Post amazingly cool pictures of aircraft (Volume 3)

Post amazingly cool pictures of aircraft (Volume 3)

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Discussion

Tony1963

5,215 posts

168 months

Saturday 6th July
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hammo19 said:
Flew over our garden at 1k feet yesterday. Made a glorious sound. Not perfect picture but grabbed my camera really quick after unlocking the door.

Had one whine its way over us yesterday, hate that racket. Thankfully it didn’t loiter at all.

JonnyWhitters

786 posts

88 months

Saturday 6th July
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First time at Goodwood racing circuit the other week and got an unexpected bonus when I realised they did Spitfire rides as well. Made for a bit of variety from the day (along with a DC-3)


CanAm

9,870 posts

278 months

Saturday 6th July
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Not amazingly cool, but not what you see very often at from your holiday hotel window.


aeropilot

36,211 posts

233 months

Saturday 6th July
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Tony1963 said:
hammo19 said:
Flew over our garden at 1k feet yesterday. Made a glorious sound. Not perfect picture but grabbed my camera really quick after unlocking the door.

Had one whine its way over us yesterday, hate that racket.
I agree, they make a horrible noise.

Jake899

546 posts

50 months

Monday 8th July
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A couple from this summers Vaasa Airshow in Finland. Lots more on the Vaasa thread in this section of the forum.

DodgyGeezer

41,865 posts

196 months

Monday 8th July
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Loire-Nieuport 10 prototype long-range maritime reconnaissance/torpedo-bomber, 1939.

xeny

4,589 posts

84 months

Monday 8th July
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The inverted gull wing seems an odd design choice. Why put the wing even lower for greater risk of wave damage? The PBY's layout seems far more sensible.

GliderRider

2,480 posts

87 months

Monday 8th July
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xeny said:
The inverted gull wing seems an odd design choice. Why put the wing even lower for greater risk of wave damage? The PBY's layout seems far more sensible.
Flying boats and floatplanes get exposed to some very sudden and large loads when hitting or being hit by waves. Reducing distance between, and thus leverage, on components increases the strength.
The Loire-Nieuport 10's design appears to have been aimed at getting the fuselage and engines as far from the water as possible without extra structure, purely for that purpose.

The Italian approach to the same problem, with the Savoia-Marchetti S.55, was to make each float into a hull, put the wing across them and the push-pull engines on top of the centre section.


xeny

4,589 posts

84 months

Monday 8th July
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Have to admire the dedication to weight reduction with those empennage support structures.

GliderRider

2,480 posts

87 months

Monday 8th July
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xeny said:
Have to admire the dedication to weight reduction with those empennage support structures.
biggrin

Maybe allowing the waves to travel through the rear fuselage structure was a way of reducing the loads that could be imposed?

GliderRider

2,480 posts

87 months

Monday 8th July
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DodgyGeezer said:


Loire-Nieuport 10 prototype long-range maritime reconnaissance/torpedo-bomber, 1939.
I was going to say that the lower rear fuselage looks a bit Handley Page Hampden. Having now looked at some Hampden pictures, you could virtually build the whole thing from a Hampden. Crank the wing a bit more, move the engines up on pylons, add a bit of tailplane dihedral, find a big pair of floats from the parts bin and you're there.

DodgyGeezer

41,865 posts

196 months

Tuesday 9th July
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aeropilot

36,211 posts

233 months

Tuesday 9th July
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DodgyGeezer said:
Ju88 prototype smile

hidetheelephants

27,362 posts

199 months

Tuesday 9th July
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Rather underlines the issues germany had introducing new aircraft types; the contemporary Bristol Blenheim was removed from most frontline duties by 1942.

Eric Mc

122,688 posts

271 months

Tuesday 9th July
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The Blenheim evolved into the Beaufort and, most significantly, into the Beaufighter - which was a formidable piece of kit.

The Ju88 didn't stand still either. The original rather under powered and under arrmed Ju88 A-1s and A4s that were in use early in the war were superseded by much more capable variants - including the Ju88G family which caused such devastation as night fighters against RAF bombers.

The Ju188 was also a descendant of the original Ju88 line but, luckilly for the Allies, by the time it arrived Germany was descending into chaos regarding their ability to mass produce effectively.









aeropilot

36,211 posts

233 months

Tuesday 9th July
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hidetheelephants said:
Rather underlines the issues germany had introducing new aircraft types; the contemporary Bristol Blenheim was removed from most frontline duties by 1942.
The Ju88 was a much better aircraft than the Blenheim from the beginning though, with much more development potential, which as mentioned above the Blenheim didn't have.
The only problem with the Ju88 was the idiotic dictate that it had to be designed as a dive-bomber...but that wasn't the fault of the aircraft designers.

DodgyGeezer

41,865 posts

196 months

Friday 12th July
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GliderRider

2,480 posts

87 months

Friday 12th July
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aeropilot said:
The Ju88 was a much better aircraft than the Blenheim from the beginning though, with much more development potential, which as mentioned above the Blenheim didn't have.
The only problem with the Ju88 was the idiotic dictate that it had to be designed as a dive-bomber...but that wasn't the fault of the aircraft designers.
Could it be that the dive bomber requirement gave the Ju88 the already built-in strength to accomodate more powerful engines and ease of modification,analagous to the Avro Manchester's torpedo carrying requirement giving the Lancaster the long bomb bay to do what the Halifax and Stirling could not?

Eric Mc

122,688 posts

271 months

Friday 12th July
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Very likely.

Sometimes an atribute built into an aircraft design for one purpose turns out to be a bonus for some other purposes that were never originally considered.

Oftentimes, it's the opposite.

For example, the short undercarriage of the Boeing 737-100/200 was looked on as a plus point as it allowed easy access for maintenance purposes to the original slim Pratt and Whitney JT8D engines.

When tubbier large fan engines were fitted to later models, the short undercarriage began to become problematic. And the significant problems suffered by the 737 Max are directly attributable with the fact that redesigning and lengthening the undercarriage legs on the 737 has proved impractical.


aeropilot

36,211 posts

233 months

Friday 12th July
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GliderRider said:
aeropilot said:
The Ju88 was a much better aircraft than the Blenheim from the beginning though, with much more development potential, which as mentioned above the Blenheim didn't have.
The only problem with the Ju88 was the idiotic dictate that it had to be designed as a dive-bomber...but that wasn't the fault of the aircraft designers.
Could it be that the dive bomber requirement gave the Ju88 the already built-in strength to accomodate more powerful engines and ease of modification,analagous to the Avro Manchester's torpedo carrying requirement giving the Lancaster the long bomb bay to do what the Halifax and Stirling could not?
Not sure, it hindered it quite a bit, as the extra weight dropped its speed enough to make it more vunerable to the newer generation of fighters (as in the Battle of Britain) as it was conceived as a 'high speed' bomber, and so for us, we have to be thankfull that Udet got his way, which delayed the project enough, that by the time of the BofB the Luftwaffe was still relying on the Do17 and He111 rather than having most KG's equipped with a very fast and capable bomber.

Great aircraft though, and like the Bf109, was in continuous production from prior to WW2 right through to the end.

Its a shame that so few complete examples of those 15000 built survived the war.