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#1
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Brian- BRBR
Are you in Russia??? P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#2
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The
B-1 is a remarkable bird but it has to fly. Going straight up takes it into an area it's not designed to operate at. This is one bird I wouldn't want to be within 10 miles if it were to stall with less than 20,000 feet involved. As he said, for a short period of time. Start with a 500 kt pass pull to the vertical, unload a bit and recover when airspeed reaches that point below you don't want to go. Thrust to weight limits would apply should you wish to accelerate vertically (or start at zero airspeed ![]() There may be some other reason that a bone can't go vertical for a bit but it's not lack of energy. Pugs good info can be found here http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/bomber/b-1b.htm |
#3
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How about structural. As I said, it has to fly. Fighters and Missiles go
straight up. The B-1 is Fuge. The larger the bird, the less structural punishment it can take. When the fighter goes vertical, it's airframe can handle the pressures. Now, put enough thrust for it do sustain it more than a few seconds and not stall then chances are, something will break. I'm with Pugs on this one. The Bone will go verticle. It should be able to do a lovely Nuke toss (1/2 cuban eight) which I'll bet the next round it was designed to do. I have read that if you max it out with bombs it can't take off with full fuel and gets topped off when airborne. But Yes I'm sure some Natops type in the AF said the verticl is too scary for the averege guy. It could all be done at 3 g's and push over at 0 g or less if that is what it takes but it could handle the stree maybe not the stick actuator (pilot). Sparky |
#4
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One reason Bones can not maintain a "near vertical" climb is that its
systems are not rated for sustained zero or negative G's for extended periods of time. B-1B's can start a near vertical climb from over 550 KEAS. From that speed they can maintain a near vertical climb long enough to trash its engines due to lack of oil pressure. You will never see a Bone do an extended inverted pass at an airshow! You might be suprised that most of the tactical navy aircraft are limited to 10 seconds at 0 g and 30 seconds at negative g. For an airshow that is more than enough to impress the crowd. However the blues have unlimited neg g with no burner. If you light the burner in negative G it will get real quiet as the engines quit. They did that stunt the first winter practice. The solo "forgot" about the burner limit. Sparky Power to weight. Maximum Takeoff Weight: 477,000 pounds (216,634 kilograms) Weight: Empty, approximately 190,000 pounds (86,183 kilograms) Thrust: 30,000-plus pounds with afterburner, per engine/120,000 plus pounds total thrust Empty weight still exceeds the engine thrust. Add fuel, Hydralic fluid, water, etc. and it's weight would be about twice what it's thrust is. The B-1 is a remarkable bird but it has to fly. Going straight up takes it into an area it's not designed to operate at. This is one bird I wouldn't want to be within 10 miles if it were to stall with less than 20,000 feet involved. As he said, for a short period of time. Start with a 500 kt pass pull to the vertical, unload a bit and recover when airspeed reaches that point below you don't want to go. Thrust to weight limits would apply should you wish to accelerate vertically (or start at zero airspeed ![]() There may be some other reason that a bone can't go vertical for a bit but it's not lack of energy. How about structural. As I said, it has to fly. Fighters and Missiles go straight up. The B-1 is Fuge. The larger the bird, the less structural punishment it can take. When the fighter goes vertical, it's airframe can handle the pressures. Now, put enough thrust for it do sustain it more than a few seconds and not stall then chances are, something will break. |
#5
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![]() "David Casey" wrote in message ... On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 19:10:20 -0500, Allen Epps wrote in May I introduce David Casey. He wants to join the Air National Guard in NM but can't get the waiver. He's part of a group that still attempts to take over certain areas on the usenets with this BS. He's part of the so called 404th that infests the us.* areas. Just ignore the idiot and press on. |
#6
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![]() "Tank Fixer" wrote in message k.net... In article , on Fri, 27 Feb 2004 18:44:04 GMT, "Gord Beaman" ) "Gord Beaman" ) attempted to say ..... "Admin" wrote: The fact remains that the B-1B is not designed for a 90 degree vertical unless you like smacking the ground and spreading yourself over a country mile. Don't let's get all silly here...we're talking generalities and I think most posters here seem to think (me too) that any a/c can go vertical if even for a short time. There may be some with particular reasons why they can't but in general they all can. This makes sense to me. And as Judge Judy says "If it makes sense to me then it's true!" ![]() The B52 wasn't designed for low level penetration operations. But then those SAC crews must have been wrong all those years for practicing it.... Just what do you know about the B-52? You are an Army Guard. Let me introduce another of the us.military.army 404k00ks. |
#7
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![]() " wrote in message hlink.net... "Tank Fixer" wrote in message k.net In article , on Fri, 27 Feb 2004 05:22:23 -0600, "Duke of URL" macbenahATkdsiDOTnet "Duke of URL" macbenahATkdsiDOTnet attempted to say ..... In , redc1c4 radiated into the WorldWideWait: Tank Fixer wrote: Bob Hover, Boeing 727, Loop. Alvin M. "Tex" Johnston 707 Barrel Roll All pilots Any airplane Stark raving lunatics Just those who jump out of the perfectly good ones are lunitics. Any plane captain will tell you there's no such thing as a perfectly good airplane. And here is the 404k00k with the 5 purple hearts and not even a Bronze to go with them. He used to post as his first name of Syndey. Hope you don't mind if I don't leave the k00ks area in the address. |
#8
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![]() "Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... "Admin" wrote: "Tosser" wrote in message ... "Admin" wrote in message ... Why can't a B-1 go straight up (for however short a time)?...if it can do a 60 deg attitude then are you telling us that it cannot go another 30 deg?....why not?... Power to weight. According to the story, all that mass was going *supersonic*, FFS. You don't lose that amount of inertia in the blink of an eye ..... No but going completely vertical at the blink of an eye, you do lose your wings. WTF does that mean?...you didn't go to 60 degrees instantly did you?...why must you go to 90 instantly?... I just like to have two good wings on any AC I happen to be on at the time. There is enough escapes on the B-1 but not on all AC. But I guess we need to be overtaxing our Airframes on a daily basis so we can test them out once in awhile. |
#9
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![]() "Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... "Tosser" wrote: "Admin" wrote in message ... Why can't a B-1 go straight up (for however short a time)?...if it can do a 60 deg attitude then are you telling us that it cannot go another 30 deg?....why not?... Power to weight. According to the story, all that mass was going *supersonic*, FFS. You don't lose that amount of inertia in the blink of an eye ..... What ARE you talking about?... He's talking about flight. Something you don't know too much about. |
#10
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"Admin" wrote in message
... "Tank Fixer" wrote in message k.net... In article , on Fri, 27 Feb 2004 18:44:04 GMT, "Gord Beaman" ) "Gord Beaman" ) attempted to say ..... "Admin" wrote: The fact remains that the B-1B is not designed for a 90 degree vertical unless you like smacking the ground and spreading yourself over a country mile. Don't let's get all silly here...we're talking generalities and I think most posters here seem to think (me too) that any a/c can go vertical if even for a short time. There may be some with particular reasons why they can't but in general they all can. This makes sense to me. And as Judge Judy says "If it makes sense to me then it's true!" ![]() The B52 wasn't designed for low level penetration operations. But then those SAC crews must have been wrong all those years for practicing it.... Just what do you know about the B-52? You are an Army Guard. Let me introduce another of the us.military.army 404k00ks. In a Red Flag years back, a friend of mine flying a TARPS hop at 500 AGL and 480 knots had a B-52 fly *under* him on his way to a target. At least that was his story. I'd call that low-level. __!_!__ Gizmo |
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