Subject: Power on the flareout.
From: (B2431)
Date: 1/10/04 6:38 PM Pacific Standard Time
Message-id:
From: "Tom Swift"
Date: 1/10/2004 1:24 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:
Is this the Comedy Channel?
Hilarious stuff though, a Pilot discussing the relative methods of landing
an airplane with a Bombardier. Really funny.
A bombardier with a bunch of experience in a B-26. If he says he heard the
engines do something then he heard them.
The odds are he has a very good idea how everything in the aircraft worked.
Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired
Well almost everything. (grin) Of course every member of the crew becomes very
sensitive to every sound and is familiar with every sound.If a sound changes
with no reason, your heart beat goes faster and your blood pressure rises and
your adrenalin pumps. I remember that if Paul or Bob let the R-2800's go even
sligfhtly out of synch we would get that annoying beat frequency sound and I
would wonder what the hell is happening in the cockpit, aren't those guys
paying attention., But they always were and all got synched up fast. Look at
it this way. You are sitting in the nose of a Marauder. The sun is beating in
the Plexi and the temperature is rising. It is getting really warm. Then the
engines creep slightly out of synch and you get those droning beat
frequencies. Try to stay awake. It ain't easy.
Arthur Kramer
344th BG 494th BS
England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany
Visit my WW II B-26 website at:
http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer