An Eddy? In the space-time continuum like what Ford Prefect talked about?Not an aerodynamicist but I assume there is a little eddy/low pressure area just aft of the probe assembly, sucking that stuff back forward. Neat!
An Eddy? In the space-time continuum like what Ford Prefect talked about?Not an aerodynamicist but I assume there is a little eddy/low pressure area just aft of the probe assembly, sucking that stuff back forward. Neat!
An Eddy? In the space-time continuum like what Ford Prefect talked about?
Clearly it isn't right. But it might be more interesting if one had a picture of a normal installation to compare. As it is, looks nothing like the one I recall, S-3, B837, or MD80.Speaking of AOA, I made some cool art today with my AOA probe, improperly cured sealant, and transonic fluid dynamics. ?
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One simply does not ask Jackson Pollock what his canvas looked like before the masterpiece was completed.Clearly it isn't right. But it might be more interesting if one had a picture of a normal installation to compare. As it is, looks nothing like the one I recall, S-3, B837, or MD80.
DON'T PANIC!An Eddy? In the space-time continuum like what Ford Prefect talked about?
You would also understand why 42% get jets . . . just sayin'.haha Jim you old fuck. My big sister and brother are both heart of the envelope (late 60s to mid 70s) Gen X. They both always talked about this (for them) coming of age book. If only I could read, maybe I would understand the fanfare. Did this get printed in Canada then?
One does wonder the over/under for the number of swear words coming out of 120 and 12C when the masterpiece came back to the line, though. "Umm . . . about that signoff . . ."One simply does not ask Jackson Pollock what his canvas looked like before the masterpiece was completed.
They're all civilians, so... I dunno. If it ever cures, it will probably peel right off in one piece.One does wonder the over/under for the number of swear words coming out of 120 and 12C when the masterpiece came back to the line, though. "Umm . . . about that signoff . . ."
FWIW inverted spins and tail slides/zero airspeed departures are prohibited in the NATOPS.
Chip lights were pretty uncommon in the T-6 (it's got the "big" PT6, not the small or medium one) and I can only think of one IP who had one (on a night fam no less) although I'm sure there have been more. I figured the tail slide prohibition was because of what the air loads did to the elevator and rudder, but I can see how the committee would have got it in the book from day one because of T-34 corporate knowledge. Oddly, extended flight going straight up or straight down (i.e. vertical rolls) isn't explicitly prohibited, and the airplane certainly has enough smash to do it- I always thought of that as being very bad for the oil system. The oil pickup needs at least a little G, either positive or negative but at least some, or the engine won't get any oil. We'd occasionally set off the low oil pressure warning (not just the mere caution) by bunting too hard out of a spin recovery... that tells you a lot about respecting the limitations of the oil system.They weren't in the T-34...until they were sometime around 2006-07. There was a rash of chip lights and several OCF IPs known to do zero-speed departures, so they stopped that and cases of chip lights went back down to their normal instances. I'm guessing the T-6 prohibition is a carry over.