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Richard Bong had a good career in the P-38.
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Brent The X15 was the only aircraft I flew where I was glad the engine quit. - Milt Thompson. "Don't get so caught up in your right to dissent that you forget your obligation to contribute." Mrs. James to her son Chappie. |
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Sugar Scoops Rule :)
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That must have sounded bad ass. I love the sound of a B-17 flying over, and that's just 4 engines, 10 (even at low RPMs) must sound killer.
Can you imagine what it must have sounded like back in the day when 100's of them were in the air at the same time? (prior to the bombs exploding that is...)
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Dave _______________________________________________ '76 911S Targa '62 VW Type 1 Sunroof '73 914 2.0 (1st Porsche, gone long ago but not forgotton) |
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Joe Bob was right. It's both a turbo and a supercharger.
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David 1972 911T/S MFI Survivor |
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What did these engines run on "back in the day?"
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-Brad 2002 Carrera2 1986 944 Turbo |
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Not sure about WWII but until the late '90s 115/145 octane Aviation Gasoline was still available and both the Alaska piston freighter operators (DC-6, C-46, C-47) burned that as well as the Reno Air Races. As with gas for cars, aviation gas used to be a lot better.
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'84 Carrera Cabriolet |
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You do not have permissi
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Quote:
The wind shifted direction, and the sound indescribable. 396 cylinders. |
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Cool thread. My dad flew p-332’s in advanced training (P-38’s without turbocharges & both engines turning CW), P-61’s in the European theater and bailed out of an F-5 (Photo-Recon version of P-38) over Louisiana after the war. He went to primary pilot training at CalAero, at Chino. It's a small world!
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Old Houses, wooden boats & planes, air-cooled P-cars; 1988 Dark Blue 911 coupe 1941 Aeronca 65TC 1953 18' Old Town Otca Canoe |
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Max Sluiter
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There was an article in Flying a while ago about Lindy and the P-38. The pilots were all using too rich a mixture. Lindy showed them how to operate lean of peak (cylinder head temperature). Aircraft use cylinder head temperature as a substitute for oxygen sensors and other methods of measuring air/fuel mixture. Once you get leaner than stoichiometric the temps go down but efficiency goes up.
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1971 911S, 2.7RS spec MFI engine, suspension mods, lightened Suspension by Rebel Racing, Serviced by TLG Auto, Brakes by PMB Performance |
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Evil Genius
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thank you for helping me shoot my load for the night......
Trivia.........for extra effort......."giving it the whole nine yards" So I've been led to believe, the term "Giving it the whole nine yards" as a phrase, was from a wing mounted machine gun in the P-51, Corsair, or P-38 era WWII planes, that had 27 feet of ammo belts. They would shoot it all on target, and you didn't want to come back to base with any ammo left over, hence, "gave it the whole nine yards". I shot my load..........heck we didn't have laser guided sharks back in those days.
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Life is a big ocean to swim in. Wag more, bark less.
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