snip but modified to try and eliminate the "chugs", . .
That brings back MANY memories- We spent LOTS of nights out there on the
high-power line trying to duplicate that chug. Watchin the trim box, blow
out the PT-2 line, watch those pressures, trying to concentrate while
FREEZIN our asses off!
We called it "jam accell"- creep the throttle up and SLAM it to military,
slam it back down, then repeat about 250 times. Nope, were not going to
"A799" this one!
The high-power line was WAY out there between the runways at Whidbey.
MidRats never tasted so good after spending a few hours out on high-power!
Cold, dark, wet. The "Rock" was one of those places you either loved, or
hated.
Lots of memories.
Thanks, I *almost* forgot about that. Those were pretty good times-
definitely worth revisiting.
--
Larry
AECS (AW/SW/MTS)
Disabled Combat Veteran
USN Retired
20 years of Navy in my rear view mirror
and getting further away every day ;-)
"user" wrote in message
...
Prowler Motors are mostly J52-408Bravo's now. Same thrust as the
408A's (10,400 - 11,200 lbs per motor) but modified to try and
eliminate the "chugs", (didn't work, the compressor still stalls under
the right conditions), also have new 3 1/2 bearings and a reinforced
or beefed up compressor casing.
On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 07:27:07 -0500 (EST), (Kurt
{:{) wrote:
Hi,
-
I was to an air show awhile back. I was inspecting a Navy A6 Intruder. I
caught the exhaust end of the tail pipe and noticed a circumference of
mesh "feathers" on the inner ID, that honestly looked like dragonfly
wings, gossamer in texture. I wonder what the function of this is, what
the material is, and how is it produced? A stamping process is a guess.
Material---titanium?
-
Thanks.
-
Kurt
{:{