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Big John wrote in message . ..
Water injection in WWII aircraft engines was basically to prevent detonation with high MP. Believe the Jug had it on their R-2800 P & W engines. Could pull 90 inches with water as I recall??? Some early jets had water injection. Ferried a F-94A/B that had water. Used on T/O and you used all to prevent any residual from freezing in tamk and lines at altiude (-50 F). Big John Point of the sword. Pac sez: Caution: Tall Flight Engineer story follows: Believe it or not they also did it with heavy 747's! Climbed aboard this 200 series 747 in Anchorage, the wind chill was -7 dgrs Far. Almost got lost during the preflight in the blowing snow! Put my Union-negotiated extreme wx parka back into the Union-negotiated lock box (thought it was silly up till this morning!) Thought to myself well, the hard part of this trip is over.. Then after putzing around with the PA system for ten minutes (Dammit Jim! I'm just a cargo doctor, not a passenger Engineer!) I was given the expected passenger count: 535 including crew! More bad news: Auto pressurization inop! In fact only Manual Available for six plus hours...God, should've studied that procedure better in grd schoooool. Stop everything.... get manual out for man pressurization... yikes ...seven pages to read! Fourteen flight attendants later: "Ding Ding Ding": the soon-to-be-familiar song: "It's too hot, It's too cold.. You're too young, I'm too old!" Damn... most of those girls are over 50 and none of them (not even the "ball-bearing" stew knows how to fix anything down there. "Two movie projectors won't power up, and several beverage cart locks won't release!" Holy ****, Captain.... forget the safety of flight items... the sky nags have summoned me downstairs for the really important stuff! What the hell... push is not for another... damn... fifteen minutes!... Down the stairs I go, into... a sea of un-amused faces... least I remembered my damn hat... looks impressive... maybe they will not ask me any revealing questions... "Hey kid, is this you're first flight!" a GI asks. I tell him that as a matter of fact, it is (without a babysitter) "How old are you?"he asks. "Old enough to drive this thing" (I lie; cuz I'm only the oiler) "Been nice chatting.. gotta go." Meanwhile back upstairs: I corkscrew back up into the cockpit, and discover bodies everywhe mechanics, flight attendants, gate agents....squirm into my seat...still got five minutes to preflight... lets go.... UH, OH... lots of switches are not in the right places... and there's a bunch I was never trained on.... damn..... well better just focus on fuel... ****... even its like nothing in the book. Focus.. focus... "Ding Ding Ding" "Before start checklist" calls Cpt Prescott, and I start doing the disco, since it is my unfortunate job to turn all four of these five million dollar fans and try not to roast any of them. Picture sweat pouring out of my forehead; like in the movie "airplane" We start to take the runway and I'm almost caught up... I struggle to turn my unlubed S/O seat forward for t/o and them I see them down low on the s/o's accessory panel... Four huge switches labeled "WATER PUMPS..eng 1, eng 2 eng 3 eng 4.. MUST BE ON FOR T/O" "Uhhhhh... Capin Sir.... uuuhh does this thing have water injection?" I stammer as he spools up the big pratts for t/o. Luckily, the snickering co-pilot that knew this might happen, lets me in on the secret: "Dave, they're deactivated..." Later, he also tells the new boy about the "deact" stickers that have been falling off for years (won't stick to that surface I guess) the INS bump that will occur when the computers switch hemispheres and the fact that Asian females have.... well you get the idea. At least they didn't make me get a tattoo or an ear ring... pacplyer |
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