The walkaround is where you catch the problem on the ground instead of in the air.
By the end of this lesson you can:
Conduct a systematic preflight inspection using the POH flow, not memory.
Explain what you are checking on rotor blades, controls, drive system, and fluids.
Apply the PAVE checklist to identify and mitigate flight risk.
Describe how complacency and distraction defeat a good preflight.
1 · Why the walkaround is non-negotiable
A helicopter has many single-point items where a small defect has large consequences — a loose control fitting, a crack at a rotor attach point, a hydraulic leak. The preflight is your last chance to find them on the ground. Use the POH inspection checklist as your authority and follow the same consistent path every time so nothing is skipped.
2 · What you're really looking for
Area
Looking for
Main & tail rotor blades
Nicks, cracks, delamination, corrosion, security; condition of tips and trailing edges.
Controls & linkages
Security, correct travel, no binding; hardware and cotter pins present.
Drive system & belts
Belt condition/tension indications, gearbox security, no abnormal leaks.
Fluids
Engine oil and gearbox levels; fuel sumped for water/sediment and correct grade.
Airframe & landing gear
Skids, dampers, fairings, antennas, doors, and general condition.
Your aircraft: the authoritative item-by-item flow, torque/leak criteria, and oil/fluid quantities are in the Robinson R44 POH Section 4 (Normal Procedures) — Preflight Checklist. Follow it; this table is orientation, not a substitute.
✍️ Fill in for the aircraft you fly (N-________)
Value / limit:
R44 POH section & page:
Leave blank until you look it up in your R44 POH (see the reference above) and confirm it with your CFI. Aircraft-specific numbers vary with weight & conditions — don’t guess.
✍️ Fill in for the aircraft you fly (N-________)
Value / limit:
R44 POH section & page:
Leave blank until you look it up in your R44 POH (see the reference above) and confirm it with your CFI. Aircraft-specific numbers vary with weight & conditions — don’t guess.
3 · Watch: helicopter preflight inspection (FAA)
Curated reference clip — “Preflight Inspection (The Rotorcraft Collective),” Federal Aviation Administration (YouTube). Public FAA safety content for the rotorcraft community; embedded with the creator's player.
4 · PAVE — managing the bigger risks
Airworthiness is only one bucket of risk. The PAVE checklist sorts the whole flight into four areas so nothing hides:
Letter
Bucket
Example questions
P
Pilot
Am I current, proficient, and fit (IMSAFE)?
A
Aircraft
Airworthy, fueled, within W&B and performance for today?
V
enVironment
Weather, density altitude, terrain, airspace, lighting?
E
External pressures
Schedule, passengers, “need” to go — am I being pushed?
PAVE pairs with personal minimums: identify the risk, then mitigate it (delay, reroute, add fuel, decline) rather than just noting it.
5 · The quiet killers: complacency & distraction
A preflight done a thousand times becomes a ritual your eyes stop seeing. Interruptions are worse — a phone call or a chatty passenger mid-walkaround is exactly when an item gets skipped. If you're interrupted, back up several steps and re-do them. No distractions during the preflight is a rule worth keeping.
Risk management (the “Consider”): the preflight inspection and PAVE are the same discipline at two scales — find the problem before it finds you. The failure mode isn't usually not knowing what to check; it's rushing, getting interrupted, or feeling pressure to go. Build in unhurried time, protect the walkaround from distraction, and treat “I really need to make this flight” as a red flag, not a reason.