North Country Heli FlightHELICOPTER GROUND SCHOOL · ACS-ALIGNED
Private (PPL-H) · Free Preview
★ Free preview lesson — a taste of the full Private (PPL-H) course.
ACS Alignment
FAA-S-ACS-15 — Private Pilot, Rotorcraft–Helicopter · Foundational principles of flight (supports multiple Areas of Operation)
Four forces & rotor lift/thrustTorque & antitorqueCollective · cyclic · pedals[exact K-codes: confirm at QA]
How a Helicopter Flies
The four forces, and what the three controls actually do.
By the end of this lesson you can:
Name the four forces and explain how a rotor makes both lift and thrust.
Explain why a single main rotor produces torque, and how the tail rotor counters it.
State what the collective, cyclic, and pedals each control.
Describe how the controls interact — why no input is ever truly isolated.
1 · The four forces
Like any aircraft, a helicopter lives under four forces: lift, weight, thrust, and drag. The difference is the wing: a helicopter's "wing" is its rotating blades. By changing blade pitch and tilting the rotor disc, the rotor produces lift (to oppose weight) and thrust (to move the aircraft) at the same time. Tilt the disc forward and some of that rotor force becomes forward thrust; keep it level and it's nearly all lift — which is how a helicopter hovers.
2 · Watch: the four forces on a helicopter
Curated reference clip — “HELICOPTER LESSON: The Four Forces of Flight,” Utah Helicopter (YouTube). Embedded with the creator's player; we don't host or alter it.
3 · Torque, and why there's a tail rotor
Spin a big rotor one way and the fuselage wants to spin the other way — that's torque (Newton's third law). On a single-main-rotor helicopter like the R44, the tail rotor produces sideways thrust to counter that torque and let you control heading (yaw). Change power on the main rotor and you change torque, so antitorque demand changes too — that's why the pedals and collective are always working together.
4 · The three controls
Control
What it changes
What you feel
Collective (left hand, with throttle/governor)
Pitch of all blades together → total lift/power
Climb or descend; power and torque change
Cyclic (right hand)
Tilts the rotor disc → direction of thrust
Move fore/aft/left/right; attitude changes
Antitorque pedals (feet)
Tail-rotor pitch → yaw / heading
Nose swings left or right; counters torque
In the R44 the governor manages throttle to hold rotor RPM as you move the collective, so the pilot's collective hand mainly commands lift while RPM stays in the green — but you still verify it.
5 · Reference figures — use the authoritative sources
Your aircraft: see your Robinson R44 POH, Section 7 (Systems Description) for the actual collective/cyclic/throttle-governor and tail-rotor systems on N668SA.
✍️ 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.
FAA handbooks are public-domain U.S. Government works; in the published course the relevant figures are embedded inline.
Risk management (the “Consider”): the rookie trap is treating each control as isolated. Add collective and the nose yaws and the aircraft pitches; every input ripples into the others. Smooth, small, coordinated inputs — anticipating the cross-effects — are what separate a controlled hover from a wrestling match.
6 · Knowledge check
ACS-coded — framed the way the written test asks it.
Lesson complete ✓
The full Private (PPL-H) course covers all of ACS-15.