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#1
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"Jay Beckman" wrote
Did you guys ever feather the inboards for extended loiter time? Seems I've seen pics of this. Nope! But we did shutdown the "outboard" engines. :-) Bob |
#2
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"Bob Moore" wrote in message
. 122... "Jay Beckman" wrote Did you guys ever feather the inboards for extended loiter time? Seems I've seen pics of this. Nope! But we did shutdown the "outboard" engines. :-) Bob Ah, ok. Just as long as it was one on *each* side... Jay B |
#3
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote Nope! But we did shutdown the "outboard" engines. :-) Yeah, you wanted to save the "outboard engine" for when you were "on" the water, for trolling (fishing) and such, right? ducking, running -- Jim in NC |
#4
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Bob Moore wrote:
Seems as if almost all of PanAm's worldwide destinations were served by seaside airports. PanAm started service to most of these places before there were airports there. They flew seaplanes in. People eventually built airports in the same cities. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#5
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote But then, I had spent most of my 10 years of Navy flying (P-2 P-3) at 100'-200' over water both night and IMC. Hand flying a P-2 Neptune for 12 hours at 100' at night could very well test one's mettle. Did you have a radar altimeter, or any other means of fine tuning your altitude, other than barometric altimeter? -- Jim in NC |
#6
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"Morgans" wrote
Did you have a radar altimeter, or any other means of fine tuning your altitude, other than barometric altimeter? YES. And in the P-3 Orion, we had a "control wheel steering" mode for the autopilot that would allow us to lock the altitude hold function to the radar altimeter and just "drive" the ailerons with the control wheel. Wherever you put the control wheel, the autopilot kept it there. Controlwheel steering also worked for the elevator axis if the altitude hold function was not engaged. Bob |
#7
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![]() "Bob Moore" wrote in message . 122... "Morgans" wrote Did you have a radar altimeter, or any other means of fine tuning your altitude, other than barometric altimeter? YES. And in the P-3 Orion, we had a "control wheel steering" mode for the autopilot that would allow us to lock the altitude hold function to the radar altimeter and just "drive" the ailerons with the control wheel. Wherever you put the control wheel, the autopilot kept it there. Controlwheel steering also worked for the elevator axis if the altitude hold function was not engaged. Bob ....and that is what put that L1011 into the swamp down in Florida way back when. They bumped the yoke which put the plane in a very gradual descent ~100 FPM while they were all looking at the landing gear light... -- Dan DeVillers http://www.ameritech.net/users/ddevillers/start.html .. |
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