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*Buzzsaw* linked several links in 109 e3b against spitfire II topic, i noticed one thing: http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/avi...2-a-20108.html "The discussion was led by 'Glider' Gavin Bailey, who is a well respected historical journal whose material is subject to critical scrutiny by the best of English historians." He wrote this: 1st August 1940 Memo from Downing re the Handling of the Merlin Engine This note is advising the pilots that there is an increase in engine failures in the overuse of the emergency 12lb boost. The interesting thing is that this memo was sent to ALL fighter groups. Had we been talking about the 16 squadrons or less this would not have been the case. It would have been sent to the squadrons involved. I think, this unambiguous warning. If was used continuously the 12lbs boost, and the engine was ruined continuously, it does not interest, if COD makes the same one. |
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http://www.spitfireperformance.com/dowding.pdf he discusses a number of scenarios that result in engine oil starvation and/or overheating. The engines were failing, not just from overuse of 12lb/3000rpm but from overheating and lack of oil pressure. Steep climbs damage the engine from overheating, not overboosting. Inverted flying damages the engine from lack of lubrication not overboosting. Dowding memo is pretty clear: keep your gauges in the black! Yes, Dowding states not to use 12lb boost for more than 5 minutes, but the real culprit is overheating and lack of oil pressure. No sane pilot, in a combat situation, say with a 109 on his tail is going to worry about using 12lb/3000rpm for more than 5 minutes, and Dowding's memo is nothing more than a reminder to not use overboost except when really needed. |
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They would write it if the injury of the bearing would depend on the temperature only. "Be watching the thermometer, and untill not in red, u can make what you want". Unnecessarily would limit their pilots (5 min limit) without reason? "but the real culprit is overheating and lack of oil pressure." - and the strain of the drive. I believe it you recognise it you too, it takes advantage of everything if you squeeze more strength from the drive. Winch, crank, bearing, axis, gaskets, cooling, lubrication. They call it emergency power (notleistung in 109) because of this. "No sane pilot, in a combat situation, say with a 109 on his tail is going to worry about using 12lb/3000rpm for more than 5 minutes" - totally agree :cool: I would not care about it. But the engine from this probably gets ruined yet. :rolleyes: U reach home, or dont, it depends of luck. If u lucky enough, u can show the oil filter to maintenance team, if not... with an airplane less. The same one is true for the Bf 109 anyway. Invert flying prohibited its oil system, and the increase manifold pressure until time only it may be used (start und notleistung). It is not linked to the temperature there actually, but this unambiguous. Temperature OR the time a limit defines it, till when it may have been used. What is interesting yet, and I did not know about the fact that the system of the hydraulic propeller is bound to the engine, not separate system: "loss of engine oil pressure (inverted flight, slow rolls) has an effect on the Rotol aircrew in that baldes return to a fine pitch position". This means that he should lose very much from the performance at this time right? |
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You don't read what anyone else writes. Quote:
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http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.o...bs-14nov39.jpg without the need for repeated engine checks, since by definition the engine was being cycled multiple times per sortie. |
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I believe it if you say that a limitation was official onto the machine, but nobody took it seriously. Okay. But this does not mean that it did not have consequences. If you don't want to, you do not deal with it in the game. But let it have consequences. As it is for the other side. |
Yeah I forgot this :cool: According to you, what was the purpose that the oil filter was taken out (without an oil change)? What did they make with it? It was thrown in into a big green box, on which was a huge "not interest " stencil? :grin:
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May I remind you the late war LW with thousands of a/c build each month but with only hundreds on the fronts? Even in the late war Tempy the Emergency power had a restricting safety link. The Spitfire during BoB was a wonderful aircraft, potent, powerful and survivable. That's it. |
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Sorry, but the fact that you claim continuous running on what's called emergency power and then try to support it with the argument that most planes would be destroyed pretty fast anyway, makes it all sound like an effort to disguise the fact that if the aircraft survived long enough they would get a higher proportion of engine failures. It would be more accurate to phrase this a bit differently: engine failures were rare not because WEP was free of charge, but because the aircraft rarely survived long enough for the engine abuse to take effect. Like i said before, they wouldn't call it emergency power if it was fine to use it all day long and fuel burn was the only real drawback. They would just call it full power and insert a footnote "warning, it burns fuel really fast". Emergency has a pretty strong connotation to it, it means "don't use unless you're about to die" in simple terms. And finally, this is not a thread about what the Merlin could or couldn't do. This is a thread about modeling engine limitations on ANY kind of engine in the sim if it also had them in reality. If the Merlin did or didn't have such restrictions is a completely different matter and totally out of the scope of this thread. What are doing here is this: "Supposing engine X has limitation Y, what's the best way to have this reflected in the sim?" Why do you feel the need to constantly hijack this thread in the direction of the Merlin specifically is completely beyond me, especially when you can just as easily start your own thread and argue your point there without dragging this one completely off-topic. We are not discussing the capabilities of a specific engine here, we are discussing a proposed idea for a game feature. If you want the Merlin to be exempt from it, feel free to start a separate thread about it or use one of the many already provided. We don't need every single thread around here to revolve around the Merlin and the use of 100 octane fuel, there's several of them already ;) Excuse me the bolded text, i mean no hostility and it's purely for emphasis. It's just getting mighty tiresome trying to discuss an interesting idea with some like-minded fellows in the pub and having someone from across the bar constantly jump in the middle of your group shouting "AHA" as he dumps a load of old musty dossiers and charts on the table before he starts on something that has almost nothing to do with the discussion at hand. Don't drive us out of the pub man, especially when there are people having the kind of discussion you prefer just two tables over :-P |
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