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Aviation Geeks unite?! Anybody else care about planes here?

What's your level of interest in aviation?!


  • Total voters
    50
The Mi-24 got a mention a while back - for anyone who's interested, here's a walk around video on one that's now flown in the U.S.

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The guy who made the video has a whole pile of aviation videos (seems to be his livelyhood).


Thank you for posting that.

Always liked those. Had many models of them in different paint schemes
 
And from the how no to build a supersonic bomber but the soviet union did it anway we have the TU-22 (as opposed to the TU-22M).

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On of the issues was the positioning of the engines. Now we've had aircraft with engines mounted at the rear (DC-9 for example) but the TU-22 has been the only one to mount them on top of the fuselage and there's a good reason for that.

The person who did the TU-22 video also has several others.

One is on the true story of the B-21 rescue mission that was turned in a film staring Gene Hackman and another was the engineer who accidentally took off in a British Electric Lightning.

Then they build the TU-160.

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I love it when I learn about some simple little engineering hack that solves a problem with an aircraft. Recently learned about the the simple fix they used to solve the asymmetric stall problem on the F4 Corsairs. Seems that the monster prop wash caused the left wing to stall before the right which could really go south during carrier landings. All it took to fix the problem was to install a 6" x 3" wedge on the leading edge of the right wing. This "stall strip' caused just enough instability in the right wing's airflow for the two wings to stall together. That a little piece of metal on that huge wing could have such a difference is super cool.

You can see the stall strip here part way up the folded wing (with the cockpit directly behind)
 
Here's a bit of a flying freak: the Capelis XC-12, a badly conceived and sloppily built aircraft that was purchased by RKO Pictures and used in several movies (including 1939's Five Came Back, mentioned in the Galileo Seven thread). The studio used the plane only as a stationary prop; a miniature was built for flying sequences.

VqC0shj.jpg


That is one butt-ugly airplane.
 
Here's a bit of a flying freak: the Capelis XC-12, a badly conceived and sloppily built aircraft that was purchased by RKO Pictures and used in several movies (including 1939's Five Came Back, mentioned in the Galileo Seven thread). The studio used the plane only as a stationary prop; a miniature was built for flying sequences.

VqC0shj.jpg


That is one butt-ugly airplane.

Well I guess the studio got it's moneys worth out of the plane.

there are some planes that have no survivors and that's a sad thing but I'd say the XC-12 isn't one of them.
 
Hehehe.. I very well know self tapping screws.. my frankenscooter is held together by a lot of them.. the original screws were either gone or so rusty that they were no longer usable.:biggrin:

That they used those on that aircraft yeah.. that's a tad eh.. much..
 
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