Hey, there! Log in / Register

Citizen complaint of the day: That stupid copter has doubled back to Roslindale, get it outaaa heah!

Copter over Northeast Corridor tracks in Roslindale

It only seems like the copter's gotten tangled in the wires along Rowe Street.

A fed-up citizen filed a 311 complaint this morning about that helicopter Amtrak hired to survey the power lines along the Northeast Corridor, which had been slowly moving north, but which is now hovering low over Roslindale again, specifically, Rowe Street:

Noise pollution low flying helicopter violating many airspace’s disturbing the peace. Trying to have some peace in my house and can’t, get it outaa here.

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

So our home's/backyard's are our "airspace's" now.

mmmkay's

up
Voting closed 6

… has been granted by the city for a while now.

Noise pollution is a thing. Protection from it is for rich and poor alike.

up
Voting closed 4

The's city's doesn't's control's the's FAA's or's the's airspace's.

(I know this because I live under one of those "can't hold a conversation" flight paths).

up
Voting closed 6

Not everyone is defeatist.

Whoosh away.

up
Voting closed 4

's's's's's's's's's's's's's's'

up
Voting closed 1

The FAA controls all the airspace above 60'. That's why you can't just go out and fly a drone around.

Recent picture of Lee complaining about clouds in "their" personal "airspace's": IMAGE(https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/001/044/247/297.png?w=640)

up
Voting closed 3

Cluck, cluck, goose.

up
Voting closed 2

...but I'm pretty sure helicopters are regulated by the Mass Aeronautics Commission, not FAA. Same goes for banner planes and other small private aircraft. Helicopter's flight paths seem to be limited to some extent, to flying over highways, rail lines and waterbodies like the Charles. For this work I suspect they filed some sort of flight plan with MAC. Maybe there' s a UHUBber pilot that knows this stuff better, idk?

up
Voting closed 1

You’re in trouble now…

up
Voting closed 3

The FAA regulates the airspace around the area in question: https://www.massport.com/logan-airport/about-logan/logan-airspace-map/

up
Voting closed 2

Vertical airspace is considered part of a property up to a certain elevation. I forget what the ceiling is, but it's certainly higher that the 60 or so feet above street level I've seen that helo hovering at.

up
Voting closed 3

Federal law allows aircraft, including drones, to fly over private property, even right up to our back windows. And if we interfere with them, we're breaking the law.

up
Voting closed 2

They should use a drone for a fraction of the cost and noise.r

up
Voting closed 2

Consumer drones don't have the range, flight time, or payload capacity to do this kind of inspection. Amtrak could, and probably should, use the kind of commercial drones used for powerline inspection and similar tasks, but these cost tens of thousands of dollars, and are quite large and quite noisy. They would also excite the paranoids even more than helicopters do.

up
Voting closed 2

It i a pain, I agree. The chopper was also down again by Blakemore Bridge today (Sunday) as well. We had it run from Forest Hills to Blakemore on Saturday, and a week ago it was between Blakemore and Cummins.

Press south of Boston has been running stories on this since September. The company under contract specializes in the aerial inspection and photography of power lines. Aside from Amtrak they also work for power companies.

This is a new and already proven technology. Similar such inspections by helicopter and less-often by drones is commonplace on remote tracks west of the Mississippi. Similar flights can also use SONAR, RADAR, and LIDAR to detect below-ground issues or locate things such as drainage conduits, utility lines passing under or alongside tracks, or capped passageways.

If this was done by a track crew at track level the railroads would have to slow or stop trains or change tracks resulting in delays. While annoying, this process assures a good inspection to identify potential problem areas that can be followed up by a human crew, while trains can continue at speed.

The high-voltage wires were installed about 30 years ago (give or take) so a timely inspection at this point in time is needed. The flights also identify areas where tree branches may be fouling the power lines, or will be soon, allowing for preventive maintenance.

The last time a tree branch fouled those lines near me (Blakemore Bridge area) it was spectacular, and the fire department could do nothing until it was verified that power had been cut.

up
Voting closed 6

Get rid of the electric trains and no more helicopters.

/s

up
Voting closed 2

I hate traffic copters. Ban cars and no traffic copters. /s

up
Voting closed 2

and that train could run at night when the NE corridor isn't running.

Catenary/track inspection the world around is done by a special train car. Not flying a helicopter burning thousands of dollars of jet-a a day

up
Voting closed 2

They run as part of a train, and analyze the rails and what lies beneath them. They are no more obstructive to traffic than any other train. If you watch Virtual Railfan webcams, they are frequent sights.

up
Voting closed 2

but according to the original story, the helicopter isn't inspecting the rails, it's inspecting the poles that carry the wires.

up
Voting closed 2

The high-voltage wires were installed about 30 years ago (give or take) so a timely inspection at this point in time is needed.

It took Amtrak about three months to put up the catenary wires during the summer of 1999; trains did not run to Hyde Park so shuttle vans picked us up at Fairmount.

I remember the day the electric trains began service on January 31, 2000 - I was waiting at Hyde Park for the usual 6:30 train to Back Bay, and the first train with an electric engine roared past at speed (120mph?) on the middle track.

up
Voting closed 2

I know. I mean, I know this the city, but really? Back and forth, back and forth, all day. The rumbling is crazy along with the noise and extra dose of air pollution. Why, exactly?

up
Voting closed 1

On the one hand, I can see how a helicopter suddenly hovering near one’s house would be disconcerting. On the other hand, it has been a known thing for several days, and it is a helicopter doing maintenance work that needs a view from above.

I’ve been running along the line several times in the past week. I may have just noticed it today, or it was somehow a different copter along the line. Not really a big deal. Hardly a nuisance.

This does bring up one gripe I have with my neighbors. A copter overhead is hardly “noise pollution.” If you don’t like copters, trains, and the like, move west of Worcester, where you can avoid city noises.

up
Voting closed 2

No exemptions for helicopters or advance notice.

Of course you have “one gripe”. It’s practically your tag line.

up
Voting closed 7

Sorry, but perhaps because I have spent my entire life in Boston, overwhelmingly in Roslindale, I've become a bit immune to the sounds of trains, planes, helicopters, and the like. Just like how I have barely noticed these helicopters. There are places where you won't hear such things.

You're probably one of those people who moved to the neighborhood then started complaining a year or 2 later how the "quality of life" has gone down.

up
Voting closed 3

Lived and worked within city boundaries most of my entire life all over town.

I don’t know which of us is older but you certainly have more gripes.

I never throw the “I’m a native and can tell people to leave” in anyone’s face. To me that’s a sure sign of insecurity about if you actually belong here. I doubt you have the insight to even understand that.

Boston itself belongs to the nation because of its history.

up
Voting closed 2

Gonna say it's a blight on the neighborhood but it's odd to me how the copter stopped by Forest Hills again today for an hour maybe and had to get more data or do whatever surveying process they have been doing that couldn't have been already accomplished.

up
Voting closed 7

14 CFR 91.119

Basically an airplane has to be operated at a height where it can safely land if it has an engine failure, and no lower than 1000' over the highest obstacle within 2 miles (so in Boston ~1500 amsl, give or take, but probably higher given a glide path to an airport).

But helicopters are exempt!

A helicopter may be operated at less than the minimums prescribed in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, provided each person operating the helicopter complies with any routes or altitudes specifically prescribed for helicopters by the FAA

up
Voting closed 5

And when there's a derailment, you'll whine that Amtrack didn't do enough to prevent it.

up
Voting closed 2

This never would have happened in old Rozzi.

up
Voting closed 2