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#131
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![]() "Pat Flannery" wrote in message ... MichaelJP wrote: I always think flying an Me-163 in combat must have been one of the most crazy experiences in wartime aviation, firstly you have all the explosive fuel around you, secondly you are shortly to be boosted at tremendous climb rates into the middle of a heavily armed B-17 formation, thirdly if you survive all that and manage to get a shot in before the couple of minutes before the motor dies, you have to glide back like a brick to a tiny airfield and land on a skid! As a glider it was superb, thanks to Lippisch's background as a glider designer. Although the pilots tended to dive away at high speed to escape enemy fighters once their fuel was gone (and to get back to base ASAP for the same reason), it had a really good gliding performance, and the pilots who flew it said its handling qualities were superior to any other German aircraft. It's only drawback in gliding flight was that it was _too_ good at it - once it got down in ground effect near landing, it had a tendency to just float along above the ground till speed bled off and it would settle down. Even the addition of underwing extensible spoilers didn't completely solve the problem, and a lot of pilots were injured or killed by the aircraft remaining stubbornly airborne down the whole length of the landing field (they landed on grass generally) and not touching down till it arrived on the rough ground outside the field's boundaries. Pat Thanks Pat - the ME-163 is modelled in the superb combat flight sim IL-2, trying it last night they must have modelled this aircraft quite nicely as I found it very difficult to bleed off enough speed in the hold-off, exactly as you said above. Landing on the grass the skid dug in and certainly a real aircraft would have been destroyed. Difference is I could reset for another go ![]() Doing some other testing I found it impossible to recover from a spin entered from a slow-speed stall. Wonder if that's correct? |
#132
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![]() "Henry Spencer" wrote in message ... In article , Herb Schaltegger wrote: (also related to thinner air: rocket engines are more efficient with less back pressure. My undergraduate propulsion prof would be gagging at your use of the term "back pressure" Henry... This is the difference between someone whose idea of an unsophisticated audience is upper-year engineering students, and someone who's actually had practice writing for, and talking to, non-captive audiences. :-) Is "back pressure" strictly correct? Arguably not, although the issue is more complicated than it looks (for one thing, ambient pressure at the nozzle exit isn't necessarily the same as ambient pressure elsewhere on the engine, which in turn isn't necessarily the same as ambient pressure on the vehicle -- rocket exhausts can be powerful ejector pumps). But it *is* what you say if you want to give the right general impression to an audience that doesn't care to hear the rigorous details. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | In a similar way that the term "centrifugal force" is generally despised by experts, but for most people it's quite a good way to describe the sensations they experience. |
#133
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On Thu, 11 Jan 2007 21:37:33 -0600, Henry Spencer wrote
(in article ): In article , Herb Schaltegger wrote: (also related to thinner air: rocket engines are more efficient with less back pressure. My undergraduate propulsion prof would be gagging at your use of the term "back pressure" Henry... This is the difference between someone whose idea of an unsophisticated audience is upper-year engineering students, and someone who's actually had practice writing for, and talking to, non-captive audiences. :-) Is "back pressure" strictly correct? Arguably not, although the issue is more complicated than it looks (for one thing, ambient pressure at the nozzle exit isn't necessarily the same as ambient pressure elsewhere on the engine, which in turn isn't necessarily the same as ambient pressure on the vehicle -- rocket exhausts can be powerful ejector pumps). But it *is* what you say if you want to give the right general impression to an audience that doesn't care to hear the rigorous details. I know what you're saying Henry. It's just that every time I hear "back pressure" in terms of rocket or gas turbing engines, I still to this day have the mental image of Prof. Wilkerson standing at the blackboard, closing his eyes as if in pain and squeezing his hand so hard the chalk snaps . . . ;-) -- Herb Schaltegger "You can run on for a long time . . . sooner or later, God'll cut you down." - Johnny Cash http://www.angryherb.net |
