![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 18 Nov 2003 19:59:31 -0600, Big John
wrote: Dan Don't know if you ever saw the N-9 (P-40) and K-14 computing gunsights (P-51). Both would leave a 'mark' on your forhead in a crash (that you survived) Used to be a 'mark of honor'. Then they started making everyone wear helments. Big John The early F4F Wildcats were not equipped with shoulder straps. In fact few of the early fighters were. In the case of the Wildcat, not having shoulder straps resulted in a gashed forehead in the event of a ditching, as the pilot pitched forward and collided with the gunsight. During the Battle of Midway, in which a lot of Wildcats ditched, one pilot related that he manage to hurl himself sideways at the moment of impact with the ocean during a ditching, and avoided being slashed. In all the text written about this battle, this one pilot was the only instance recorded of a guy who remembered what would happen during a ditching, planned how to avoid being injured, and accomplished it. Another pilot decided to have his crew chief install shoulder straps to hold him away from the instrument panel coming, and the dreaded gunsight, in the event of a ditching. Ironically, the A6M Mitsubishi type 0 fighter WAS equipped with shoulder straps, but the pilots often wriggled out of them while in flight so as to allow more freedom of movement to look around. Corky Scott |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Todd Pattist wrote:
Story 2: Glider flying the ridge is carrying water ballast, gets low and lands in the trees, flipping inverted. The uninjured pilot is hanging upside down with his head crammed into the inverted bubble canopy. Releasing the straps will likely drop him head first 50 feet to the forest floor. The wrecked wings begin to drain water into the canopy, turning it into a fishbowl from which the pilot cannot pull his head. The canopy is prevented from opening by branches too weak to hold him, but too strong to force the canopy open. The pilot has the dilemma of death by drowning or death by falling. (Choking in the rising water, he ultimately manages to extend a crack in the canopy to drain the water. If that was me in the glider hanging upside down 50 feet over the ground, it wouldn't be water in that canopy... Mark Hickey |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Todd Pattist wrote:
Story 2: Glider flying the ridge is carrying water ballast, gets low and lands in the trees, flipping inverted. The uninjured pilot is hanging upside down with his head crammed into the inverted bubble canopy. Releasing the straps will likely drop him head first 50 feet to the forest floor. The wrecked wings begin to drain water into the canopy, turning it into a fishbowl from which the pilot cannot pull his head. The canopy is prevented from opening by branches too weak to hold him, but too strong to force the canopy open. The pilot has the dilemma of death by drowning or death by falling. (Choking in the rising water, he ultimately manages to extend a crack in the canopy to drain the water. Mark Hickey responded: If that was me in the glider hanging upside down 50 feet over the ground, it wouldn't be water in that canopy... Ewwww! Yet another example of no matter how bad a situation is, it can always be worse. Russell Kent |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]() BernadetteTS wrote: I've been reading through the BD-5 thread and have a question. I guess this is an opinion thread but what happens to a rear engine mounted directly behind the pilot in a crash? In something like an ultralight, BD-5, Cutiss pusher or Vari-EZ does an engine have a tendency to rip loose and go through the pilot due to inertia in a sudden stop? Or in many crashes is the direction of flight not straight ahead, like if the aircraft was in a stall when it contacted the ground? The force is down not forward through the cockpit. Bernadette The force is forward. Pusher aircraft may incur a weight penalty because the airframe requires more structure to ensure the cockpit is not collapsed by the engine. A clever design, would use other parts of the airframe already in place. As anothe poster has mentioned some of the ultralights do not have enough strength to restrain the engine in a bad crash. --dan |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yeah and they told us that the struts holding the rotodome on the AWACs
were of unequal strength so that it would break to the side instead of chopping thru the fuselage. Good thing we never had to find out. -- Kevin McCue KRYN '47 Luscombe 8E Rans S-17 (for sale) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My father (http://users.erols.com/viewptmd/Dad.html) flew the P-39. He
