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#1
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Change the uniforms again? Jesus X Christ! What's wrong with these
guys' brains? They get up to CoS and all of sudden they think - "Hey, it's time to change the uniform!" I forget the name of the jerk who deep-sixed the trench coat - but I still have mine and I wear it when it gets cold here in CO. Very nifty coat, too. The only decent move these perfumed princes (thanks, Hack!) ever made in the uni bit was to go to wash and wears. But then I mostly wore flying suits anyway. The Nomex bag wasn't so bad after it had been through the washing machine a dozen or so times. A real sweat hog when brand new, though. BTW what is the uniform allowance now - still 2 bucks a month? Walt BJ |
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#4
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George Shirley wrote:
--cut-- My god, that was hot work, trying to get some rest/sleep while lying back in the midrest seats alongside the open overwing hatches listening to the hellish pounding of the slipstream there. The bunks were unuseable due to the heat. You guys now have it easy in airconditioned comfort!... -- -Gord. Nomex is well known in the oil refining industry as being hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It only protects against flash fires up to about 900F AFAIK and you ain't gonna make it if the fire is really bad. Personally I always preferred cotton clothing when I was a plant operator and still wear cotton and wool by preference. Hopefully my Nomex coveralls are hanging in the closet forever. VBG George, wearing his safety consultant hat again Y'know, this is a favourite subject of mine. We wear Nomex for years and years with all the attendant discomfort that it gives us just to protect 'someone' for a few seconds of 'flash fire' maybe. Seems like a silly thing to do, it's like we provide a 'fireguard' for every a/c engine start when it'll maybe do some good on some start ten years in the future. I've likely started thousands of aircraft engines and NEVER had an engine fire on start, moreover, I've never even seen one. That spread out over 26 years of service. Never even SEEN one, let alone HAD one myself, let alone had one myself which was put out by the fire guard!!. Seems a huge waste of manpower to me...yet it was drilled into us...NEVER START without a fire guard!...and I did once too, still feel a twinge of guilt... ![]() -- -Gord. |
#5
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#6
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![]() "George Shirley" wrote in message .. . wrote: George Shirley wrote: --cut-- My god, that was hot work, trying to get some rest/sleep while lying back in the midrest seats alongside the open overwing hatches listening to the hellish pounding of the slipstream there. The bunks were unuseable due to the heat. You guys now have it easy in airconditioned comfort!... -- -Gord. Nomex is well known in the oil refining industry as being hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It only protects against flash fires up to about 900F AFAIK and you ain't gonna make it if the fire is really bad. Personally I always preferred cotton clothing when I was a plant operator and still wear cotton and wool by preference. Hopefully my Nomex coveralls are hanging in the closet forever. VBG George, wearing his safety consultant hat again Y'know, this is a favourite subject of mine. We wear Nomex for years and years with all the attendant discomfort that it gives us just to protect 'someone' for a few seconds of 'flash fire' maybe. Seems like a silly thing to do, it's like we provide a 'fireguard' for every a/c engine start when it'll maybe do some good on some start ten years in the future. I've likely started thousands of aircraft engines and NEVER had an engine fire on start, moreover, I've never even seen one. That spread out over 26 years of service. Never even SEEN one, let alone HAD one myself, let alone had one myself which was put out by the fire guard!!. I know of a crew who escaped with burns on back of head and ears only when the aircraft exploded. They made it out and the nomex did save their back sides. I never had a fire during start in over 4000 individual engine starts. I don't count a few torches with J57s that were blown out immediately. I guess the real question would be, could you give a good answer to your commander if you did lose the jet because of a fire and you didn't have a fire guard. But usually it is a waste of time. MG |
#7
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I've likely started
thousands of aircraft engines and NEVER had an engine fire on start I've started 8 engines at least 300 times (2400 starts) and I've only had 2 engine fires on start and one of them was a torch that the crew chief, in my opinion, over reacted to. BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
#8
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#9
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"Gord Beaman" wrote
(BUFDRVR) wrote: I've likely started thousands of aircraft engines and NEVER had an engine fire on start I've started 8 engines at least 300 times (2400 starts) and I've only had 2 engine fires on start and one of them was a torch that the crew chief, in my opinion, over reacted to. BUFDRVR Sure...and just about anyone who starts a/c engines can say the same...fireguards are a waste of time... We had a DC-3 burn-up on start in Pleiku once. Course that was a gasoline fire. It was full of body bags going to Saigon. What a mess. Digging latrines was good duty that week. That was a month before the Cathay Pacific airliner blew-up over Pleiku at 29k ft. We had raining body parts on that deal. |
#10
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Sure...and just about anyone who starts a/c engines can say the
same...fireguards are a waste of time... I think it depends on the aircraft. Despite the extremely rare occurances, I actually believe they serve a purpose during a BUFF engine start, at least for #4 (the first engine started). In the BUFF, we have no APU and rely on an AGE cart for starting #4 and # 5 engine. The carts are old (imagine that) and generally not designed to spin your engines any higher than about 25% RPM, so basically, until you have #4 on line, you have limited ability to motor out a fire, which obviously increases your probability of needing fire retardant and a fire guard. BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
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