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#21
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On Sat, 27 Sep 2003 03:44:49 GMT, Mike Marron
wrote: Lemme guess, you're a former air force grease monkey now with a private pilot's license? [snicker] Mike, most every day you tempt me to put a filter on you. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#22
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Don't you just hate a guy who spoils a perfectly good argument by dragging facts into it? "White 9" deserves the credit, not "Glamorous Glennis"! This seems complete nonsense to me. The Germans did fly high-speed tests with the Me 262, of course. The senior Me 262 test pilot, Zeigler, has described how they climbed to 10.000 to 12.000 m, and then put the aircraft into a steep full-throttle dive. At 7000 meter they would reach 950 km/h, close enough to Mach 1 at that altitude to produce a deep rumble as the airflow detached, followed by a strong tendency for the nose to drop and the aircraft to roll. The Me 262 then entered an out-of-control dive until it had descended into the denser air at low altitude. The dive achieved only Mach 0.86 at 5700 m. It is also claimed that in July 1944 a modified Me 262 with a low-drag canopy reached slightly over 1000 km/h at 10.000 m in level flight, or Mach 0.92. But the type was firmly subsonic. In service Me 262 were 'red-lined' to stay out of compressibility problems, as they tended to become (quite unlike the XS-1 or F-86) completely uncontrollable at high Mach numbers. But the Me 262 actually had quite good decent aerodynamic characteristics for transsonic flight compared to the Meteor, which initially suffered from control problems already at Mach 0.71 to 0.74, because the engine nacelles of the early Meteors were too fat and disturbed the airflow. Of the propeller fighters the Spitfire got closest to Mach 1 because its thin wing had less drag at such high speeds even than the laminar flow wing of the Mustang. Tony Martindale reached 0.92, not without blowing up the gearing of the overspinning propeller, and bringing back the aircraft without propeller. There also is a claim that a weather reconnaissance PR.IX reached 0.96 in an uncontrolled dive from high altitude over Hong Kong. During WWII there were claims to have achieved Mach 1 in various fighters in dives, but most of these would have been transsonic dives, with airflow over the aircraft only being locally supersonic -- and airspeed indication probably becoming very unreliable as a result. It is characteristic of the true performance of these aircraft that when designers decided to install Mach meters, these had scales ranging only up to 0.8. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#23
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Mike Marron
wrote:Lemme guess, you're a former air force grease monkey now with a private pilot's license? [snicker] Petty and disrespectful. I don't think I'd trust flying with your ego. VL |
#24
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#25
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"Mike Marron" wrote in message ... Lemme guess, you're a former air force grease monkey now with a private pilot's license? [snicker] You write that like there might be something negative about being a former Air Force mechanic or private pilot. |
#26
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In article ,
Mike Marron wrote: "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Mike Marron" wrote: Er um, you misspelled "altitude." Nope. "Attitude" is used by pilots to describe the orientation of an aircraft's axes relative to a reference line, normally the horizon. Since you ain't a pilot, you regurgitated that one by rote, huh? Whether he is a pilot or not makes no difference; "attitude" was what was meant, "altitude" was not: The Me-262 wasn't going to be supersonic (in one piece, at least) in level flight or heading straight down, or any other attitude. |
#27
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In article ,
Mike Marron wrote: "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "Mike Marron" wrote: Since you ain't a pilot, you regurgitated that one by rote, huh? I'm more pilot than you can ever hope to be. Lemme guess, you're a former air force grease monkey now with a private pilot's license? [snicker] -Mike Marron Sigh... *PLONK* |
#29
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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote:
"Mike Marron" wrote: Lemme guess, you're a former air force grease monkey now with a private pilot's license? [snicker] You write that like there might be something negative about being a former Air Force mechanic or private pilot. Lemme guess, you are a United States Air Force technician now with a United States Federal Aviation Administration Private Pilot Certificate? -Mike (snicker) Marron |
#30
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Steve Hix wrote:
Whether he is a pilot or not makes no difference; "attitude" was what was meant, "altitude" was not: He said he was more pilot than I ever wuz or wannabe or sumpthin. The Me-262 wasn't going to be supersonic (in one piece, at least) in level flight or heading straight down, or any other attitude. Damn straight. So let's PLONK that Me-262 and be done with it!! -Mike (whole lotta' plonkin' goin' on) Marron |
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