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| FM/DM threads Everything about FM/DM in CoD |
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#1
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I tried climbing at 170mph IAS to 16500ft, +6.2psi 2700 rpm Oil temp at 16500 feet 93'C, coolant 107'C Itunes playlist: Kim Wilde 1980's pop diva Throttle back to +2psi 5 mins for cooling, Oil 91'C, coolant 100'C Then 3000rpm +6.2psi for max speed test. Itunes Song: Kim Wilde "Kids in America" What do you get under similar conditions? I don't want to give away all the flight tests, we need to encourage a cadre of high alt flight testers for CloD to get some data variability Cheers, camber |
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#2
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#3
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Its a well known fact you will climb better with Elton John - Rocket Man. Of course, you will bleed from your ears..... |
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#4
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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 |
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#5
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I have experienced a cut oil return line (low pressure thankfully) and had a hole in the intake manifold cut by braided stainless steel lines. I got rid of every one. Braided stainless steel and airplane engines do not mix very well. |
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#6
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Hang on a minute... Was this thread not about the 109?
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#7
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No, these are the 100 octane forums.
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#8
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Yes it was, I cleverly managed to derail my own thread on historical 109 performance by posting CloD high alt flight tests of all aircraft. Then my flight tests contaminated another thread on turn rates with all the power of 100 octane
Then I managed to derail it again by making a joke about stainless steel hoses. What you people don't seem to understand is that you should take everything I say about the 109 as gospel because unlike you, I own a real 109, have flight tested it and have the video. Sure it is a 109G, and must be Hartmann's old ride because it has his girlfriend's name on the side. But I am sure he took good care of it and always kept his braided stainless steel hoses clean (Apologies I post this video anytime I feel I can get away with it): I have my own MkII Spit as well, 1C has failed to model the high altitude propellor falling off flight condition: camber |
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#9
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Last year out for a ride I noticed my gas consumption radically increasing, plus my left leg suddenly feeling very cold. Pulled over and found 94 octane gas sprinkling down from under the gas tank and sizzling on the hot air-cooled V-Twin underneath. Fortunately closing the fuel petcock stopped the flow, but the nifty s/s braiding had worn through the fuel line it was covering leading to the carb. Loosened two hose clamps and one of my buds made a quick trip with the braided line to a nearby Canadian Tire for a plain rubber counterpart. The fix was quick, easy, and cheap in this case, but can't imagine the huge danger this would've been in an aircraft!
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#10
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Same thing happened to me, fuel line split, half a tank rolled straight down one of the steepest hills in sheffield at night. I thought about lighting it to burn it off but decided that would be worse than gushing nine letres of Petrol down the hill... Unfortunatley the Kawasaki er5 doesnt have a stop on the fuel cock. -Only res and on!
They were not braided... I suppose better visual inspection is the lesson here... I also had to push all 100kilos of it up the rest of the hill with the aid of my drunken cousin who insisted the bike had to be straight instead of leaning slightly my way, so it was twice as hard and took twice as long... |
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