha Eagle Helmets Intercomp Company Intermountain Turbine Services, Inc International Governor Services, LLC International Machine Transport International Turbine Service Inventory Locator Service, LLC Isolair Inc. Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) IAI North America ITT Corporation Jet-Care | Spectro JETNET LLC JSfirm LLC JSfirm.com JSSI (Jet Support Services, Inc.) Jupiter Avionics Corporation Kallman Worldwide Inc. Kaman Aerospace Kansas Aviation of Independence LLC Kawak Aviation Technologies KC Power Hydraulics Corp. Kell-Strom Tool Company, Inc. Kelly Manufacturing Company Keystone Turbine Services KGS Electronics Kinetic Defense Mfg. Inc. KOO 1 INDUSTRIES LTD L.J. Walch Co., Inc. L-3 Communications - Wescam Langara Fishing Adventures Latitude Technologies Corp. LAUNCH Technical Workforce Solutions Laversab, Inc. LCI Helicopters Leading Edge Composites, Inc. Leading Edge Insurance Agency, Inc. Lear Chemical Research Corporation Lexavia Integrated Systems Life Support International, Inc. Lifesaving Systems Corporation Lift-It Manufacturing Co., Inc Lightspeed Aviation, Inc. Liquid Measurement Systems, Inc. Lite Metals Company Little Giant Ladder Systems LORD Corporation Luminator Luminator Technology Group Lumitron Aerospace Lighting Components M.I.T. Corporation Machida Inc. Macquarie Rotorcraft Leasing Macro-Blue Inc Main Line Helicopter LLC MarathonNorco Aerospace, Inc. Marenco Swisshelicopter Ltd Marvel Aero International, Inc. MASCO Service Corporation MD Helicopters, Inc. Mecaer Aviation Group S.p.A. Mechanical Specialties, Inc. Medallion Foundation MEE LLC Meeker Aviation Services Ltd. Merex Group Merit Apparel Co., Inc. Merlin Simulation, Inc. Metro Aviation, Inc. Micro-Surface Finishing Products, Inc. Mid-Continent Instruments and Avionics Middle Georgia State College Milestone Aviation Group Mint Turbines LLC Miraj Corporation Mueller Die Cut Solutions MyGoFlight NAAMTA NAASCO (North American Aviation Supply) Nampa Valley Helicopters an HNZ Company Napoleon Engineering Services NationAir Aviation Insurance National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) National EMS Pilots Association (NEMSPA) Nav-Aids Ltd. Nebraska Gas Turbine, Inc New Hampshire Ball Bearings, Inc. HAI Heli-Expo 2015 Orlando n March 2–5 Reliance Aerotech Services Inc. Remote GeoSystems, Inc. RENK Systems Corporation REVUE THOMMEN AG RF System Lab RHOTHETA USA, Inc. RMCI, Inc. Robertson Fuel Systems Robinson Helicopter Company Rockwell Collins Rogerson Kratos Rolls-Royce Rotor & Wing Access Intelligence LLC Rotor Leasing, Inc. Rotorcraft Pro Media Network Rotorcraft Services Group Rotorcraft Support, Inc. Rotor-Tech International RPX - DynaVibe Russian Helicopters, JSC SACS Boysen Aerospace U.S. Inc. Safe Flight Instrument Corporation Saft America Inc Sagem, a Safran Company Sandel Avionics SATAIR Group Satcom Direct Scheme Designers Segers Aero Corporation SEI Industries Ltd. Semco Instruments SEMIA Senior Aerospace Metal Bellows Shephard Media Sherwin-Williams Aerospace SHOTOVER Camera Systems SIFCO ASC Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation Silicon Forest Electronics Simplex Aerospace Sirio Panel, Inc. Skurka Aerospace, Inc. Skyplan Services LTD SkyTrac Systems Ltd. SMARTug Société Générale Equipment Finance Softtech LLC Solid Concepts Southeast Aerospace Southwest Fuel Systems Spectrolab, Inc. Spectrum Aeromed Spider Tracks Limited SRT Helicopters, LLC StandardAero Starboard Aeronautical, Inc. START PAC Sterling Helicopter Straube Sun Aviation, Inc. Sun-Foil Aircraft Sunscreens, Inc. SureFlight, LLC Survival Systems USA Sutton James, Inc. Swesystem Swiss Rotor Solutions Ltd. Switlik Survival