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![]() "B2431" wrote in message ... From: "Dudley Henriques" "Cub Driver" wrote in message Dudley, would you post a brief bio for us? I think I recall P-51s, but I don't have any notion of your career. When were you in the USAF/USAAF? For whom a commercial pilot? Where taught? I am a civilian pilot Ford, not military. Obviously you haven't yet done enough research. Lots of public record on this. How and why I have flown military airplanes is none of your business. Although I can't stop you from going down the road I believe you're thinking of going with this, I will tell you that I don't like this type of post . Do your own legwork Ford. There are many sources of public information on me, and what's not there, I have no desire to share with someone as obviously hostile to me as you are with this post. I sincerely hope I'm wrong in what I'm reading from your post here. If I am, please feel free to dig up and post anything you wish that's public information on me. If I'm not wrong, I feel compelled to advise you to be extremely careful where you go with this in a public forum. Your call ! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/ CFI Retired For personal email, please replace the z's with e's. dhenriquesATzarthlinkDOTnzt Dudley Henriques Am I missing something here? I see nothing "hostile" in the request. I also see nothing wrong with simply saying "I'd rather not say" as a response. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired There's a history here Dan. I know several of the surviving AVG members personally. I reviewed Ford's book on the AVG after spending a day being briefed on it by a member of the Tigers who wasn't at all happy with his "research". Mr. Ford and I go back a few years, and have our "differences of opinion". Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/ CFI Retired For personal email, please replace the z's with e's. dhenriquesATzarthlinkDOTnzt |
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![]() "B2431" wrote in message ... Am I missing something here? I see nothing "hostile" in the request. I also see nothing wrong with simply saying "I'd rather not say" as a response. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired Just for general information; It's considered extremely bad manners to ask for, request, or demand personal background and/or qualifications of any individual on Usenet. These things can be offered in an atmosphere of friendship by someone voluntarily, but not asked for. When this is done, it's almost always done in an atmosphere of hostility. You really need go no further than Mr. Ford's remark, "Dudley, there is something fishy about you" to ascertain this. The inference is that if the person being "asked" to state these things doesn't respond to the poster's demand, that there is something to hide. The reality however, is that only idiots post these "requests", and only idiots allow themselves to be drawn into this scenario. These "requests" as you can see, attract the usual posters who either like or dislike either the poster or the person being "nailed". It's a losing proposition for everyone, and I have no intention of getting involved too deeply with it, as aside from a few people who have become good internet friends on the group through the years, I don't really give a rat's ass who on Usenet believes what about what . Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/ CFI Retired For personal email, please replace the z's with e's. dhenriquesATzarthlinkDOTnzt |
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![]() How and why I have flown military airplanes is none of your business. Sheez. We're supposed to sit here awestruck at the Fighter Pilot Fellowship, but we can't inquire as to how and why you flew military airplanes? Dudley, there is something fishy about you. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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Cub Driver wrote:
How and why I have flown military airplanes is none of your business. Sheez. We're supposed to sit here awestruck at the Fighter Pilot Fellowship, but we can't inquire as to how and why you flew military airplanes? Dudley, there is something fishy about you. all the best -- Dan Ford C'mon Dud, obfuscate, you know you're good (albeit kinda obvious) at it... -- -Gord. |
