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#1351
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![]() Good luck in your service, S!
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Bobika. |
#1352
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That the cut-out will provide +12 boost is obvious, it has the same boost control as the Merlin III and it is also proven by the later amendments. The question that remains is when it was authorized. |
#1353
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S!
Will check the link, thanks Banks ![]() ![]() |
#1354
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Just found another contemporary source.
Flight Magazine - April 1940 ![]() |
#1355
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An interesting clip on building the Merlin:
Wish the original soundtrack had been kept instead of adding the usual muzak |
#1356
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I'd just like to add a little example of how procedures differed during the war when compared to peacetime/modern times.
Spitfires suffered from a couple of problems that would today result in the grounding of the fleet. Namely the "Skew Gear problem" in Merlins where the skew gear would fail randomly and catastrophically, (this happened to Alex Henshaw a number of times) and the Piston seizures on Packard Merlins - caused by the fact that the piston heads were not machined, to save time, and were left to wear to shape, or in some cases seize as the push rods got bent. Neither of these problems would be acceptable today. They simply could not afford to halt production to find the source of the skew gear problem, so they continued making the engines as was, up until the point that they fixed it. This almost certainly cost lives and certainly cost aircraft. Last edited by winny; 04-26-2012 at 12:12 PM. |
#1357
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Yeah it seems pretty evident this Crumpp chap is not familiar with the concept of 'can do', its more like 'could do subject to subclause B paragraph 8 having gone through all the correct channels to get a facilitation to arrange several meetings, the minutes of which will be copied in triplicate and sent for further approval'.
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Intel Q9550 @3.3ghz(OC), Asus rampage extreme MOBO, Nvidia GTX470 1.2Gb Vram, 8Gb DDR3 Ram, Win 7 64bit ultimate edition |
#1358
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What Crumpp is conveniently ignoring is that Rolls-Royce were already
A) Testing a Merlin at 18 lbs boost and generating 1,536 hp on a special blend of gasoline, benzol, methanol tetraethyl lead in August 1937. (Price Spitfire Story 2010 p. 107) But then Price, like most aviation historians, is an ignorant -non engineering- dweeb who knows nothing about aircraft. B) testing Merlins IIs on 100 Octane in 1938. Whatever Crumpp might think Rolls-Royce had been working on modifying Merlins to run on 100 Octane and high boost well before 1940, and with their engineering capabilities would have known what sort of modifications would be needed to get the Merlin II & III series running reliably at higher ratings - the modified cylinder heads would have been developed and ready to use as soon as the go ahead was given in November 1939 to allow Merlins to run at +12 lbs. If Crumpp had been in charge at R-R at the time nothing would have been done because Crumpp would want every single tiny detail thrashed out at length, and he would know better than everyone else that at least 30 months would be needed for intensive operational testing and development before production engines could be cleared to use 100 octane fuel. |
#1359
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The paperwork would follow later.
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#1360
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In short, we'd have lost the war if Crump had been in charge.
Imagine D-Day on Omaha beach, Crump leading the first wave in Dog Green sector with a clipboard in his hand pointing out all the hazards to the commanders before ordering a full retreat because of failures in Health and Safety policy. |
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