hated it. The most uncomfortable plane he ever sat in, except for his Mooney M-18 which had the same problem - no headroom. Having the engine behind with a shaft running between your legs meant you sat so high there was no headroom (he was well over 6'). More on topic, he claimed that you had no chance in a forced landing. The Allison would end up where you were sitting every time, so he said. Fortunately, never had to test the theory. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) "BernadetteTS" wrote in message ... I've been reading through the BD-5 thread and have a question. I guess this is an opinion thread but what happens to a rear engine mounted directly behind the pilot in a crash? In something like an ultralight, BD-5, Cutiss pusher or Vari-EZ does an engine have a tendency to rip loose and go through the pilot due to inertia in a sudden stop? Or in many crashes is the direction of flight not straight ahead, like if the aircraft was in a stall when it contacted the ground? The force is down not forward through the cockpit. Bernadette |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Marc J. Zeitlin" wrote:
There have been many accidents, incidents, and crashes of VE's, LE's, Velocity's and COZY's over the past 20 years. I have never heard of an injury caused by the engine coming through the firewall, nor have I ever heard of a case of the engine coming through the firewall. Remember, if you've caused enough of a G load for the engine to push the mount through the firewall, you've already turned the passengers to jelly. I think there are a lot more important things to worry about. Agreed. I chuckled when I read similar concerns voiced elsewhere recently. In a properly designed pusher, such as a VE or LE , it is a non-issue. Yes, there have been fatalities in VEs and LEs where the engine has come through but those were in crashes in which the impact angle and speed was such that the occupants were dead whether the engine came through or not. And no, in the VE and LE there is no weight penalty incurred in "beefing up" the aft fuselage structure to prevent the engine coming through as suggested (although somewhat more generally) elsewhere. David O -- http://www.AirplaneZone.com |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 23 Nov 2003 20:14:13 -0500, David O
wrote: :"Marc J. Zeitlin" wrote: : :There have been many accidents, incidents, and crashes of VE's, LE's, :Velocity's and COZY's over the past 20 years. I have never heard of an :injury caused by the engine coming through the firewall, nor have I ever :heard of a case of the engine coming through the firewall. : :Remember, if you've caused enough of a G load for the engine to push the :mount through the firewall, you've already turned the passengers to jelly. : :I think there are a lot more important things to worry about. : :Agreed. I chuckled when I read similar concerns voiced elsewhere :recently. In a properly designed pusher, such as a VE or LE , it is a :non-issue. Yes, there have been fatalities in VEs and LEs where the :engine has come through but those were in crashes in which the impact :angle and speed was such that the occupants were dead whether the :engine came through or not. And no, in the VE and LE there is no :weight penalty incurred in "beefing up" the aft fuselage structure to ![]() :generally) elsewhere. I've seen fatal Long EZ accidents - and a Berkut accident - where the engine was still attached to the firewall and spar, but there wasn't much fuselage left in front of the spar. I've also seen a fatal LE accident where the engine separated on impact with water and went up (probably inverted impact) but the fuse mostly held. Any direct, forward impact, such that the velocity vector of the engine is through the fuselage, great enough to break the engine mount and destroy the spar, is going to completely disintegrate the fuselage. OTOH, Misha Kasyan's Berkut tumbled, broke off the nose, both wings, canard, landing gear and about 1/4 of the mainspar and strake, and ended up inverted. The engine mount was intact, I don't even think it bent. |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Tecumseh Engine Mounting Question | jlauer | Home Built | 7 | November 16th 03 01:51 AM |
Objective Engine Discussion | Rick Maddy | Home Built | 26 | October 14th 03 04:46 AM |
1710 allison v-12 engine WWII p 38 engine | Holger Stephan | Home Built | 9 | August 21st 03 08:53 AM |
Corky's engine choice | Corky Scott | Home Built | 39 | August 8th 03 04:29 AM |
Gasflow of VW engine | Veeduber | Home Built | 4 | July 14th 03 08:06 AM |