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#21
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In article , Bob McKellar
writes Thomas W Ping wrote: Are there aviation-related reasons why the starboard side is favored for the island, or is it a purely naval issue? If the latter, did the practice come about because the first pioneering carriers were arbitrarily drawn up that way and the configuration simply stuck as a matter of tradition, or were there more significant reasons for the convention? -- Thomas Winston Ping A somewhat silly what-if: Since the idea of using an angled deck is quite simple ( though brilliant, even if it did come from them Brits ) what would have been different if it had been used from the beginning? A very sensible what-if, but at some time someone would have suggested an observation tower of some sort, on an angled deck or straight. Re. the angled deck (invented by a brilliant and modest Brit, who had an excellent relationship with the USN dating from his wartime service in Washington) it seems that when aircraft carriers were first conceived, and aircraft speeds were very low, putting a straight runway on a ship seemed simple and obvious. Only when aircraft speeds became much higher did the problems of overrunning on landing manifest themselves. Even then, with the naval aviation world seemingly fixated on the straight deck, other schemes were considered first, including the rubber mat landing strip, and even a two-storey concept with aircraft landing on the top layer. When the angled deck was first suggested at an MoD committee in London, the response was amusement and mild derision, but to their credit the USN reacted at once to the idea and painted an angled deck on a carrier within weeks. As a beginning guess, I would say fewer crashes into islands, parked aircraft etc., Agree that one... and more losses to planes dribbling off the end of the angle unable to regain flight. Not necessarily - unable to regain flight in the old days seems to have been mostly caused by late or over-cautious application of throttle. Bob McKellar Cheers, Dave -- Dave Eadsforth |
#22
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Seraphim wrote:
"Tarver Engineering" wrote in news ![]() "William Hughes" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Nov 2003 03:22:34 GMT, in rec.aviation.military "Gord Beaman" ) wrote: William Hughes wrote: Early piston aircraft had a lot of torque generated by the engine. In a wave-off situation, the sharp increase in power would roll the aircraft slightly to port. Combined with pulling back on the stick to gain altitude, this would result in a climbing left turn. Having an island in the way when doing this could ruin your whole day. Hence, the island was placed on the other side of the filght deck. So what does one do in an a/c which has an engine turning the opposite way?... And which aircraft would that be? AFAIK, all aircraft engines rotated the same way - clockwise from the pilot's point-of-view. At least on single-engine birds; some twins may have had counter-rotating props, but I don't think they operated from carrier decks all that much. What, like a P-3? The P-3 doesn't have counter-rotating props, and AFAIK operates from land bases. So your point about the P-3 was? Come on, it's the Tarver bot. Coherence is unexpected, much less a point. -Marc -- Marc Reeve actual email address after removal of 4s & spaces is c4m4r4a4m4a4n a4t c4r4u4z4i4o d4o4t c4o4m |
#23
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![]() Why would they? Their aircraft engines rotated in the same direction as the American's, thus generating the same port-biased torque. No, British aircraft engines turned the other way. Still do, I believe. They famously emasculated the Lightning by burdening it with two left-turning engines. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#24
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![]() And which aircraft would that be? AFAIK, all aircraft engines rotated the same way - clockwise from the pilot's point-of-view. At least on single-engine birds; some twins may have had counter-rotating props, but I don't think they operated from carrier decks all that much. As posted, British aircraft engines turned to the left, or anti-clockwise as seen from the cockpit. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#25
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![]() You are aware of the meaning of "AFAIK", are you not? If I am incorrect, you are invited to enlighten me. Post snide comments, with no correcting information, does not advance the discussion. That was your second posting. The first one had no qualification. Consider yourself enlightened. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#26
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message news ![]() Why would they? Their aircraft engines rotated in the same direction as the American's, thus generating the same port-biased torque. No, British aircraft engines turned the other way. Still do, I believe. They famously emasculated the Lightning by burdening it with two left-turning engines. The problem with the version of the P-38 supplied to the RAF was the inferior supercharger supplied on the export version not the fact that it had 2 engines turning the same way. Keith |
#28
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In article ,
Dave Eadsforth wrote: In article , Bob McKellar and aircraft speeds were very low, putting a straight runway on a ship seemed simple and obvious. Only when aircraft speeds became much higher did the problems of overrunning on landing manifest themselves. Even Exactly. Take-off run and landing distance weren't the problems - Pups or Camels could take off from the foredeck of Furious (or of Campania, for that matter) without trouble, and their landing speeds were so low that there wasn't hardly any landing run (modus operandi in the Furious trials seems to have been for several large chaps to grab hold of the aircraft as it landed, more or less - the difficulty was more of keeping it on the deck than stopping it). The problem was eddiesthrown off from superstructure, which did really bad things for the small, light, low-powered aircraft of the time (especially as they didn't really have any throttle control - you had to blip the engine on & off for landing). The island was a brilliant solution to this problem (proposed by Murray Seuter, IIRC) which allowed for uptakes well away from the approach path and an easy way of casting any eddies away from the flight deck. It wasn't until quite a lot later that take off and landing distances became the issue - maybe with the Hawker Osprey/ Nimrod generation in the 1930s for fighters, earlier for attack a/c. Certainly Furious, Glorious and Courageous still had their low-level foredeck launching decks for flying off fighters straight from the hanger in the early 30s. -- Andy Breen ~ Interplanetary Scintillation Research Group http://users.aber.ac.uk/azb/ "Time has stopped, says the Black Lion clock and eternity has begun" (Dylan Thomas) |
#29
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On Mon, 17 Nov 2003 03:22:34 GMT, "Gord Beaman" ) wrote:
William Hughes wrote: Early piston aircraft had a lot of torque generated by the engine. In a wave-off situation, the sharp increase in power would roll the aircraft slightly to port. Combined with pulling back on the stick to gain altitude, this would result in a climbing left turn. Having an island in the way when doing this could ruin your whole day. Hence, the island was placed on the other side of the filght deck. So what does one do in an a/c which has an engine turning the opposite way?... Pray Al Minyard |
#30
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William Hughes wrote:
On Mon, 17 Nov 2003 05:30:18 GMT, in rec.aviation.military "Gord Beaman" ) wrote: William Hughes wrote: So what does one do in an a/c which has an engine turning the opposite way?... And which aircraft would that be? AFAIK, all aircraft engines rotated the same way - clockwise from the pilot's point-of-view. You think so?...amazing indeed...you sound most assured...I'd have felt damned uneasy if it had been me making that big bald statement to the whole world. WooHoo. You are aware of the meaning of "AFAIK", are you not? If I am incorrect, you are invited to enlighten me. Post snide comments, with no correcting information, does not advance the discussion. Nor does your snide remark of "And which a/c would that be". Of course I know AFIK...I merely objected to the abruptness of your remark that's all. We're mostly mature people here and sharp remarks (or those which can be mistaken for them) aren't needed. Now then, I don't know which a/c have right turning and which have left turning engines but I've certainly heard of both. -- -Gord. |
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