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#171
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in news:6sWdne8- : I agree. The history stuff is interesting but highly speculative to say the least. Sorting it out can try your patience for sure. I remember Bader telling me about one "historian" who cornered him one evening and proceeded to TELL him about an air battle he had been in personally. When Bader tried to correct the man on a certain detail he personally had experienced, the "historian" argued with him that he (Bader) was wrong! :-)) Beautiful. It's realy interesting talking to those guys. I haven't met one in a long time, now, though.. They'll soon be all gone.. I did meet a B-50 pilot at a party not too long ago. He was interesting to talk to alright. Pretty old! Bertie We're losing a lot of our last flying generation each year. -- Dudley Henriques |
#172
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Roger wrote:
On Sun, 16 Mar 2008 09:25:24 -0400, Peter Clark wrote: On Sat, 15 Mar 2008 19:39:13 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: I believe you are repeating wht I have said. I said that "dragging it in" generally refers to flying the approach in the area of reverse command or if you will behind the power curve. This is absolutely Well, time to try again. I had this ready to go and the computer ate it. When flying a Debonair, F-33, and A36 Bo by the POH all landings are done well below the max endurance speed, but not to the point where they don't have enough reserve power to arrest or even change the descent into a climb. They are however in the area where power controls rate of descent and pitch controls speed. correct. Coffin corner is the area behind the curve where sink rate can't be stopped with power but requires reduction in angle of attack. For a perfect example of an aircraft in coffin corner, see the Edwards AFB accident involving a young AF pilot who got his F100 so deep into coffin corner behind the curve he couldn't recover the airplane; not I saw the video and he did one whale of a job balancing on the thrust/tail until he lost it. He just needed a few thousand pounds more thrust. enough air under him to reduce the angle of attack. He applied full burner but couldn't fly it out on power alone. Reduction of angle of attack was what he needed and he didn't have the room. THIS is the definition of coffin corner and it most certainly IS in the area of reverse command. I saw a clip of a 104 that was skidding sideways and then flipped over on its top. I believe the engine seized on that one. any thought? I thought coffin corner was the point where if you go slower you stall and if you go faster you hit critical mach number? Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com I think it's in the pilot's code that we're not allowed to say the airplane flipped over on it's "top" :-)))) -- Dudley Henriques |
#173
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On Mar 16, 7:31 pm, Roger wrote:
.... I saw the video and he did one whale of a job balancing on the thrust/tail until he lost it. He just needed a few thousand pounds more thrust. I think some tape of that incident was used in this movie, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048364/ enough air under him to reduce the angle of attack. He applied full burner but couldn't fly it out on power alone. Reduction of angle of attack was what he needed and he didn't have the room. THIS is the definition of coffin corner and it most certainly IS in the area of reverse command. I saw a clip of a 104 that was skidding sideways and then flipped over on its top. I believe the engine seized on that one. any thought? I have a clip from "Planes of Flame", where the 104 is tangled in an arrestor net, yaws left, then rolls over right that looked messy. Is that the clip you mean? Ken Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)www.rogerhalstead.com |
#174
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in news:6sWdne8- : I agree. The history stuff is interesting but highly speculative to say the least. Sorting it out can try your patience for sure. I remember Bader telling me about one "historian" who cornered him one evening and proceeded to TELL him about an air battle he had been in personally. When Bader tried to correct the man on a certain detail he personally had experienced, the "historian" argued with him that he (Bader) was wrong! :-)) Beautiful. It's realy interesting talking to those guys. I haven't met one in a long time, now, though.. They'll soon be all gone.. I did meet a B-50 pilot at a party not too long ago. He was interesting to talk to alright. Pretty old! Bertie We're losing a lot of our last flying generation each year. Yep Bertie |
#175
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
