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antarmike

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Posts posted by antarmike

  1. Whilst singing the praises of the Mosquito, let us not forget The DeHavilland Hornet.

    Built with the same principles it was ( I beleive) the faster Piston engine Fighter ever to be built (at 472 Miles per Hour ) They were the last piston engine fighters to serve with the RAF, being withdrawn and replaced by Vampires in early 1956 and as bueautiful as the Mossie

  2. I meet up occasionally with an ex wartime navigator of a Sunderland, spent time in Hong Kong.

     

    The amazing thing was that they could not take off if the water was too smooth (hull suction), so they sometimes had to send the harbour launch out to chop the surface up a little before takeoff!

     

    He had a great respect for the marque, said it was like being posted to a floating hotel, complete with even a workshop and lathe!

     

     

    The Sunderland hull shape changed with the Mk111. This saved 10% of the total air drag, but did it also help with the Sunderland unsticking from calm water?

  3. I was once walking behind the horse, next to the tow rope going back to the boat, when the horse decided to take a shortcut, through a gap in a Hawthorn hedge, down a steep bank, through nettles, to reach a field we used to keep her in. As she went through the hedge, the rope got me by the chest, under the arms and I was dragged though the hedge and the nettles, at this point the horse was running at 90 degrees to the bank, the towrope pulled the boat to the side of the cut, stretched a lot and broke, the loose end flying back into my face, so yes, walking behind a horse isn't always a good idea...

  4. The front axle drive shaft in the Aux Box runs in a bronze bush presssed into the end of the Rear Axle drive shaft, They turn at almost the same speed when out of 4 wheel drive, unless you fit free wheeling front hubs, which stop the front shaft turning. I was always worried about the long term durablity of this bush when I ran Series LR with freewheeling hubs...

  5. The ill fated Vulture was anh X24 engine. It reminds me of another myth, That the Merlin was named after King Arthurs magician. It wasn't, A Merlin is a bird of prey, as is Griffon ,Vulture, Pergrine and other Rolls Royce engines of the period!

  6. The Lancaster was also built in two forms, one with Rolls Royce Merlins, but a significant number were also built with Bristol Hurcules Air cooled radials, and having engine production spread between to manufactures ensure engines will always be available, should a manufacturers factory be bombed.

     

    American aircraft were never at risk of losing engine production, so never needed a backup plan, but as backup plans go tis one was very good, since both versions of the lanc were excellent.

     

    The Merlin Lanc had a total of 6560 Horsepwer, but The Hurcules engine version had 6900.

     

    with Bombs away it was faster than the Merlins and was loved by the crews because it got them out of danger zone far quicker.

     

     

  7. Another plus fror the lanc was it was modular, and it was relatively easy to uses whole sections of one damaged lanc and bolt them into another with different damage. I have seen photos of Lancs where the paint line between the black undersurface and the upper camoflage has had distinct steps in it at the joint lines indicating part of one aircraft has been bolted straight into another without repainting. Easy Battle damage repair has to be a big plus foor a warbird.

  8. The spare parts manuals for the Antars have lots of parts (Cab, and bodywork in particular that have a desription but no part number, merely saying "local manufacture"

     

    Ie they do not exist as spare parts, you have to make them yourself.

     

    To have a part name and no part works out as infinity. since anything divided by zero equals infinity.

     

    This ratio is hard to beat!!!

  9. My Matador has 12 Volt 36/36 Watt headlight bulbs, on a small bayonet cap, without indexing pins.

    In order to get the bulb in the right way so it dips down, instead of up, it relies on the word "top" printed in black ink on the brass bayonet. Imagine taking one out after it has been fitted to a fairly close fitting lampholder and this writing still being on it!

  10. In the late eighties you could walk round the Auto Jumble at Great Dorset Steam Fair and several traders were selling Coal fired cooking ranges with a "broad Arrow" cast into them. They were almost all dated 1953. I thought about buying one.

     

    In the last three years one of these (again dated 1953) came up for sale in a junk shop in Woodhall Spa, but it wasn't pristine as the Dorset ones had been. In fact it would have taken a lot f work to brig it rund.

     

    Where would these big heavy solid fuel coking ranges have been indinted to be used?

  11. width=640 height=304http://i137.photobucket.com/albums/q208/antarmike/stuckatrushden.jpg[/img]

    I moved on to the land and started some tree sirgery and soon I found the "need" and was able to justify (to myself) buying a Matador (Ex RAF and 118 Recovery Northampton Barracks, bought as a chasssis cab from David Crouch and converted by myself to Timber Tractor spec, used to pull a 24 ton capacity Pole trailer. Here I am getting stuck.

  12. If I remember correctly the US operated a number of armoured Cobras as targets for air gunnery schools.

    The cockpit had armoured glass and the leading edges of the wings, the nose etc had fairly heavy steel armour and other vunerable area lighter protection.

     

    The Air gunners fired frangible bullets from unmodified aircraft ( I beleive they carried a dye also). (somewhat like early paintballing)

     

    If I remember, there were shutters over the radiator which were closed before each target "attacked the gun training aircraft, and opened as soon as each attack was over.

     

    I don't beleive any were ever damaged enough to be shot down, but it must have been a bit hairy for the pilots.

     

    I think part of the decision to use the Cobra was the engine being behind the pilot was extremely unlikely to be damaged in a frontal attack.

  13. My mistake. It doesn't pay to take the word of others does it. My info came from a Tiger Moth Owner, who I used to work with, and he relaed to me that the nose had broken up. I don't know why he thought that>

  14. I saw the British Aerospace Mosquito flown many times before it was lost. I have seen it flown tamely at airshows but I will allways remeber it beating up Woburn Safari park at the Tiger moth fly in a few weeks before it's fatal crash.

     

    To my mind it must have been flown outside its recommended flight envelope because the pilot was simply hurling bit about and turning it at the end of each run standing it on it's wingtips. I have never seen the like since.

     

    The Mossie was lost when the nose broke up in flight, and I wonder if the pasting it got ( official or otherwise) at the Moth fly in wasn't the start of the end of an old Airframe.

     

    But seing A Mossie flown with such guts is totally awe inspiring and She was my favorite Aircraft from that day onwrds.

     

    but living in Lincolnshire and often working at RAF Coningsby I get to see an awful lot of the Lanc, (even climbing around inside and sitting in the Pilot's seat, I love that too.

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