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... How and why I have flown military airplanes is none of your business. Sheez. We're supposed to sit here awestruck at the Fighter Pilot Fellowship, but we can't inquire as to how and why you flew military airplanes? Dudley, there is something fishy about you. Strange! I don't remember even coming close to requiring you or anyone else on Usenet to be "awestruck" by either myself, my background, or the Fellowship. Perhaps you will be kind enough to provide an example of this........other than the simple fact that I use a tag line sig for the Fellowship. Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/ CFI Retired For personal email, please replace the z's with e's. dhenriquesATzarthlinkDOTnzt |
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Let's take two planes going on low level support missions. They will have to fly through heavy ground fire including small arms fire. One plane is equipped with a radial engine,. let's say an R-2800. The other with a jet engine. Which plane would have a better chance of survival inder these conditions?. Opinions? Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Much of the Structure of a Gas turbine is thinner than that of the rugged engine blocks, cylinder and heads required on piston engines and thus penetration into a vital component by projectiles may be more likely however gas turbines can be quite tough. The central casting of which the shaft and combustion chambers are suspended is quite solid and centrifugal compressors can be very rugged. It might be possible to obtain data as to how influential compressor type is on combat ruggedness. I suppose that the best comparison might be to assume an aircraft such as the B26,A26 or B29 had of been equipped with a turboprop like the Rolls Royce Dart. (Fokker when designing the F27 (built latter by Fairchild) resisted American Airlines's pressure to use the PW2800.) This engine would have about 1/2rd the weight and I suspect 1/2 to volume of the PW2800 and this in itself would reduce its chance of being hit. The two stage centrifugal compressor was very rugged and for the weight saved you could wrap the engine in armor. The Allison T53 gas turbine used on the UH-1 Iroquois and many other aircraft had a reputation for ruggedness. It kept operating with objects like bolts ingested and stuck in the compressor. This engine had as a first stage an axial compressor, a second stage centrifugal stage that led to a double reverse flow combustion chamber. The Germans seemed to have had a concern with debris ingestion (presumably after a hit on a target) in the Jumo 004B engine of the Me 262. For ground handling and safety reasons wire baskets had been developed to prevent unfortunate ground crewman being ingested. The aircraft was tested in flight with the baskets attached and apparently suffered no reduction in performance. The concern of 'combat ruggedness' was one reason that the RLM technocrat Helmuth Schelp (who mapped out Germany's 15 year gas turbine development program in 1938?) specified that the Heinkel Hirth He S11 1300kg turbo-jet was to have a 'diagonal compressor'. This is essentially a centrifugal compressor faired such that the air flow exits axially (backward) instead of radialy (outward). The air is then impinged upon a stator to get a degree of axial compression. In the He S11 there were then 3 subsequently axial stages. The beauty is that the ruggedness of centrifugal compressor in object ingestion and turbulent airflow as a first stage can be combined with subsequently more axial stages of higher efficiency. (Thus He S11 aircraft designees had very flexible air intake shapes e.g. slits in wing leading edges ) The efficiency at the operating point for the axial unit of the Jumo 004B was 0.79. For the hybrid diagonal-axial He S11 it was 0.8. By the time the He S11 entered production in 1945 the diagonal compressor for the BMW 003C the HERMESO I was achieving 0.85 on the test stand and the HERMESO II of the BMW 004D was expected to achieve 0.91. (By this time the Germans were converting to more efficient reaction type axial compressors over the impulse type axial seen on the Jumo 004B and BMW 003A then in service) so they sacrificed a lot to achieve this diagonal/compressor on the He S11. The British style centrifugal compressors, the double sided impeller types, must have been much more rugged than the axial types they Germans preferred (for their low frontal area and ease of installation) However a shrapnel or bullet hole in the post combustion area of a combustion chamber in either type of engine would have been fatal as a flame would be expelled that would eventually melt or burn through something. A holed combustion chamber or rocker cover was unlikely to be fatal in an air cooled radial. The answer clearly is to try and armor parts of the Jet engine, e.g. the Chance Vought A7 used silicon carbide. Jets are free of the oil.water cooler problems of piston engines. The |