Products Takata Protection Systems Tanis Aircraft Products Technisonic Industries Limited Tech-Tool Plastics, Inc. Teledyne Battery Products Teledyne Reynolds Tempest Aviation Group Texstars, LLC Thales The Barden Corporation FAG/ Schaffler KG The Easy Peel Shim Company, Inc. The QC Group, Inc. Tiger Performance Products, Inc. Tiger Tugs Timken Tomlinson Aviation, Inc. Towcart.com TRACE Worldwide Corporation TracMap Aviation Ltd TracPlus USA, Inc. Trade-A-Plane (TAP Publishing Company) Tradewind International, LLC Trakka Corp Pty Ltd. Transaero, Inc. Transupport, Inc. Tri-County Instruments, Inc. Triple Crown Products Tri-Star Technologies Triumph Group, Inc. Troll Systems TURBO PURE WATER Turbomeca, a Safran Company Turtle-Pac Pty. Ltd. U.S. Specialty Insurance Company Aviation Division United Rotorcraft An Air Methods Division United Turbine Corp. Unitron Power Systems Universal Avionics Systems Corp. Universal Helicopters US General Services Administration Property Management Division USAIG UTC Aerospace Systems Van Horn Aviation LLC Vector Aerospace Helicopter Services North America VectorNav Technologies Velocity Aerospace Vertical Magazine VIH Aerospace Inc Vision Systems Aeronautics Vislink Volga Dnepr Unique Air Cargo, Inc. Waypoint Leasing WBParts Inc. Westmor Industries WHELEN Whirly-Girls International Williams & Williams Inc. WinAir WireMasters, Inc Women in Aviation, International Woodward, Inc. World Fuel Services Wysong Enterprises, Inc. X-Copter Helicopter Simulators ZF Luftfahrttechnik GmbH ZODIAC AEROSPACE heliexpo.rotor.org 35 2015 Exhibitors New Hampshire Helicopters A Division of Port City Air, Inc. Newport Aeronautical Sales Night Flight Concepts North American Aircraft Services North Flight Data Systems LLC Northrop Grumman Corporation Northwall srl Northwest Helicopters, LLC NSE Ocean Helicopters, Inc. Onboard Systems Ontic Oregon Aero, Inc. Oxley Inc PAC International PACIFIC OIL COOLER SERVICE, INC Pacific Southwest Instruments Pall Aerospace Panalpina Inc. Heliship Div. Paramount Panels Inc. Paravion Technology, Inc. Parker Aerospace Partsbase, Inc. PATS Aircraft Systems PCX Aerostructures PEGASAS Pentagon 2000 Software, Inc. People’s Capital & Leasing Corp. Pergam Technical Services Phoenix Heliparts Phoenix Heli-Support Physical Optics Corporation Pilatus Business Aircraft Ltd Plastek Point Lighting Corporation Port-A-Cool Powervamp Ltd PPG Aerospace Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Precise Flight, Inc. Precision Fuel Components LLC Precision Heliparts Inc. Precision LLC Precision Flight Training Inc Premier Turbines A Division of Dallas Airmotive Prime Industries, Inc Priority 1 Air Rescue Professional Pilot Magazine Projects Unlimited Purolator Facet, Inc. Pynco, Inc. QAI Ramco Systems Corporation RAVCO RCM Aeroservices Ltd REBTECH REB Technologies, Inc. Red Hen Systems, LLC RedViking 1920 Ballenger Avenue Alexandria, VA 22314-2898 Learn more at rotor.org/sponsor It’s Not Too Late: Become an Official Sponsor Join Our HAI HELI-EXPO 2015 Sponsors DIAMOND Broaden Your Competitive Edge with Increased Visibility! GOLD Be promoted as an industry leader at the premier helicopter event of the year. A wide variety of sponsorship opportunities are available at rotor.org/sponsor — everything from receptions and golf tournaments to tote bags and bus wraps. SILVER For more information, visit rotor.org/sponsor or contact the HAI Sales Department at sales@rotor.org or 703‑683‑4646. BRONZE Innovation. Connection. Inspiration. Register by Jan. 16 and Save $$! hai.rotor.org/registernow A United Technologies Company SUPPORTING Component Services, Inc. This list is accurate as of Oct. 31, 2014.