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What's some of the unusual uses for avionics you've heard of?
I'll start off with a few: Some airrline pilots turn on the weather radar during takeoff, their superstition is that it scares away birds. During WWII, there was just enough space between some tubes in one radio set to hide a thin flask of hooch. A later model of the same radio was much disliked, as the design was perhaps changed intentionally to eliminate this cubby-hole. .. |
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"George R. Gonzalez" wrote:
What's some of the unusual uses for avionics you've heard of? I'll start off with a few: Some airrline pilots turn on the weather radar during takeoff, their superstition is that it scares away birds. During WWII, there was just enough space between some tubes in one radio set to hide a thin flask of hooch. A later model of the same radio was much disliked, as the design was perhaps changed intentionally to eliminate this cubby-hole. Don't know how "unusual" this is, but during an emergency under a very low ceiling with a fast moving front approaching I've used my handheld GPS (w/moving map) for NOE navigation which possibly saved my life. |
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"George R. Gonzalez" wrote in message news:jIgeb.639605$Ho3.131537@sccrnsc03...
What's some of the unusual uses for avionics you've heard of? Hoho: 1) On long XCs in the T33 tuning to the 'bottom' on the VOR would yield a commercial FM radio station and music, etc. (ISTR that was 108.3mhz) 2) The F102A's upper electronics bay would hold two adults with the bay door shut so the space was utilized a lot on flights from Canada to the US for other (ahem) freight - like eight cases . . . I understand the same opportunity existed in the F89 series, accessed from a panel above and between the engine exhausts, although this, strictly speaking, wasn't an electronics bay. WaltBJ |
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Not electronics, but chaff tanks on EB-57s had been known to carry
smoked hams, shrimp, and beer. |
#5
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Buzzer wrote:
Not electronics, but chaff tanks on EB-57s had been known to carry smoked hams, shrimp, and beer. Engine sling compartments on Lancasters, wheel well fairings on P2V-7's and the Hydraulics bay between the bomb bay's on the Argus were all the sweet spots for transporting 'goods' when homeward bound from jaunts to Bermuda, Lajes and other ASW haunts. ![]() (memories of CC for a buck a fourty...Bacardi's two bucks a fourty or Cockspur Rum for SEVENTY CENTS!! -- -Gord. |
#6
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Don't know how "unusual" it is, but when ADF's were common, they were
used to point out lightning, long before there was a "Strikefinder", which I've heard was developed from a cheap ADF. |
#7
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"Gord Beaman" ) wrote in message . ..
Buzzer wrote: Not electronics, but chaff tanks on EB-57s had been known to carry smoked hams, shrimp, and beer. SNIP: Chaff tanks! 2 ALE-2s on a T33, call ahead, the dealer would be there at BaseOps at Dow AFB with 300 lobsters - 150 per tank, seaweed and ice and two quick ops-stop hops back to Homestead FL! Quite a sight to see the bugs crawing about the 319th FIS ramp before the feast. Walt BJ |
#8
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I saw a guy crack some walnuts with a processor from an ALR-46 RWR once
(a hundred thousand bucks worth of electronics). The funny part was that it was a repair action (the cards inside got loose, and the common way to reseat them was to undo some lock screws and whack the thing on a solid surface from a couple of inches up). -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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#10
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It wasn't really avionics, but in the bad old days when lots of us
smoked (and could, in the A-1), a pilot who forgot his lighter could light up by using the light bulb in the gun sight (unscrew the fitting, turn the sight on, hold against cigarette). Jim Thomas George R. Gonzalez wrote: What's some of the unusual uses for avionics you've heard of? I'll start off with a few: Some airrline pilots turn on the weather radar during takeoff, their superstition is that it scares away birds. During WWII, there was just enough space between some tubes in one radio set to hide a thin flask of hooch. A later model of the same radio was much disliked, as the design was perhaps changed intentionally to eliminate this cubby-hole. . |
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