Friday, July 1, 2011

INOS's Helicopter Underwater Escape Training (HUET)


HUET simulator for Westland Lynx helicopter Helicopter Underwater Egress Training in the United States, and Helicopter Underwater Escape Training in most other countries, (often abbreviated HUET, pronounced hue-wet, hue-way or you-way) is training provided to offshore oil and gas industry staff and military personnel who are regularly transported to and from facilities by helicopters over water. As the name implies, the purpose is to prepare them for emergency exit in the case of a crash landing over water.

Overview
The training involves simulated sinking in a pool while rotating the training module upside down and focuses students on bracing for impact, identifying primary and secondary exit points, avoiding smoke inhalation, surfacing for air, and head count. The conventional simulators simulate an immersed cabin rotating around single axis, usually lengthwise. Most trainees find that the repetition of predictable submerging and controlled rotation does not offer any additional improvement to their survival skills. While the traditional simulators can only be turned left or right in the horizontal plane, the new generation simulators can turn 360ยบ in both the horizontal and vertical planes and can increase post-accident underwater survival by up to 250%. - Wikipedia.

At 26 to 28 last June, I attended a training Huet for a second time in Terengganu Safety Training Center, Kemaman, Terengganu. As always are a little bit frightening because as human habitat is not in the water. hehe.

Surprisingly, when this time we (staff Institute of Oceanography and Environment) were given a mask. Helicopter drops first and second time we were given a Self Breathing Equiment. In the past, we are provided with life jackets only. Piece of cake.

In the past, Huet is a module that is feared, not anymore. Jumping from a platform is a module for us devastated. Anyway, we were able to spend a MIS-BOSET training and are ready to do research at Kemaman offshore, 18 July.



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