A quick risk assessment could have been carried out, chuck another lawyer down, if it didn't collapse try another couple - but wait for a few days just to be certain. 

the bike will be more dangerous, at least pilots are highly trained, any numpty can drive a car
I don't dispute the ability of a pilot, but even the best pilot cannot control a 10 ton machine when it has lost all drive, or a gearbox failure, and being a man made machine serviced by man, it is much far too vulnerable to many elements. However aeroplanes are by far the most safest means of transport and their failure rate is much much lower than helicopters.
There was one that fell in London when it struck a crane, sadly killing one innocent bloke on the road on his way to work, whilst the pilot naturally died upon impact ! shame really
One would imagine a helicopter blades could have been made out of some special material so strong as to chop the crane in half and yet suffer no damage itself, and continue to fly, but thats another question for designers and a lot of room for improvement I guess.
or why not have a huge baloon that inflates instantly from a compressed helium when the chopper engines or gearbox fails, it could be deployed in some clever way so as to not tangle with the blades, allowing it to land safely.
I've seen pictures of a helicopter ejector seat system - yes, really! The rotors are first jettisoned using explosive bolts and then the ejector seats fire.
No help to anyone on the ground, of course.![]()

I've seen pictures of a helicopter ejector seat system - yes, really! The rotors are first jettisoned using explosive bolts and then the ejector seats fire.
No help to anyone on the ground, of course.![]()
I've seen pictures of a helicopter ejector seat system - yes, really! The rotors are first jettisoned using explosive bolts and then the ejector seats fire.
No help to anyone on the ground, of course.![]()
In my humble opinion it would be better to jettison the cockpit area and deploy a parachute, I'll phone Martin Baker and get him to knock something up.
Aye on a military spec chopper maybe. I don't think 18 people ejecting into an engine and gearbox will work.![]()
I heard on the news earlier that the emergency services were sitting on their hands again in Glasgow.
I heard on the news earlier that the emergency services were sitting on their hands again in Glasgow.
I heard on the news earlier that the emergency services were sitting on their hands again in Glasgow.
is it time we scrapped the fire service in its present form and relied on volunteers who are not doing a dangerous job for monetary reasons?
Ayrshire has 3 Wholetime Fire Stations and SEVEN Retained Stations,
A retained Firefighter is a PART TIME VOLUNTEER who does another FULL TIME job and is paid a yearly retaining fee and a Call Out fee, exactly like the RNLI Volunteers.
So in this particular instance there is a very good chance the first firefighters on the scene were Volunteer firefighters.