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Gord Beaman wrote:
"miket6065" wrote: snip Probably was that the pilot didn't have a direct linkage to the engine. It seems in the wings were the flight engineers and the pilot spoke into speaking tubes giving orders about power settings. This was almost as dangerous as the glider idea and Karl complained bitterly. Finally the pilot had some direct power control on the engines. I doubt that this is correct...on the Canadian ASW aircraft (the Argus) the pilots didn't operate the engines either, they never touched them, and we flew that aircraft for over twenty years with the flight engineers operating them...no accident was ever attributed to that fact. Gord, good to see that you're still here! The B-36 was also an FE-oriented airplane. The pilots had a set of coarse throttles, but all the fiddling and fine adjustment was done by the FEs (later models had 2 on duty at any given time). Of course, they had a lot to do - 6 engines, 6 props, 2 turbosuperchargers/engine, multispeed cooling fans (Which would chew up 200 hp/engine if you set 'em wrong) and, if they had nothing better to do, they could go out into the wing & change out the accessory sections. BTW, I just noted a new book in one of the local shops in the making of "The Dambusters" - lots of beautiful shots of Lancasters, both inside & out, from about your era - (Mid '50s). I think the Statute of Limitations is off now, so - after the movie came out, you guys weren't, uhm, taking the opportunity to practice chasing down the local lakes at 60', were you? (Just in case they needed to make the sequel, after all). Oh, yeah - the John Wayne estate's just released one of his better movies, after sitting on it for a couple of decades- "Island in the Sky". It's the story of a C-47 (Captained by John Wayne) on the North Atlantic Run (Preque Isle, Gander/Goose, Bluie West 1, Reykavik, Prestwick) forced down somewhere in Labrador or Newfoundland during Winter, and the search for the missing plane. It was adapted by Ernie Gann from his novel of the same name, which is based on events that actually happened while Gann was a Civil Contract pilot on the North Atlantic Run. The film was directed by Lafayette Escadrille veteran William Wyler - so it's got Authentic Aviation through the roof. It's damned good, and not your typical John Wayne movie. (And Wyler's presence shows that while Bomber Pilots make History, Fighter Pilots _do_ make movies.) I caught it on cable, but I understand it's also being released on DVD. -- Pete Stickney Java Man knew nothing about coffee. |
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