#134
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![]() "Herb Schaltegger" wrote in message .com... I know what you're saying Henry. It's just that every time I hear "back pressure" in terms of rocket or gas turbing engines, I still to this day have the mental image of Prof. Wilkerson standing at the blackboard, closing his eyes as if in pain and squeezing his hand so hard the chalk snaps . . . ;-) He only snapped chalk? You're lucky. I had a Latin teacher that would throw it... very quickly... at the blackboard behind your head. THAT got your attention. -- Herb Schaltegger "You can run on for a long time . . . sooner or later, God'll cut you down." - Johnny Cash http://www.angryherb.net |
#135
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"Greg D. Moore (Strider)" wrote in message
news:TeMph.13533 "Herb Schaltegger" wrote in I know what you're saying Henry. It's just that every time I hear "back pressure" in terms of rocket or gas turbing engines, I still to this day have the mental image of Prof. Wilkerson standing at the blackboard, closing his eyes as if in pain and squeezing his hand so hard the chalk snaps . . . ;-) He only snapped chalk? You're lucky. I had a Latin teacher that would throw it... very quickly... at the blackboard behind your head. Why would your Latin get upset when you mentioned "back pressure"? g |
#136
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![]() "Steve Foley" wrote in message news:8mMph.7617$GL.3332@trndny06... "Greg D. Moore (Strider)" wrote in message news:TeMph.13533 "Herb Schaltegger" wrote in I know what you're saying Henry. It's just that every time I hear "back pressure" in terms of rocket or gas turbing engines, I still to this day have the mental image of Prof. Wilkerson standing at the blackboard, closing his eyes as if in pain and squeezing his hand so hard the chalk snaps . . . ;-) He only snapped chalk? You're lucky. I had a Latin teacher that would throw it... very quickly... at the blackboard behind your head. Why would your Latin get upset when you mentioned "back pressure"? g Because we were conjugating it properly. Geesh :-) |
#137
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#138
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![]() Henry Spencer wrote: The big reason why you might need tank insulation is if the tank holds LH2, in which case you need to insulate to prevent liquid air from condensing... and that'll happen even at subzero temperatures, so you can't get away with leaving it off. In the case of a carrier aircraft, the airstream should carry away any liquid air on the tank. Although a completely rreusable LV will have a TPS to take reentry heating, and therefore will already have exterior insulation, the drop tank solution makes for far easier design as far as vehicle weight goes. The gain is actually rather questionable, after you consider reentry -- the drop tank leaves behind a heavy, dense vehicle that makes a severe reentry. At reentry time, it's *good* if lots of the volume inside the TPS is empty tanks. The drop tank does make for far easier design if you can "throw the TPS problem over the fence" to the materials team... I'm really surprised that the small air-launched orbiter with giant drop tank concept didn't get anywhere- both we and the Russians thought the idea had enough merit to do designs of the concept: http://www.buran.ru/htm/busfact.htm#maks-op http://www.abo.fi/~mlindroo/SpaceLVs/Slides/sld053.htm Pat |
#139
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![]() Henry Spencer wrote: I wonder, though, if it actually ascends in that direction, or if that's just a transient error -- perhaps something to do with the dynamics of breaking the surface -- that the guidance system sorts out a second or two later. No, I've seen films of the launch; it comes out of the water straight, then immediately pitches over and climbs at a steep angle; There's a video of a launch he https://wrc.navair-rdte.navy.mil/war...bs/trident.mpg Pat |
#140
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Pat Flannery wrote:
Henry Spencer wrote: I wonder, though, if it actually ascends in that direction, or if that's just a transient error -- perhaps something to do with the dynamics of breaking the surface -- that the guidance system sorts out a second or two later. No, I've seen films of the launch; it comes out of the water straight, then immediately pitches over and climbs at a steep angle; There's a video of a launch he https://wrc.navair-rdte.navy.mil/war...bs/trident.mpg That's one launch out of many Pat. I've seen pictures of a Polaris coming out at about 30 degrees from vertical. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. -Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings. Oct 5th, 2004 JDL |
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