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| IL-2 Sturmovik The famous combat flight simulator. |
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#1
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Blueish. Daimlers burn very rich though and burn low grade fuel, 87% octane. Would they still burn that now? They had much lower compression ratios than merlins but they were made that way because the Germans didn't have access to the good fuels that the allies had. Lower compression engines run well...better one low grade fuels than they do on high grade fuels. It's probably why they had such a bigger displacement than Merlins 27 I think and 34 liters. Bigger displacement to get the power.
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#2
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#3
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I need immediatly to run from office.
Please if you find any materials that to show, read, and you own suggestion - write it here. I and my guys will read it. I will be back soon. Hope on Sunday. |
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#4
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Here is a Merlin engine being started, but one see no flames at all, maybe only visable during night time?
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#5
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But thanks for the sample |
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#6
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http://www.rogerdarlington.co.uk/Hurricane.html "Even with the flame shields over the exhaust, I found the flickering blue flames strangely comforting over the water but, once over the French coast, one felt very conspicuous in the night sky". His squadron colleague Morrie Smith makes the same point: "I felt that everyone for miles around could see the exhaust stubs glowing in the night, but the anti-glare cowlings protected the pilot's night vision from this glow". "As I descended deeper into the cloud, I experienced a frightening phenomenon: the whole inside of the cockpit was lit up by a red glow. My immediate reaction was: 'Fire!' But there was no heat and all my instruments showed everything to be in order, so I ventured to look outside. My two exhaust manifolds were belching out the usual flame, made perhaps a trifle more red and less blue from being throttled back, and this source had illuminated the surrounding very dense cloud. It was an eerie sensation but, once I knew what it was all about, it ceased to trouble me". Don't forget the glowing stubs
__________________
klem 56 Squadron RAF "Firebirds" http://firebirds.2ndtaf.org.uk/ ASUS Sabertooth X58 /i7 950 @ 4GHz / 6Gb DDR3 1600 CAS8 / EVGA GTX570 GPU 1.28Gb superclocked / Crucial 128Gb SSD SATA III 6Gb/s, 355Mb-215Mb Read-Write / 850W PSU Windows 7 64 bit Home Premium / Samsung 22" 226BW @ 1680 x 1050 / TrackIR4 with TrackIR5 software / Saitek X52 Pro & Rudders |
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#7
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I often feel like that when I'm at work!
I realy like the way the spitfires suspension reacts in the first video. That little dip of the wing as as the plane turns and comes to a halt. It really gives the impression of inertia and the mass of the aircraft. Cheers and thanks for the update! Last edited by Skoshi Tiger; 12-10-2010 at 09:49 PM. |
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#8
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S!
Thank you for the update Also many nightfighter books I have read state blueish flames on British bombers. And there was a talk witha guy who tuned/maintained DB engines and he said the engine tunes were done in a dark room to see the exhaust flame color to adjust the injection etc. correctly. Ok, have a good weekend all! |
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#9
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#10
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As I told above a lot of factors is present in forming of color. |
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