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#1
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Dan Ford wrote in part:
See my question to Gord about ground effect. Is it really there, as a cushion, or is that a myth? Probably a reality, but I don't recall noticing it in teh exercise mentioned. Did have a friend who lost an engine in a P2V about half way to Hawaii. Officially, too heavy to stay airborne, dump enough fuel to be light enough to stay airborne, and one hasn't enough fuel to reach land. Double bind. (It has ben suggested that is why Lindbergh elected a single engine plane. With the engines available, if he had two and lost one -- splash. If he had one and lost one -- splash. But the chances of losing an engine in a single engine plane are half those of a twin.) They went down to zero altitude --ground effect max -- went through plane with bolt cutters dumping everything dumpable. They spent about 4 hours with one mill feathered and the other operating beyond all redlines. Arriving at Barbers Point (?) there was no "letting down" to a landing. They simply lowered the gear onto the runway. Whew! Quent |
#2
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#3
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I hope you'll allow me a small smile and a wink at your "3 to 5
feet". As you wish. You've a lot more experience than I have -- at the higher altitudes, of course. (snicker/wink) Quent |
#4
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![]() Damnably impossible I'd say...the rules say 100 feet for 'pilot bombing' and while this figure was likely (certainly) broken a _few_ times nobody actually flew _knowingly_ with the prop tips "3 to 5" feet above the water in a P2V. Trust me. How much of a cushion do you have, from ground effect, in a high-powered aircraft? I suppose it would be least in a fighter or a B-26. But what about a B-25 or -17? If you were making 200 mph, say, would the ground really want to reject you, or would you plow right in? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#5
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Cub Driver wrote:
How much of a cushion do you have, from ground effect, in a high-powered aircraft? I suppose it would be least in a fighter or a B-26. But what about a B-25 or -17? If you were making 200 mph, say, would the ground really want to reject you, or would you plow right in? Seems like the thing to do is to trim the nose up and manually force it down. Then if you relaxed for a second, you'd naturally float up away from the water. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN http://www.mortimerschnerd.com |
#6
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I think it would depend on the attitude and the angle of attack, also wing
area; the vulcan would float because of the wing area, it pushed a cushion of air in front of it at low altitude. "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... Damnably impossible I'd say...the rules say 100 feet for 'pilot bombing' and while this figure was likely (certainly) broken a _few_ times nobody actually flew _knowingly_ with the prop tips "3 to 5" feet above the water in a P2V. Trust me. How much of a cushion do you have, from ground effect, in a high-powered aircraft? I suppose it would be least in a fighter or a B-26. But what about a B-25 or -17? If you were making 200 mph, say, would the ground really want to reject you, or would you plow right in? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#7
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![]() Interesting about the Vulcan. What made me think of this was reading about the supposed difficulty of landing the Northrop YB-49 Flying Wing bomber at Muroc (later Edwards) AFB -- that it would just float and float. On Sat, 20 Mar 2004 15:03:47 -0000, "M. H. Greaves" wrote: I think it would depend on the attitude and the angle of attack, also wing area; the vulcan would float because of the wing area, it pushed a cushion of air in front of it at low altitude. "Cub Driver" wrote in message .. . Damnably impossible I'd say...the rules say 100 feet for 'pilot bombing' and while this figure was likely (certainly) broken a _few_ times nobody actually flew _knowingly_ with the prop tips "3 to 5" feet above the water in a P2V. Trust me. How much of a cushion do you have, from ground effect, in a high-powered aircraft? I suppose it would be least in a fighter or a B-26. But what about a B-25 or -17? If you were making 200 mph, say, would the ground really want to reject you, or would you plow right in? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#8
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"M. H. Greaves" wrote:
I think it would depend on the attitude and the angle of attack, also wing area; the vulcan would float because of the wing area, it pushed a cushion of air in front of it at low altitude. I think that it's there for all a/c, look at that huge Russian jobbie...'ekronoplanne' (or somesuch). It was designed to use ground effect...I understand that you gotta be within about one-half of your wingspan from the surface. You can almost picture it, imagine why they use those 'winglets' at the tips of Airbus and others, they prevent vortices by 'discouraging' the higher pressure air from under the wings curling up and over the tips to the lower pressure air above the wing. -- -Gord. |
#9
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I've just finished reading the book to the film, as usual, though the film
is quite excellent, i enjoyed the book a bit more, you find that there are things in the book that may not be in the film, and one or two of the parts of a film may be "holywood'ised!". Great film, and very interesting. "zxcv" wrote in message ... I was watching "Empire of the Sun" the other night and near the end some P-51's attack the Japanese base. What struck me was that the P-51's were flying in just a few feet above the ground and dropping their bombs. Would this really have been done? How did the planes keep from blowing themselves up? |
#10
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In article , zxcv
writes I was watching "Empire of the Sun" the other night and near the end some P-51's attack the Japanese base. What struck me was that the P-51's were flying in just a few feet above the ground and dropping their bombs. Would this really have been done? How did the planes keep from blowing themselves up? I understand that the way in which bombs are dropped from low level is a combination of delay fuze (as already mentioned by another respondent) and the attack profile. If you bomb from enough height to be able to depart to a safe distance before the bomb goes off then that's okay, even with impact fuzes. If you are going to be still close to the bomb when the fuze is impact triggered then it should be a delay fuze, so you can depart to said safe distance. That's the obvious basic principle. But I guess that many complications can set in. For instance, (question to you bods who have actually done this kind of thing) low level skip bombing will probably give good accuracy, but I assume one must know a bit about the nature of the target. If the target is sufficiently massive (e.g. building/ship) so as to be able to bring the bomb to a halt, then a short delay fuze should be fine - the aircraft will be a long way the other side by the time the bomb goes off. But if the target is less robust, the bomb could go straight through the target (impact triggering the delay fuze as it does so) and accompany the aircraft for some distance beyond; not nice, and suggests that an attack from height would have been better. That leads me to assume that somewhere in the mission planning process, (following the target description) choice of fuze and attack profile will be defined, and the safety parameters stated. I assume that even on general roving tactical bombing missions in WWII, pilots would choose which targets were safe to attack in a particular mode; given the fuzing of the bombs they carried. Re. the film 'Empire of the Sun', am I right to remember that one of the bombs dropped by a P-51 actually flew off to one side rather than going straight ahead? I thought at the time it must have been a low-density repro to do that - rather than a real cast steel jobby. Cheers, Dave -- Dave Eadsforth |
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