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Any idea who owns this or what it is doing? From under the landing pattern for
San Diego's International Airport, we watch dozens of airliners and corporate jets gliding down to land. Occasionally, someone comes in all cocked up and we joke about, "Airport is over THAT way!" Rare, though - its mostly a conveyor belt of Southwest Airlines jets passing over to land about 2 miles away. The exceedingly rare sound of a radial is enough to turn my head to look up and a B-26K, white and silver with white tip-tanks, came over just looking like a million bucks. The sounds of the twin radials carried for miles and I bet more than a few people looked up to see that old warbird pass. I'd love to see it at an airshow but its a new one to me. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Donate your memories - write a note on the back and send your old photos to a reputable museum, don't take them with you when you're gone. |
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police,
(Krztalizer) blurted out: Any idea who owns this or what it is doing? From under the landing pattern for San Diego's International Airport, we watch dozens of airliners and corporate jets gliding down to land. Hope your observation point is not on short final to 27...I get a chuckle thinking of the folks that live with spooled up 757s passing less than 200 feet RA (radio/radar altitude) over their noggins. I'd love to see a 747 on final to 27 (must have at some point since there are special taxi lines labeled 747 at the threshold of 27). Wonder what a house costs right there, wonder what conversations are like inside those homes. Juvat |
#3
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On Thu, 05 Feb 2004 13:06:42 GMT, Juvat
wrote in Message-Id: : After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, (Krztalizer) blurted out: Any idea who owns this or what it is doing? From under the landing pattern for San Diego's International Airport, we watch dozens of airliners and corporate jets gliding down to land. Hope your observation point is not on short final to 27...I get a chuckle thinking of the folks that live with spooled up 757s passing less than 200 feet RA (radio/radar altitude) over their noggins. I'd love to see a 747 on final to 27 (must have at some point since there are special taxi lines labeled 747 at the threshold of 27). Wonder what a house costs right there, wonder what conversations are like inside those homes. In the '50s with the advent of turbine powered aircraft, the B-707 noise assault on homes under the 4 approach paths to LAX 3 to 4 miles distant from the threshold was so bad, that it was completely impossible to have a conversation or hear the 6 o'clock news. I would characterize the constant din of arriving aircraft overhead every 5 minutes for a couple of hours every night as being unhealthy and EXTREMELY LOUD. Within a year or two, property values plummeted to the point that minority residents were able to afford veritable mansions in the once prestigious neighborhoods surrounding the airport. The homeowners' litigation against the City of Los Angeles raged for decades. The city was ultimately forced(?) to purchase much of the prime ocean front property under the departure path at depressed prices. The city's reprehensible conduct in permitting the operation of noisy aircraft to degrade the environment of residents' habitat to such a degree that they were forced to move was/is the epitome of hubris. But like the effective hushing of police helicopters, that in the '70s were so loud overhead on their nightly neighborhood patrols that they would repeatedly rouse sleeping residents, today's airliners are as quiet as many piston powered aircraft. In the end, the city's arrogance provided minority citizens an otherwise unavailable equal-rights opportunity at a time when local laws required 'negroes' off the public streets after 10:00 pm. And the Great Experiment trundles forward ... |
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Hope your observation point is not on short final to 27..