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Subject: Survivability in Combat
From: "The Enlightenment" Date: 12/7/03 5:12 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Let's take two planes going on low level support missions. They will have to fly through heavy ground fire including small arms fire. One plane is equipped with a radial engine,. let's say an R-2800. The other with a jet engine. Which plane would have a better chance of survival inder these conditions?. Opinions? Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Much of the Structure of a Gas turbine is thinner than that of the rugged engine blocks, cylinder and heads required on piston engines and thus penetration into a vital component by projectiles may be more likely however gas turbines can be quite tough. The central casting of which the shaft and combustion chambers are suspended is quite solid and centrifugal compressors can be very rugged. It might be possible to obtain data as to how influential compressor type is on combat ruggedness. I suppose that the best comparison might be to assume an aircraft such as the B26,A26 or B29 had of been equipped with a turboprop like the Rolls Royce Dart. (Fokker when designing the F27 (built latter by Fairchild) resisted American Airlines's pressure to use the PW2800.) This engine would have about 1/2rd the weight and I suspect 1/2 to volume of the PW2800 and this in itself would reduce its chance of being hit. The two stage centrifugal compressor was very rugged and for the weight saved you could wrap the engine in armor. The Allison T53 gas turbine used on the UH-1 Iroquois and many other aircraft had a reputation for ruggedness. It kept operating with objects like bolts ingested and stuck in the compressor. This engine had as a first stage an axial compressor, a second stage centrifugal stage that led to a double reverse flow combustion chamber. The Germans seemed to have had a concern with debris ingestion (presumably after a hit on a target) in the Jumo 004B engine of the Me 262. For ground handling and safety reasons wire baskets had been developed to prevent unfortunate ground crewman being ingested. The aircraft was tested in flight with the baskets attached and apparently suffered no reduction in performance. The concern of 'combat ruggedness' was one reason that the RLM technocrat Helmuth Schelp (who mapped out Germany's 15 year gas turbine development program in 1938?) specified that the Heinkel Hirth He S11 1300kg turbo-jet was to have a 'diagonal compressor'. This is essentially a centrifugal compressor faired such that the air flow exits axially (backward) instead of radialy (outward). The air is then impinged upon a stator to get a degree of axial compression. In the He S11 there were then 3 subsequently axial stages. The beauty is that the ruggedness of centrifugal compressor in object ingestion and turbulent airflow as a first stage can be combined with subsequently more axial stages of higher efficiency. (Thus He S11 aircraft designees had very flexible air intake shapes e.g. slits in wing leading edges ) The efficiency at the operating point for the axial unit of the Jumo 004B was 0.79. For the hybrid diagonal-axial He S11 it was 0.8. By the time the He S11 entered production in 1945 the diagonal compressor for the BMW 003C the HERMESO I was achieving 0.85 on the test stand and the HERMESO II of the BMW 004D was expected to achieve 0.91. (By this time the Germans were converting to more efficient reaction type axial compressors over the impulse type axial seen on the Jumo 004B and BMW 003A then in service) so they sacrificed a lot to achieve this diagonal/compressor on the He S11. The British style centrifugal compressors, the double sided impeller types, must have been much more rugged than the axial types they Germans preferred (for their low frontal area and ease of installation) However a shrapnel or bullet hole in the post combustion area of a combustion chamber in either type of engine would have been fatal as a flame would be expelled that would eventually melt or burn through something. A holed combustion chamber or rocker cover was unlikely to be fatal in an air cooled radial. The answer clearly is to try and armor parts of the Jet engine, e.g. the Chance Vought A7 used silicon carbide. Jets are free of the oil.water cooler problems of piston engines. Lots of good info. Thanks. I woiuld love to hear the take on all this by a pilot who flew Jugs in WW II in low level operations then flew jets later and hear comparative opinions. Any jugheads around here? Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
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(ArtKramr) wrote in message ...
