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#15
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![]() "Blueskies" wrote in message et... | | "George" wrote in message . net... | Blueskies wrote: | I meant while the part was in service. If an engine mount was brazed, and there was an engine fire, would the braze | joint fail (come apart) where a welded one would hold? | | | | Dunno, Mongo. | | I guess it would depend on how hot for how long. | | But remember that it takes an acetylene flame to braze in the first | place. | | If if gets that hot in the engine room, whether the mount welds hold or | not is probably going to be a secondary issue... | | Richard | | Its just gotta last long enough for me to get it on the ground ;-) | | | | | Getting it on the ground is no problem, gravity will help you with that task, now doing it in a survivable manner, | that is the trick. | | George | | Reminds me of the guy with the souped up O-200 formula racer. The engine was putting out great power at something like | 3200 rpm, till it threw a prop blade at something like 2000' agl... Shook real bad and tore the engine off the mount, | but the safety cable kept it from coming loose from the airframe, so he was able to get it back on the ground "in a | survivable manner". If it had broken completely loose the CG would have been way off and that would have been the end of | it... | | Same thing with a fire in flight. I would at least want the engine to hang on for a while to give me a fighting | chance... An ex Air Force pilot landed with his engine separated from his airplane over Illinois a good many years back. I think the airplane was a Globe Swift that had a Continental 65 in it with a wood prop. The whole incident from throwing a prop blade, physically loosing the engine and making a safe landing took place in less than a minute. When the airplane whipped up into a stall, his jet training kicked in, and he knife edged it. Let the nose fall through and with full down elevator and plenty of airspeed he was able to do a near vertical dive to a fresh plowed field. At the last second he rounded out and plowed the field again with the firewall. The article said the investigators figured the plowed field kept the airplane from whipping back up into a stall after initial contact. -- Anyolmouse ---- Posted via Pronews.com - Premium Corporate Usenet News Provider ---- http://www.pronews.com offers corporate packages that have access to 100,000+ newsgroups |
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