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I have always wondered what happens to the a/c that go down like the hornet recently. Do they take them out of the sea or leave them there? Forgive me if this is a meaningless question.
"Runaway engines?" First time I've heard that term used. Was that a broken throttle linkage going to mil?
They would also apparently have compressor stalls if you looked at them cross-eyed. Like Master said, not a good mark for P&W. I was curious because in the Prowler (with our spontaneously exploding J52s :icon_tong), a throttle linkage failure can cause the engine to basically do whatever it wants depending on what the vibrations do to the FCU.One of my sim instructors was telling me the old A model Tomcat had some "quirky" engines early on. He was saying that, believe it or not, he saw several engines "runaway" for no apparent reason, wierd enough to the point that some of them the reason for it they couldn't figure out.
Nerd alert! :icon_tongDifferent animal, but in the 60's you had 2 "throttle cables" and both were spring loaded to max-power.
One set the max power available (PAS, normally left at "fly" aka max power)
The other was a load-demand cable, which told the HMU about how much power the rotors wanted.
The governor trimmed it to the desired RPM.
Either cable breaking could cause some form of runaway (aka, high side failure).
...spring loaded to max-power.
One set the max power...
"Nobody snuggles with Max Power. You strap yourself in and feel the "G"s!"
Max Power. He's the man whose name you'd love to touch. But you mustn't toooooooouch.