Nordic
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« Reply #45 on: January 18, 2010, 04:42:10 pm » |
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Thunderbolt
George Eyston's late 30's LS record breaker
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Some people will tell you that slow is good - and it may be, on some days - but I am here to tell you that fast is better. H S Thompson 1937 - 2005
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Steve Pyro
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« Reply #46 on: January 18, 2010, 04:56:43 pm » |
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Well, done Rup. That's the land bit done.
2 more applications to go.
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Steve East Anglian cobras
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Ferrari Spider
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« Reply #47 on: January 18, 2010, 05:02:48 pm » |
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You want clues already!
of course not, just want to see if you know what you are talking about or is it just the usual bollocks
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Steve Pyro
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« Reply #48 on: January 18, 2010, 05:49:58 pm » |
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Well you haven't been very pro-active with providing an answer yet - usual bluster and BS.
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Steve East Anglian cobras
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Perdu
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« Reply #49 on: January 18, 2010, 06:15:11 pm » |
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Bill, for an extra point, what is the most striking difference beween the chippy's and the rest of the aircraft in the flight?
here I can only cheat I have flown in many Chipmunks I have never flown in any other aircraft in the BBMF, not even the doughty old Dakota, although Gwyn, the guv'ner flew in daks to france as a schoolgirl lucky bugger! what had two Rolls Royce R engines? Whirlwind or Manchester? Didnt the R become the Vulture? Or is it the dunces corner again for me? NO I WAS WRONG......... this time I tried Wiki George Eyston built a car with two R's in it, Thunderbolt and blimey o'reilly they were the two Supermarine S6B engines relocated one even won the Schneider TrophyThanks for making me look that up Steve new things every day
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"Ha ha you can't a fool me, there ain't a no sanity clause!"
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Ferrari Spider
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« Reply #50 on: January 18, 2010, 06:35:24 pm » |
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Well you haven't been very pro-active with providing an answer yet - usual bluster and BS.
yep, usual ball sh*t from you, nothing changed there, hows the fake car...
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mgmark
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« Reply #51 on: January 18, 2010, 10:33:06 pm » |
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Bill, for an extra point, what is the most striking difference beween the chippy's and the rest of the aircraft in the flight?
Aside from two sticks in tandem, and the Dak had two side by side, so I don't imagine it's that, do you mean the non-period shiny black finish? MG Mark
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"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." Mario Andretti
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Perdu
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« Reply #52 on: January 19, 2010, 12:02:35 am » |
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I must look up the serials of the BBMF Chippys, to see if either of them is in my ATC cadet logbook.
I wish I'd logged the ones I flew in as a Civilian Instructor in later years
I thnk Mark will be right about the colour scheme
come on Peter spill'em
bill
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"Ha ha you can't a fool me, there ain't a no sanity clause!"
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nopanic - neil
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« Reply #53 on: January 19, 2010, 10:40:00 am » |
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Another teaser question - what had 2 Roll Royce 'R' engines?
did a google search for Miss England II and came up with this not sure if that is right but could be this one Miss England II was built for Lord Wakefield in 1930, who had obtained a pair of the powerful new Rolls-Royce type R V-12 engines. Miss England II which was was 38 feet long with a beam of nine feet. She had been designed by Fred Cooper. Speed: 98.76 mph (85.82 kn; 158.94 km/h), Sir Henry Segrave, 13 June 1930, Windermere 110.28 mph (95.83 kn; 177.48 km/h), Kaye Don, 9 July 1931, Lake Garda
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If you're going through hell, keep going.
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Steve Pyro
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« Reply #54 on: January 19, 2010, 11:15:48 am » |
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Well done Neil, 2 boats makes the set (Rup got the car)
So -
George Eyston - Thunderbolt LSR car Henry Segrave - Miss England II WSR boat Kaye Don - Miss England III WSR boat
all had 2 Rolls Royce 'R' engines
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Steve East Anglian cobras
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BigH
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« Reply #55 on: January 19, 2010, 12:28:39 pm » |
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Bovril Morning, squadron leader. Squadron Leader What-ho, Squiffy. Bovril How was it? Squadron Leader Top hole. Bally Jerry pranged his kite right in the how's your father. Hairy blighter, dicky-birdied, feathered back on his Sammy, took a waspy, flipped over on his Betty Harper's and caught his can in the Bertie. Bovril Er, I'm afraid I don't quite follow you, squadron leader. Squadron Leader It's perfectly ordinary banter, Squiffy. Bally Jerry ... pranged his kite right in the how's yer father ... hairy blighter, dicky-birdied, feathered back on his Sammy, took a waspy, flipped over on his Betty Harper's and caught his can in the Bertie. Bovril No, I'm just not understanding banter at all well today. Give us it slower. Squadron Leader Banter's not the same if you say it slower, Squiffy. Bovril Hold on, then. (shouts) Wingco! Wingco Yes! Bovril Bend an ear to the squadron leader's banter for a sec, would you? Wingco Can do. Bovril Jolly good. Wingco Fire away. Squadron Leader (draws a deep breath and looks slightly uncertain, then starts even more deliberately then before) Bally Jerry ... pranged his kite ... right in the how's your father ... hairy blighter ... dicky-birdied ... ... feathered back on his Sammy ... took a waspy ... flipped over on his Betty Harper's ... and caught his can in the Bertie. Wingco ... No, don't understand that banter at all. Squadron Leader Something up with my banter, chaps? A siren goes. The door bursts open and an out-of-breath young pilot rushes in in his flying gear.
