Page 23 of 23

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 25 Oct 2023, 01:59
by Stanley
I had an idea that the 'scimitar' blades were a distortion of the camera lens Peter. Never seen vapour trails like that. I suppose they're related to the vapour trails you see from the wig tips of low flying aircraft sometimes.....

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 25 Oct 2023, 09:01
by Tizer
This web page is from 2005 when the first pics were released of the scimitar bladed prop for the A400M: Scimitar blades

This shows Airbus A400M prop blades on an aircraft taxiing where the outer set is feathered, and the inner applying thrust.
Image

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 26 Oct 2023, 02:31
by Stanley
The blades of propellers on ships like submarines were modified to scimitar shapes as well.....

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 26 Oct 2023, 08:55
by Tizer
Thanks for pointing that out - there's plenty of info on the web about those, although some secrecy too. :smile:

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 27 Oct 2023, 02:42
by Stanley
I know that the big problem in water is cavitation, the forming and subsequent collapse of bubbles that are actually vacuums as they are a product of the propeller tips moving faster than water can move. You get the same phenomenon in centrifugal pumps. One of the things I found out about corrosion is that a corrosion cell in the metal of the pump impeller or body can be triggered by the collapse of these bubbles (in a centrifugal pump it is evidenced by a crackling sound.). This can result in erosion of the impellers and worm holes in the body of the pump. In marine propellers it evidences itself by erosion of the tips of the blades which get bad enough to spoil the efficiency of the propellers and become a source of sound by which the submarines can be detected. I suspect that in the case of the aircraft propellers the impairment is the formation of vacuums and vortices at the tips of the blades and this is what causes that distinctive screw pattern of condensation. But what the hell do I know about it..... :biggrin2:

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 10 Dec 2023, 10:24
by Tizer
This really is a winged heroes story...
`World War Two: When 600 US planes crashed in Himalayas' LINK

The Curtiss C-46 Commando plane was new to me but I found this web site useful: Air Vectors

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 11 Dec 2023, 03:45
by Stanley
First I have ever heard of it Peter. Thank you!

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 18 Mar 2025, 18:51
by Whyperion
Sky via MSN The last surviving Battle of Britain pilot John 'Paddy' Hemingway has died aged 105.

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 20 Mar 2025, 03:54
by Stanley
Image

This is the Handley Page Heyford in service with the RAF in 1938. I tripped over it on the web and was surprised to see that something as antiquated as this was in service well into WW2.

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 20 Mar 2025, 10:18
by Tizer
It was being phased out at the start of WW2. My father joined the RAF just before the war started and was posted to RAF Manston briefly before going on to Catterick. He recalled standing at a window in the barracks at Manston as he heard the announcement that we were at war with Germany. All he could see was Heyfords and other old aircraft in long lines and he wondered how we were going to win a war with those against Hitler's modern aircraft. Fortunately he moved on to a station operating Blenheim night fighters. On the day the war ended he was at RAF Bourn in Cambridgeshire, and looking out over a very different scene: Lancaster bombers and Mosquitoes lined up in readiness to fly if necessary.

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 30 Mar 2025, 03:24
by Stanley
See THIS Wikipedia article on the Tupolev TB3 Soviet bomber which was in service well into WW2. I tripped over a video yesterday on YouTube. I had never see it before. (LINK TO VIDEO

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 30 Mar 2025, 11:25
by Stanley
And then I found this!


Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 30 Mar 2025, 13:33
by Stanley
and this......


Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 09 Apr 2025, 16:04
by Tizer
Showing off in Rome!... :smile:
`Red Arrows stun crowds during Rome flypast' BBC video

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 10 Apr 2025, 00:15
by Cathy
Thanks Tize, that was exciting :good:

Re: Winged Heroes

Posted: 10 Apr 2025, 01:25
by Stanley
Morning Cathy! They're pretty good aren't they.... :good: