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![]() "Zomby Woof" wrote in message news:0sULi.28297$x%6.23120@pd7urf2no... 42 Tons of air per minute. At that rate it could stay aloft for ~15 minutes. That's assuming a 14.7 to 1 air to fuel ratio. -- Tom |
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pretty cool dude!!1
"octothorpe" wrote in message news:yQULi.12282$Ww5.888@trnddc03... "Zomby Woof" wrote in message news:0sULi.28297$x%6.23120@pd7urf2no... 42 Tons of air per minute. At that rate it could stay aloft for ~15 minutes. That's assuming a 14.7 to 1 air to fuel ratio. -- Tom |
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On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 21:48:14 GMT, "octothorpe"
wrote: "Zomby Woof" wrote in message news:0sULi.28297$x%6.23120@pd7urf2no... 42 Tons of air per minute. At that rate it could stay aloft for ~15 minutes. That's assuming a 14.7 to 1 air to fuel ratio. All of which shows that a TF-39 engine has a lot higher air to fuel ratio. There is no particular reason for a jet engine to fully combust the oxygen in the air, which is where that 14.7 figure comes from. Secondly, the TF-39 has a bypass ratio of 8 to 1, meaning 8 times as much air goes around the hot section as through it, and never gets combusted at all. Try http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/ngnsim.html (especially the CF6 model) If you play with this, you can see a jet engine at full power could could have a air fuel ratio of 60. With the 8:1 bypass ratio, the overall number could be 540. This would give an answer of about nine hours at full power. --Rolf |
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![]() "Rolf T. Kappe" wrote in message ... On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 21:48:14 GMT, "octothorpe" wrote: "Zomby Woof" wrote in message news:0sULi.28297$x%6.23120@pd7urf2no... 42 Tons of air per minute. At that rate it could stay aloft for ~15 minutes. That's assuming a 14.7 to 1 air to fuel ratio. All of which shows that a TF-39 engine has a lot higher air to fuel ratio. There is no particular reason for a jet engine to fully combust the oxygen in the air, which is where that 14.7 figure comes from. Secondly, the TF-39 has a bypass ratio of 8 to 1, meaning 8 times as much air goes around the hot section as through it, and never gets combusted at all. Try http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/ngnsim.html (especially the CF6 model) If you play with this, you can see a jet engine at full power could could have a air fuel ratio of 60. With the 8:1 bypass ratio, the overall number could be 540. This would give an answer of about nine hours at full power. --Rolf I suspected there would be a problem with the calculation. I completely forgot about "bypass". Thank you for the informed answer and the URL. That looks especially interesting. -- Tom |
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