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stanzahero

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Posts posted by stanzahero

  1. Greetings Andrew,

     

    I too come from near Bendigo (St Arnaud) but drive to Horsham to fly.

     

    It is pretty much the same distance but in the opposite direction.

     

    Welcome to the forum.

     

    I'm sure you'll find heaps of resourses and tips for your flying here on the site.

     

    Stanzahero.

     

     

  2. The thread is about turning bug-smashers into bird-smashers.

     

    I had a motorcycle accident and when I was discussing it with another member of the fraternity, I refered to it as an alteration. He corrected me and said it was an altercation. I replied ....nope, to the bike it was an alteration.

     

    It seems it was the same here.

     

    It seems you were very lucky there Darky.

     

    The J170 would have coped that pretty hard.

     

    Stan.

     

     

  3. Avoid the problem entirely by you paying for the aircraft hire then 'selling' him a tictac for whatever the hire price was? He didn't hire the aircraft' date=' you did, he was just strange enough to want to pay that much for a tictac...[/quote']Before Bob Ansett became an airline mogal, he used to hire himself out to drive people to Melbourne from the Mallee in Victoria.

     

    When the government got wind of it they shut him down because he wasn't a licienced operator. To get around that he started selling oranges to his customers for the price of a trip to Melbourne.....

  4. Wha ? .... would seem more likly that the engine seized that quick that the prop couldn't stop in time. Thus removing it's self from the front of the plane.

    Don't quote me on this but I think it is something along the lines of the prop needing oil pressure to maintain a course pitch (high gear for car nuts) and when the oil pressure is lost it reverts back to a take off pitch ( low gear ).

    You could simulate the results by (VERY NOT RECOMMENDED) cruising along the highway at 100 kph, then dropping it back to first gear....

     

     

  5. As David said they can either be total disaster or a God-send.

     

    This is the way I used to use them...

     

    Depending on the grit size (finer grades are better for finishing, courser grades for de-glazing) I lubricated the cylinder bore with either cerosene (?) or a light mahine oil for the courser grades.

     

    Using a large drill (needed for the power) place the hone inside the bore while it is stationary. Slowly spin the hone inside the bore while moving the hone up and down the length of the cylinder.

     

    The optimal cross-hatch angle (the angle between the up lines and the down lines) is between 60 and 90 degrees.

     

    If the angle is too great, the piston rings tend to spin on the pistons causing abnormal wear on the ring lands and rings. Too little causes bedding in problems and reglazing.

     

    It is important not to let the drill spin in the one spot as this could do serious damage to the bore.

     

    This was my technique foe automotive engines...

     

    Stanzahero.

     

     

  6. The camel was an interesting machine. The British lost almost as many pilots in accidents as they did in combat.

     

    It had a mean roll rate one way but not the other...

     

    The SE5a was a lot more stable and forgiving for inexperienced pilots which was why it was popular.

     

    Stanzahero.

     

     

  7. I agree with Andy about the sales forecast. With diesel reaching European Quality standards it is a good alternative in cars, however...

     

    Compression Ignition engines need to be inducted for an airplane. They are reliant on compression ratio for their efficiency.

     

    Lower air pressure means lower compression ratios at altitude. Add the extra weight for a turbo, the extra strength required for the castings, mechanical fuel pressure pumps...

     

    I'm open to the idea though...

     

     

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