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John Doe wrote:
Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: ... The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. -- Richard Lamb |
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cavelamb wrote:
John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: ... The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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Dan wrote:
cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. -- Thanks to the replies. |
#4
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"John Doe" wrote in message
... Dan wrote: cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. -- Thanks to the replies. I would imagine less dangerous than trying to in-line skate with one of those things on :-) -- Remember Altitude is more important than Attitude |
#5
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![]() "Garry O" wrote in message u... "John Doe" wrote in message ... Dan wrote: cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. -- Thanks to the replies. I would imagine less dangerous than trying to in-line skate with one of those things on :-) There was a rocket powered roller skater back in the 70's http://www.the-rocketman.com/capt-rollerball.html Keith |
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"Garry O" wrote in
u: "John Doe" wrote in message ... Dan wrote: cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. -- Thanks to the replies. I would imagine less dangerous than trying to in-line skate with one of those things on :-) this powered-skater thing reminds me of the rocket-powered street luge. (used Aerotech APCP rocket motors.) -- Jim Yanik jyanik at localnet dot com |
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On Jul 22, 8:49*am, Jim Yanik wrote:
"Garry O" wrote .au: "John Doe" wrote in message . .. Dan wrote: cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. -- Thanks to the replies. I would imagine less dangerous than trying to in-line skate with one of those things on :-) this powered-skater thing reminds me of the rocket-powered street luge. (used Aerotech APCP rocket motors.) -- Jim Yanik jyanik at localnet dot com The whole concept sounds like a qualification entry for a Darwin Award. Dean |
#8
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Dean damarkley gmail.com wrote:
Jim Yanik wrote: "Garry O" wrote "John Doe" wrote Dan wrote: cavelamb wrote: John Doe wrote: Orval Fairbairn o_r_fairbairn earth_link.net wrote: The model airplane guys have a very small (about 15" long, 5" dia) turbojet that they use on scale jet R/C planes. It costs about $3000 US. How much for maintenance and fuel? It burns a quart of fuel in a minute or minute and a half. Is it louder than a gas powered weedeater? Just curious. Deafening. 100,000 RPM with every harmonic ever invented. I think they missed the lower sub harmonics, but who can hear over that racket? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxT5H...eature=related Some backpack fan powered paragliding. Looks like so much fun, but dangerous. I would imagine less dangerous than trying to in-line skate with one of those things on :-) It would be a riot, somewhere around 250 cc I guess, apparently more than necessary. Also maybe too heavy. this powered-skater thing reminds me of the rocket-powered street luge. (used Aerotech APCP rocket motors.) The whole concept sounds like a qualification entry for a Darwin Award. I have many years experience inline street skating, and designing and building stuff. Street skating, on narrow or uneven sidewalks, up and down curbs, and on rough streets presents a unique opportunity for invention. Sail powered skating would be good if not for the restriction of movement, that is similar to ordinary pushing. Propeller powered skating is attractive because of surface traction difficulties. There would be no need to pull something, like a push stick, up a curb. Flexibility in motion is a great asset of rough street skating, and propeller power would allow for excellent freedom of motion. I mainly need to know how propeller power compares to ordinary motor and wheel against the ground propulsion. -- See also Google Groups Dean |
#9
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On Jul 22, 9:31*am, Dean wrote:
... The whole concept sounds like a qualification entry for a Darwin Award. Dean The perpetrator of the car embedded in the cliff posted the full story once on rec.crafts.metalworking. No one was injured, the rocket car was rolling unmanned down an old mining railroad at maybe 60 MPH and when their crude brakes failed it slid into the tunnel entrance, which collapsed on it. The skid marks at the corner are from when they bugged out afterwards, they are actually from driving full-throttle onto the pavement from the sand. They had plowed the sand off the tracks and it probably blew back and hid them before the wrecker arrived. jsw |
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