Idk I'm not an expert on helicopters
I guess the same could be said about cars, or even guns, but those aren't born equal regarding durability
Choppers key parts are made out of titanium and other special strong alloys.
https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/11967/what-limits-the-lifespan-of-helicopters
>The military aircraft have the shorter life in terms of flying hours, the Civil Commercial the longest life in terms of flying hours where as the Civil Private / light aircraft have a very long life in terms of years. A military aircraft can have an airframe file of say 4,000 to 6,000 hours compared to some civil commercial aircraft with an airframe life of 60,000 to even a 100,000 hours.
8760 hours in a year / 100000... That's 11 years roughly for the airframe
>Now, I worked on the RAF HC1 Chinooks from 1988 to 1991. In April 2018 I went to RAF Odiham on a photography shoot event organised by TimelineEvents.Com During that photoshoot I saw aircraft that I had worked on whilst I was on 7 Squadron i.e this particular aircraft must originally been delivered to the RAF in about 1986 making it about 32 years old. However, I would say that the rotor blades will / must be less than 5 years old. Again, another however, the Engines (2 off) and gear box’s (5 off) will of be an indeterminate age but will / must contain a mixture of bits dating from less than 12 months old all the way through to the 32 years age of the original airframe. I think though the most remarkable aircraft was ZA671. It was delivered to the RAF as a HC1 Chinook and returned and rebuilt by Boeing as a HC2.
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Anyway, what's for sure is that it's ALWAYS a bad idea to fly or sail during bad weather conditions
Especially when it comes to small or medium sized civilian aircrafts/boats
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