The most time-critical reflex in a piston helicopter.
By the end of this lesson you can:
Identify causes of low rotor RPM (over-pitching, high DA, governor issues, low airspeed/high power).
Recognize the warning (horn/light) and the danger of blade stall.
Execute the recovery: lower collective, roll on throttle, manage cyclic.
Explain why low rotor RPM near the ground is immediately life-threatening.
1 · Why RPM decays
Rotor RPM decays when the rotor is asked for more than the engine can supply — over-pitching (too much collective), especially at high density altitude, heavy weight, low airspeed with high power, or with a governor/throttle problem. As RPM droops, the blades need a higher angle of attack to make the same lift, which increases drag and decays RPM further — a vicious cycle that ends in rotor stall if not stopped.
2 · The recovery
The recovery is a trained reflex: lower the collective to unload the rotor, roll on throttle to restore power/RPM, and in forward flight apply aft cyclic to help build RPM — all smoothly and together — then return to normal flight as RPM recovers into the green. Recognize it instantly from the low-RPM horn and light. The exact sequence and the meaning of the warning system are in the POH and Robinson's safety material.
3 · Watch
Curated reference clip — “Helicopter Low Rotor RPM & Recovery in Hover,” Helicopter Training Videos (YouTube). Embedded with the creator's player; we don't host or alter it.
Your aircraft: the R44 low-RPM warning system and recovery are described in your Robinson R44 POH (Sections 3 & 4) and relevant Robinson Safety Notices (e.g., low-RPM rotor stall). Confirm the exact sequence and warning thresholds there.
✍️ 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.
Risk management (the “Consider”): low rotor RPM near the ground can become an unrecoverable rotor stall in seconds — there is no time to think. The defense is an instant, drilled reflex (lower collective, roll on throttle) and prevention: avoid over-pitching, respect density-altitude/weight limits, and keep RPM in the green at all times. Treat the horn as a demand for immediate action.