news ![]() Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in news:6sWdne4- : Chuck used to feather one engine and do a roll into it. I believe he did some dead stick as well. Oh he did. Definitely. At least i think it was him. It definitely wasn't hoover, anyway. Did he beat the odds? Last I heard, Chuck was alive and well and still flying. Very good! Still doing deadstick aerobatics, though? Bertie |
#176
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "Blueskies" wrote in . net: LeVier did a lot of the high mach number dive tests in the 38, and there definitely was a compressibility problem, mach tuck; the whole works. I know they added speed brakes but not sure at exactly what stage. The engine rotation switch was early on in the program according to Ethell; I believe in the YP38 stage before the first production run. If I'm not mistaken, the high mach dives came after the switch but I'm not at all certain of that. -- Dudley Henriques All the -38s sold to England had same rotation direction engines on both sides all the way through. Just another odd thing... Are you sure about that? Bertie I heard the same thing. The Brits raised hell about what they considered a high degree of possibility for unnecessary maintainence due to the handed engines. On the practical side, the Brits had ordered a ton of P40's which used the V1710 Allison with a right handed prop. The word we got was that the brits wanted the Allison's on the 38's to be interchangeable with the P40 to cut down on cost. Well, that's reasonable. Never heard that before. Could be an urban legend based on one photo of an airplane field kitted with two RH engines. A bit like the Fokker DR1 that got an odd aileron and started a legend that they all had one smaller than the other to compensate for torque. Bertie Possible?? Torque correction IS in roll and not yaw as is the common belief :-) Oh the things had torque issues alright, but some nerd of an historian has proven that there was only one DR1 with mismatched ailerons. The eraly ones had one size and the later ones had another and a field repair resulted in the one with two odd ailerons. Since it was a good pictiure showing them clearly and someone did a detailed drawing basd on it, it got lodged in folklore. There were airplanes that had larger wings n the left for this purpose however. Ansaldo, for one. Bertie I guess the WW1 practical test for German AI's missed "aileron mismatch" :-)) Wouldn't be the first or last time! I had two very different wings on a Luscombe with two completely different aileron hinge arrangements. It was a very early 1939 airplane and it must have damaged a wing and one was put on from a later machine. There's a famous pic of a DC-3 that was dmamged and flown for a time with a DC 2 wing, which was considerably smaller.. Early days of WW2 in China, I beleive. Bertie I think I remember that DC3 shot. Lots of spare parts birds out there. Many civvy Mustangs were retrofitted with P63 brakes if that counts :-)) Yeah, it's a pretty common shot. IIRC it had some Chinese wrting on the top of the wings. I think I have it in a book about the flying tigers, in fact. Bertie |
#177
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#179
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in news ![]() Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in news:6sWdne4- : Chuck used to feather one engine and do a roll into it. I believe he did some dead stick as well. Oh he did. Definitely. At least i think it was him. It definitely wasn't hoover, anyway. Did he beat the odds? Last I heard, Chuck was alive and well and still flying. Very good! Still doing deadstick aerobatics, though? Bertie Not sure. Haven't seen him for a while now. -- Dudley Henriques |
#180
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
"Ken S. Tucker" wrote in news:e7b02c3d-eb33-4b04- : On Mar 16, 7:31 pm, Roger wrote: ... I saw the video and he did one whale of a job balancing on the thrust/tail until he lost it. He just needed a few thousand pounds more thrust. I think some tape of that incident was used in this movie, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048364/ enough air under him to reduce the angle of attack. He applied full burner but couldn't fly it out on power alone. Reduction of angle of attack was what he needed and he didn't have the room. THIS is the definition of coffin corner and it most certainly IS in the area of reverse command. I saw a clip of a 104 that was skidding sideways and then flipped over on its top. I believe the engine seized on that one. any thought? I have a clip from "Planes of Flame", where the 104 is tangled in an arrestor net, yaws left, then rolls over right that looked messy. Is that the clip you mean? Ken Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)www.rogerhalstead.com A whole post where you didn't say anything idiotic. this must be a first, kennie! Bertie There does seem to be some improvement here. :-) -- Dudley Henriques |
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