We sit in the Aerospace Museum's back parking lot, across the street from the old Balboa Naval Hospital (Pink Palace). There is a wide swath of grass bordered by trees and as the airliners drift by or directly over, they pass close enough that we can watch their wingtip vortexes sweep eerily through the treetops half a minute after the airliner has gone. My kiddos love it - we sit and play in the San Diego sunshine, critiquing each flight crew and enjoying the show. .I get a chuckle thinking of the folks that live with spooled up 757s passing less than 200 feet RA (radio/radar altitude) over their noggins. I'd love to see a 747 on final to 27 (must have at some point since there are special taxi lines labeled 747 at the threshold of 27). Haven't seen a jumbo land there recently, but we used to have a twice-weekly BA 747 come in between the buildings and land. Lots of fun when it passes over at 350' as you drive 85 mph down I-5. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Donate your memories - write a note on the back and send your old photos to a reputable museum, don't take them with you when you're gone. |
#5
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After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police,
(Krztalizer) blurted out: We sit in the Aerospace Museum's back parking lot, across the street from the old Balboa Naval Hospital (Pink Palace). Oh yeah, I know exactly where you're watching from, the Museum has its name on the roof...this coming Sunday morning about 10:45L a 757 with red tail, that'll be me. Haven't seen a jumbo land there recently, but we used to have a twice-weekly BA 747 come in between the buildings and land. Lots of fun when it passes over at 350' as you drive 85 mph down I-5. I can imagine, we have a similar setup on the approach end of 30L/R in MSP. Juvat |
#6
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Larry Dighera wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 05 Feb 2004 13:06:42 GMT, Juvat wrote in Message-Id: : After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, (Krztalizer) blurted out: Any idea who owns this or what it is doing? From under the landing pattern for San Diego's International Airport, we watch dozens of airliners and corporate jets gliding down to land. Hope your observation point is not on short final to 27...I get a chuckle thinking of the folks that live with spooled up 757s passing less than 200 feet RA (radio/radar altitude) over their noggins. I'd love to see a 747 on final to 27 (must have at some point since there are special taxi lines labeled 747 at the threshold of 27). Wonder what a house costs right there, wonder what conversations are like inside those homes. In the '50s with the advent of turbine powered aircraft, the B-707 noise assault on homes under the 4 approach paths to LAX 3 to 4 miles distant from the threshold was so bad, that it was completely impossible to have a conversation or hear the 6 o'clock news. I would characterize the constant din of arriving aircraft overhead every 5 minutes for a couple of hours every night as being unhealthy and EXTREMELY LOUD. Within a year or two, property values plummeted to the point that minority residents were able to afford veritable mansions in the once prestigious neighborhoods surrounding the airport. The homeowners' litigation against the City of Los Angeles raged for decades. The city was ultimately forced(?) to purchase much of the prime ocean front property under the departure path at depressed prices. The city's reprehensible conduct in permitting the operation of noisy aircraft to degrade the environment of residents' habitat to such a degree that they were forced to move was/is the epitome of hubris. But like the effective hushing of police helicopters, that in the '70s were so loud overhead on their nightly neighborhood patrols that they would repeatedly rouse sleeping residents, today's airliners are as quiet as many piston powered aircraft. In the end, the city's arrogance provided minority citizens an otherwise unavailable equal-rights opportunity at a time when local laws required 'negroes' off the public streets after 10:00 pm. And the Great Experiment trundles forward ... I wonder if jet engine engineers had of been given an absolute imperative to develop silent engines for 50s and 60s commercial avaition we could all have been spared this. Jet engine development was driven by the needs of the Military and for them noise and soot come second to succesfull penetration and survival. Personaly I think given a requirement and the industry would have risen to the challenge. I was reading about a rather quiet turbofan engine the germans were developing and ran succesfully on a bench several times in 1943 but was cancelled so that resources could be freed for the more desperately needed conventional turbojets and their turboprop derivatives. The Daimler Benz DB 007 was a rear fan turbofan in which the outer part of the turbine also acts as fan. The mixing of high velocity with medium velocity air apparently made the engine quiet. I believe some business jets used such a rear fan configuration. Can't recolled the name now? The engine consisted of a contarotating stator drum and inner axial compressor driven by gears. At the rear the inner 30% of the turbine was in low pressure bleed air and here it acted as a sort of gentle fan. The outer 30% acted as a fan as well. The middle 40% was in combustion air of about 1100C. Most german engines ran at just under 800C and used hollow cooled blades but in this configuration the blades could handle 1100C without inner cooling since the roots and tips were in very cooling airflows. Silencing seemed to require introducing the turbofan, getting rid of the external support spider, and mixing he hot exaust gases by creating turbulence and simply putting sound absorbing padding around part of the assembly. Engines these days are so silent one hardly notices the A320 B737NG class of aircraft. They are at their worst when manoevering excessively to avoid overflying areas to keep the noise down. |
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