Pilot (Michael) Bunch of monkeys on your ceiling, sir! Grab your egg and fours and let's get the bacon delivered. General incomprehension. They look at each other
Wingco Do you understand that? Squadron Leader No, didn't get a word of it. Wingco Sorry old man, we don't understand your banter. Pilot You know ... bally ten-penny ones dropping in the custard ... (searching for the words) um ... Charlie Choppers chucking a handful ... Wingco No, no ... sorry. Bovril Say it a bit slower, old chap. Pilot Slower banter, sir? Wingco Ra-ther! Pilot Um ... sausage squad up the blue end! Squadron Leader No, still don't get it. Pilot Um ... cabbage crates coming over the briny? Squadron Leader No. Wingco, Pilot and Bovril No, no ... Stock film of a German bombing raid.
Voice Over But by then it was too late. The first cabbage crates hit London by July 7th. That was just the beginning...
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Always with the negative waves Moriarty, always with the negative waves...
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mgmark
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« Reply #56 on: January 20, 2010, 12:06:21 am » |
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H, Excellent period banter old chap, but I'm sorry it's just not with post-Merlin (the helicopter, not R-R engine) days you know..... I mean, it's a bit like looking bamboozled over "look mate, we routed a quick one through Architect via mike charlie 6, pulled wool over the cloggy tube monkeys, fired up the cans so homebound like greased weasal sh*t across the puddle and stopped the Erics pulling a Fox 2 by spanking the firewall and firing off random rounds. Parcels in the oggin went for a ball of chalk off the plot at 12 o'clock but delivery would have created instant sunrise anyway, so we scraped the cab onto the tarmac to hit the Mess for tea, toast and medals". Which roughly translated might mean that "we got airborne from Germany and the US controller routed us immediately over an accepted turning point over the North Sea (designated MC6) albeit without the permission of Dutch ATC, to return to the UK. An attempted GDR intercept was foiled by engaging full reheat and firing chaff and flares. Although the training drop on the Wash ranges was completely unplottable by the range controllers, the nature of the weapons simulated would have made no difference to the effect. We landed the jets safely and made Happy Hour in the Mess..... And we think we have problems translating between languages..... MG Mark
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"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." Mario Andretti
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mgmark
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« Reply #57 on: January 20, 2010, 12:51:06 am » |
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Didnt the R become the Vulture?
Bill, Not quite, the potential of the R racing engine for the Scheider Trophy planes was developed into the Merlin, in line with R-R's naming of aero engines after birds of prey, and was supplanted in time by the Griffon. But, in keeping with those times of rapid technological development many things happened in parallel so, while developing the R into the Merlin, the Peregrine was their ultimate development of the pre-war Kestrel engine, via the Goshawk, and the Vulture was a pair of Peregrines coupled together into an X-24 cylinder configuration with a common cranckcase, but it was unreliable, so development of the Merlin won the day because of power, weight and development potential. But then the R engine came from the Buzzard, designed by R-R and built in the late 20s, also referred to as the "H" engine, which was then developed into the "R" by scaling-up the Kestrel. The Kestrel came about because of the Curtiss D-12, one of the first aero engines made with a cast block rather than with individual cylinder pots bolted to a separate crankcase, so it was simpler to manufacture as well being lighter and stronger. The D-12 was one of the most powerful engines then and no British company could offer anything comparable; when Fairey imported them, the Air Ministry ordered Napier and Rolls-Royce to start work on cast block engines. Napier's chief engineer had developed the Napier Lion to its potential, wasn't allowed to go further, so deserted to R-R and designed the new engine to use supercharging at all altitudes, enabling a quantum leap forward in performance. The common factor in all the R-R "birds" engines is that they were all V-12, cast block, pressurised liquid-cooled, internal combustion, piston powered, engines, whatever they ended up being used in....and if all of that is not clear, just think birds of prey.... oh and add the ironic twists that Willy Messerschmitt tested the first ME Bf 109 V1 prototype fitted with a R-R Kestrel engine in 1935, because the German designed DB engines intended for it were not ready. And that the Reich Air Ministry had acquired 4 Kestrel engines by trading a Heinkel He 70 Blitz (the civilian mail plane predecessor to the He-111 bomber) for Rolls Royce to use as as an engine test-bed for the Kestrel.... MG Mark
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« Last Edit: January 20, 2010, 12:52:44 am by mgmark »
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"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." Mario Andretti
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Perdu
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« Reply #58 on: January 20, 2010, 03:35:47 pm » |
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Didnt the R become the Vulture?
Bill, Not quite,....... (Edited for brevity) MG Mark Yes when I cheated using Wiki I followed all the relevant streams, why d'you think I replied so late after the initial Miss England had been unmasked I got carried away 'cos the thirties were a magnificent time for piston engine development scary really when Frank Whittle was already working on gas turbines bill
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"Ha ha you can't a fool me, there ain't a no sanity clause!"
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mgmark
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« Reply #59 on: January 20, 2010, 11:17:50 pm » |
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Indeed, and although it takes us a way from the thread title, it of course led you to the likes of this....... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AJcdtGh8fA&feature=relatedMG Mark
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"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." Mario Andretti
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