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#21
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![]() "Private" wrote Watching a team of CL-215/415s doing circuits is really impressive, they are much more graceful in the air than they look on the ground or in the video Dave linked. Real retardant is more effective than plain water but the CL-215/415 can deliver a lot of plain water. They seem to be able to work out of quite small lakes. http://ww.airliners.net/info/stats.main?id=119 They are also capable of adding a chemical to the water they scoop, to make it fire retardant, and usually do. Interesting thing is that the whole plane (I'm only intimately familiar with the 215, but I am pretty sure that the 415 is the same in this regard) uses all manual power for all of the control surfaces except the flaps. They use muscle power at low speeds, then as speed builds, a spring arrangement lets aerodynamically boosted tabs move the control surfaces. I was surprised to learn that. The whole theory of the plane's design was that it should be simple, and reliable, and easily maintained in the field without a big support structure and staff. It was also designed to be very maneuverable, and for it's size, it is, and needs to be to get into small lakes and narrow canyons. -- Jim in NC |
#22
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote I've watched one put out a real fire in france. Amazing. But the key here is nearby water source. without one how good is it compared to anything of similar size and weight? It can also refill on the ground with a hose and tanker. It can lift a full load off of a runway, 1200 gallons for a 215, 1400 gallons for a 415. I would have to do some searching to find out how much runway it would take, but it isn't much. -- Jim in NC |
#23
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"karl gruber" wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" I've watched one put out a real fire in france. Amazing. But the key here is nearby water source. without one how good is it compared to anything of similar size and weight? Bertie Burnbutt........................how do you propose ANY can put out a fire without a warter source? Oh I don't know, you could go past it and blow on it, or pee on it. you;'re not too god at this trolling thing, are you? Bertie |
#24
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"Morgans" wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote I've watched one put out a real fire in france. Amazing. But the key here is nearby water source. without one how good is it compared to anything of similar size and weight? It can also refill on the ground with a hose and tanker. It can lift a full load off of a runway, 1200 gallons for a 215, 1400 gallons for a 415. I would have to do some searching to find out how much runway it would take, but it isn't much. Oh I know, but that just puts it on even footing with a similar sized aircraft with a tank installed, in which case, if you were buying an airplane to protect an area with no bodies of water nearby, you'd be as well off or better off buying something even larger that's filled the same way. Bertie |
#25
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"Morgans" wrote in
: "Private" wrote Watching a team of CL-215/415s doing circuits is really impressive, they are much more graceful in the air than they look on the ground or in the video Dave linked. Real retardant is more effective than plain water but the CL-215/415 can deliver a lot of plain water. They seem to be able to work out of quite small lakes. http://ww.airliners.net/info/stats.main?id=119 They are also capable of adding a chemical to the water they scoop, to make it fire retardant, and usually do. Interesting thing is that the whole plane (I'm only intimately familiar with the 215, but I am pretty sure that the 415 is the same in this regard) uses all manual power for all of the control surfaces except the flaps. They use muscle power at low speeds, then as speed builds, a spring arrangement lets aerodynamically boosted tabs move the control surfaces. I was surprised to learn that. Yes, lots of airplanes that size have servo tabs to boost the controls. The spring tab actually reduces the effectiveness of the servo tab at higher speeds, to couteract the servo tab's natural tendency to provide more power as speed is increased. I'm not familiar with the installation on the Canadair, but I'd say if you investigated you'd find that's how they work Bertie |
#26
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On Sun, 28 Oct 2007 09:40:16 -0300, Dave
wrote: Probably some of the best vid of the 415 in action! Dave http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcqguPTBteQ For some raw news footage of some awesome flying check out: http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/...=mpvideosemail I don't know if this was posted here earlier, but it was sent to me by my son during the fires here. Ron |
#27
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"patrick mitchel" wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... "Morgans" wrote in It can also refill on the ground with a hose and tanker. It can lift a full load off of a runway, 1200 gallons for a 215, 1400 gallons for a 415. I would have to do some searching to find out how much runway it would take, but it isn't much. Do they still make the -215 as the av book shows it having the PW R2800 recip engines- do they still make those or are they using a reman? Gotta be a lot more econmical at least from the fuel burn at low altitudes. Pat No, they haven't made them since the sixties, at the latest. They'd be low hours rebuilds. Bertie |
#28
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"patrick mitchel" wrote in
: Interesting that according to the wiki art on the CL215 that the los angeles fire dept helped to sink a US manufacturing of the plane. The same plane that's working down heah now... Pat Sounds pretty unlikely. I can't see any reason why production would be moved to the us unless Canadair couldn't keep up with orders. Bertie |
#29
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You don't have to call me God .
I'm not trolling with big glass of cheap whisky though, like you....Buttburn. "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . "karl gruber" wrote in : "Bertie the Bunyip" I've watched one put out a real fire in france. Amazing. But the key here is nearby water source. without one how good is it compared to anything of similar size and weight? Bertie Burnbutt........................how do you propose ANY can put out a fire without a warter source? Oh I don't know, you could go past it and blow on it, or pee on it. you;'re not too god at this trolling thing, are you? Bertie |
#30
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"karl gruber" wrote in news:fg3nhf$lii$1
@aioe.org: You don't have to call me God . OK, I won't. I'm not trolling with big glass of cheap whisky though, like you....Buttburn. Maybe you should try it. It certainly couldn't do your style much harm. Bertie |
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