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The Navy used to have plenty of radial-pistonengined aircraft on
carriers. Now my question: in radial-engines oil is collecting in the lower cylinders when its stopped. Thats is one reason to handturn the engine before it is started.Then the oil is queezed out in the exhaustsystem and eventually on the ground. Now i thought how dangerous, filthy and slippery the deck must have been when an deckload of Hellcats, Avengers and so on started there engines nearly simultaniusly. How was this avoided or was it just ignored. Greetings Max |
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On Mon, 06 Dec 2004 20:59:33 +0100, Max Richter
postulated : The Navy used to have plenty of radial-pistonengined aircraft on carriers. Now my question: in radial-engines oil is collecting in the lower cylinders when its stopped. Thats is one reason to handturn the engine before it is started.Then the oil is queezed out in the exhaustsystem and eventually on the ground. Now i thought how dangerous, filthy and slippery the deck must have been when an deckload of Hellcats, Avengers and so on started there engines nearly simultaniusly. How was this avoided or was it just ignored. Greetings Max During the 50's there were weighted drip pans available for the worst offenders and the wooden deck soaked up the rest. A periodic blast from a fire hose did the clean up. During my day the only recips still flying on the CVAs were Skyraiders (AD-5 and -6) and Stoofs (S2F and TF). |
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Max Richter wrote:
The Navy used to have plenty of radial-pistonengined aircraft on carriers. Now my question: in radial-engines oil is collecting in the lower cylinders when its stopped. Thats is one reason to handturn the engine before it is started.Then the oil is queezed out in the exhaustsystem and eventually on the ground. Now i thought how dangerous, filthy and slippery the deck must have been when an deckload of Hellcats, Avengers and so on started there engines nearly simultaniusly. How was this avoided or was it just ignored. Greetings Max Drip pans (typically 4X5 feet in size), Speedy-Dry (cat litter) and cotton mops. It was normal to let sixteen blades pass before turning the mag switch on. The liquid oil in the exhaust collector rings burned off immediately. Rick |
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Thank You very much for these answers and i wish every one on this group
a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year Max Max Richter schrieb: The Navy used to have plenty of radial-pistonengined aircraft on carriers. Now my question: in radial-engines oil is collecting in the lower cylinders when its stopped. Thats is one reason to handturn the engine before it is started.Then the oil is queezed out in the exhaustsystem and eventually on the ground. Now i thought how dangerous, filthy and slippery the deck must have been when an deckload of Hellcats, Avengers and so on started there engines nearly simultaniusly. How was this avoided or was it just ignored. Greetings Max |
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Max Richter wrote:
The Navy used to have plenty of radial-pistonengined aircraft on carriers. Now my question: in radial-engines oil is collecting in the lower cylinders when its stopped. Thats is one reason to handturn the engine before it is started.Then the oil is queezed out in the exhaustsystem and eventually on the ground. Now i thought how dangerous, filthy and slippery the deck must have been when an deckload of Hellcats, Avengers and so on started there engines nearly simultaniusly. How was this avoided or was it just ignored. Greetings Max Well yes, they are somewhat messy but it's not as you describe them. they use pretty high capacity scavenge pumps to keep the engine internal spaces relatively free of oil after it's done it's thing in the bearings etc. The business of turning the engine over before starting is just to check for hydraulic lock which would be disastrous for the engine, not to 'squeegee' the oil out. -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
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