Subject: Survivability in Combat From: "The Enlightenment" Date: 12/7/03 5:12 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Let's take two planes going on low level support missions. They will have to fly through heavy ground fire including small arms fire. One plane is equipped with a radial engine,. let's say an R-2800. The other with a jet engine. Which plane would have a better chance of survival inder these conditions?. Opinions? Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Much of the Structure of a Gas turbine is thinner than that of the rugged engine blocks, cylinder and heads required on piston engines and thus penetration into a vital component by projectiles may be more likely however gas turbines can be quite tough. The central casting of which the shaft and combustion chambers are suspended is quite solid and centrifugal compressors can be very rugged. It might be possible to obtain data as to how influential compressor type is on combat ruggedness. I suppose that the best comparison might be to assume an aircraft such as the B26,A26 or B29 had of been equipped with a turboprop like the Rolls Royce Dart. (Fokker when designing the F27 (built latter by Fairchild) resisted American Airlines's pressure to use the PW2800.) This engine would have about 1/2rd the weight and I suspect 1/2 to volume of the PW2800 and this in itself would reduce its chance of being hit. The two stage centrifugal compressor was very rugged and for the weight saved you could wrap the engine in armor. The Allison T53 gas turbine used on the UH-1 Iroquois and many other aircraft had a reputation for ruggedness. It kept operating with objects like bolts ingested and stuck in the compressor. This engine had as a first stage an axial compressor, a second stage centrifugal stage that led to a double reverse flow combustion chamber. The Germans seemed to have had a concern with debris ingestion (presumably after a hit on a target) in the Jumo 004B engine of the Me 262. For ground handling and safety reasons wire baskets had been developed to prevent unfortunate ground crewman being ingested. The aircraft was tested in flight with the baskets attached and apparently suffered no reduction in performance. The concern of 'combat ruggedness' was one reason that the RLM technocrat Helmuth Schelp (who mapped out Germany's 15 year gas turbine development program in 1938?) specified that the Heinkel Hirth He S11 1300kg turbo-jet was to have a 'diagonal compressor'. This is essentially a centrifugal compressor faired such that the air flow exits axially (backward) instead of radialy (outward). The air is then impinged upon a stator to get a degree of axial compression. In the He S11 there were then 3 subsequently axial stages. The beauty is that the ruggedness of centrifugal compressor in object ingestion and turbulent airflow as a first stage can be combined with subsequently more axial stages of higher efficiency. (Thus He S11 aircraft designees had very flexible air intake shapes e.g. slits in wing leading edges ) The efficiency at the operating point for the axial unit of the Jumo 004B was 0.79. For the hybrid diagonal-axial He S11 it was 0.8. By the time the He S11 entered production in 1945 the diagonal compressor for the BMW 003C the HERMESO I was achieving 0.85 on the test stand and the HERMESO II of the BMW 004D was expected to achieve 0.91. (By this time the Germans were converting to more efficient reaction type axial compressors over the impulse type axial seen on the Jumo 004B and BMW 003A then in service) so they sacrificed a lot to achieve this diagonal/compressor on the He S11. The British style centrifugal compressors, the double sided impeller types, must have been much more rugged than the axial types they Germans preferred (for their low frontal area and ease of installation) However a shrapnel or bullet hole in the post combustion area of a combustion chamber in either type of engine would have been fatal as a flame would be expelled that would eventually melt or burn through something. A holed combustion chamber or rocker cover was unlikely to be fatal in an air cooled radial. The answer clearly is to try and armor parts of the Jet engine, e.g. the Chance Vought A7 used silicon carbide. Jets are free of the oil water cooler problems of piston engines. Lots of good info. Thanks. I woiuld love to hear the take on all this by a pilot who flew Jugs in WW II in low level operations then flew jets later and hear comparative opinions. Any jugheads around here? It's not inconceivable that some US WW2 types such as the A26 might have seen action with turbo props or suplemental jets slung on for extra speed and power. Jets simply lacked the fuel efficinecy for many missions. (Several types such as the B36,Neptune and others) There is a Rolls royce Dart Restored Mustang out. (The Dart ranged in power from 1650shp to 4000shp). I've found at least one restoration attempt: http://www.p51.mustangsmustangs.com/.../A68-187.shtml I recall reading an article in the last 2-3 years in "wings" on the development of the P47 the designer (Seversky?) discusions with his development insiders (Probably at coffee break). Lots of interesting stuff on why he concluded that the aircraft had