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#21
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#23
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![]() "Thomas Borchert" wrote And the B-36. Berlin and Dresden never would have been bombed without running oversquare... Berlin and Dresden were bombed with B-36's? -- Jim in NC |
#24
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Thomas Borchert wrote in
: Blueskies, That was one of the 'tricks' Lindbergh taught the P-38 pilots to increase their range in the Pacific... And the B-36. Berlin and Dresden never would have been bombed without running oversquare... A, the B36 was only a pipedream in WW2, and running oversquare in a supercharged airplane is not relevant to the discussion anyway. For one thing, the engines were geared, for another, the MP pressures for takeoff for even the lowest boosted airplanes were in the order of 32 inches, with some running well over 40 inches. IOW you're comparing apples with oranges. Bertie |
#25
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![]() "Clark" wrote Right after the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor. chuckle Yeah, that's the ticket! The German's bombing Pearl Harbor; that's the ticket! What I would give, to see a real, full sized B-36 flying overhead, and doing a few takeoffs and landings and fly-bys, just one time! Think it will ever happen again? -- Jim in NC |
#26
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![]() "Morgans" wrote: What I would give, to see a real, full sized B-36 flying overhead, and doing a few takeoffs and landings and fly-bys, just one time! When I was a 6-year old Air Force brat on Williams AFB ca. 1953, some B-36s went overhead at low altitude and were so loud I peed my pants. The sound was so overwhelming I didn't even realize what had happened until I went back in the house. What an airplane! -- Dan T-182T at BFM |
#27
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote When I was a 6-year old Air Force brat on Williams AFB ca. 1953, some B-36s went overhead at low altitude and were so loud I peed my pants. The sound was so overwhelming I didn't even realize what had happened until I went back in the house. What an airplane! Yeah! I've heard that they were so loud that the sound pressure could rupture your spleen! ;-)) -- Jim in NC |
#28
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On Sep 18, 1:40 pm, Newps wrote:
wrote: I have the cylinder from an IO-520 here that had been detonating. The head is blown clean off the cylinder; the aluminum fractured at the top of the cylinder threads. Things would get very noisy, shaky, smoky and scary if that happened. Cylinder pressures go out of sight during detonation, as do CHTs. That sounds like preignition, not detonation. Detonation is rarly fatal to an engine. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engine_knocking http://www.streetrodstuff.com/Articl...ne/Detonation/ http://www.sacskyranch.com/deton.htm http://www.americanaviationinc.com/effectsNavajo.html Dan |
#29
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Clark,
Right after the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor. Uhm, not really. Not that Hitler wouldn't have liked to. ;-) I meant the 17s... -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#30
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wrote:
On Sep 18, 1:40 pm, Newps wrote: wrote: I have the cylinder from an IO-520 here that had been detonating. The head is blown clean off the cylinder; the aluminum fractured at the top of the cylinder threads. Things would get very noisy, shaky, smoky and scary if that happened. Cylinder pressures go out of sight during detonation, as do CHTs. That sounds like preignition, not detonation. Detonation is rarly fatal to an engine. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engine_knocking http://www.streetrodstuff.com/Articl...ne/Detonation/ http://www.sacskyranch.com/deton.htm http://www.americanaviationinc.com/effectsNavajo.html Dan Back to the original post somewhat... I knew about the over squared and my Lycoming O-360 manual has a chart that shows conditions acceptable to over square for the same % hp. I tried it last night and set the two conditions for 65% and leaned. I noticed that the CHT were lower in the over squared condition rather than the "under squared?". I have a C/S prop with a redline condition between 2000 and 2250 RPM. Really limits my choices. Do you folks see the same? -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
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