Yes, twin-engine helicopters are available, offering enhanced safety through engine redundancy, greater performance, and suitability for longer or over-water routes in scenic and charter operations.
Twin-engine helicopters provide critical redundancy—if one engine fails, the remaining engine powers continued safe flight and landing without relying on autorotation.
KiliFlying Air maintains modern twin-engine models in its fleet, deploying them for demanding routes, client preferences, or operations requiring extra margins.
This guide compares single vs twin-engine safety, advantages, typical models, operational uses, and booking considerations.
Twin engines eliminate single-engine failure risk requiring autorotation. The aircraft continues normal powered flight on one engine, enhancing safety over water or remote terrain.
Regulations often mandate twins for certain commercial operations beyond gliding distance to shore.
Higher power enables better hot/high performance, heavier payloads, faster cruise speeds, and improved climb rates compared to similar-sized single-engine models.
Larger cabins and range suit extended transfers or multi-stop itineraries.
Both configurations maintain excellent safety records when properly maintained. Single-engine helicopters rely on proven autorotation capability.
Twins offer additional redundancy preferred by some clients and required for specific missions.
Popular options include Airbus H135, Bell 407, Bell 429, and AW109—combining reliability, comfort, and modern avionics for premium charter experiences.
These models accommodate 5-8 passengers with generous baggage space.
Extended over-water flights, long-distance transfers, high-altitude operations, or corporate/VIP requirements often benefit from twin-engine selection.
KiliFlying Air advises the best aircraft based on route, group size, and preferences.
Twin-engine helicopters deliver premium safety and performance. Contact KiliFlying Air to discuss twin options for your flight requirements.