to be as big as it did to do the missions and carry the armour and armament that would be needed. (Sorry the issue is in my dusty attic and my hay fever tells me not to go have a look) At one point the P47 designers get around to saying that if they are going to have turbo-super chargers that they may as well cut out the piston engine in between. Presumbly to get Jet thurst or to make a turbo-prop. (Indeed converting automotive turbocharges into jets and turbo props is a common hobby pursuit these days) Any of the Jets of the 1940 period could be modified to turbo props simply by putting on a gearbox and a bigger (perhaps 2 stage) turbine. The british centrifugal types were a little more suited to conversion as the airflow path is simpler as it need not be smooth so the ducting needed around the intake needs less care. (The axial engines of the Germans were so much narrower it was much easier fitting them to a wing though) The US was doing some good work at the time, I'm just not as familiar with it. Quite suprisingly Hungary had a turbo-prop in 1940 that was to go into production. http://tanks45.tripod.com/Jets45/Lis...ginesOther.htm "Designed by Gyorgy Jendrassik in 1938 the Cs-1 was the worlds first working turboprop engine, first run in 1940 and hoped to produce 1,000 hp it never made more that 400 hp due to combustion problems. All work on the engine was stopped in 1941 as the Daimler-Benz DB 605 engine was to be made in Hungary. A plane was specifically made for the Cs-1 the RMI-1 X/H, which ironically was fitted with the DB 605 in 1944" One big problem in any gas turbine was that designing the airflow in combustion chambers needed extensive test stand experience. The airflow has to be designed to protect direct flame impingement of flames on metal by using films of air and a controlled flame propagation. The Germans, Americans, British, Hungarians all faced that. The Germans faced with horrible materials to use had the best test stand facilities of all. During the second world war the Arado 234 seemed to have no problem with AA artillery even over the radar directed proximity fused guns in the British isles. 10,000 meters at 400 knots would have meant that the aircraft would have travelled almost 3km-5km ( 2-3 miles) before a shell got near. Attacking the bridges at Remagen was different and many a Arado pilot lost his life attacking these bridges due to the super intense AAA at low altitude. The engine once holed seemed to keep going by some accounts) but rapidly set the whole wing on fire. (Fuel lines and Hydraulic lines everywhere) Escaping from an Arado was very difficult and the ejection seats intended for the awkward to egress cabin never got fitted to the few production aircraft. Having said that even getting near the bridges for a piston engined aircraft must have been near to impossible. FOI (Foreigne Object Ingestion) is an issue on jets especialy axial types. Northrop tested the intakes of the F17 (ie F/A 18) by sprinkling cornflakes on the floor. The Mig 29 shutters of its intakes with a mesh and draws in airflow via gills in the top of the intakes on the ground. The material used probably make a difference. Using steel rather than Aluminium. Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
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"The Enlightenment" wrote in message ...
"ArtKramr" wrote in message ... SNIP .. The efficiency at the operating point for the axial unit of the Jumo 004B was 0.79. For the hybrid diagonal-axial He S11 it was 0.8. By the time the He S11 entered production in 1945 the diagonal compressor for the BMW 003C the HERMESO I was achieving 0.85 on the test stand and the HERMESO II of the BMW 004D was expected to achieve 0.91. (By this time the Germans were converting to more efficient reaction type axial compressors over the impulse type axial seen on the Jumo 004B and BMW 003A then in service) so they sacrificed a lot to achieve this diagonal/compressor on the He S11. There is a typing mistake in my above post. All the compressors of the BMW003 series were axial NOT diagonal. The BMW 003A (the 4 jet engines of which used on the Arado 234C and in its BMW003E dorsal mount form as on the Heinker He162 Salamander/VolksJaeger) in fact had an axial type compressor. This compressor was an axial "impulse" type in which the compression is carried out by the turbine blades and the stator merely serves to guide the airflow. The BMW 003A produced 800kg thrust. To increase thrust without increasing fuel consumption ABB developed for the BMW 003C an axial compressor known as the HERMESO I. The was of the "reaction type" in which more precise machined blades provide around 50% of the compression. The result is higher efficiency in the case of HERMESO I this was 0.84 Thus the BMW 003C achieved the same thrust as the Jumo 004B with the samller weight, fuel cosumption of the already good BMW003. The BMW 003D had the refined HERMES0 II with a bench tested efficiency of 0.91. The engine was expected to have a thrust of 1100kg and to be used on on range recon versions of the Arado 234. For combat the tougher 1300kg thrust He S11 with its diagonal compressor was seen as superior. |
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