Belarusian airforce Mig29 and Su25 are landing on Minsk-Mogilev highway. | FerrariChat

Belarusian airforce Mig29 and Su25 are landing on Minsk-Mogilev highway.

Discussion in 'Aviation Chat' started by Ryan S., Mar 19, 2017.

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  1. Ryan S.

    Ryan S. Two Time F1 World Champ
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    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gttwL854cR4[/ame]

    Has the USAF or Navy ever practiced anything like this in the states?
     
  2. Ryan S.

    Ryan S. Two Time F1 World Champ
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    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wacKnYPWPH8[/ame]

    And just because it is cool lol
     
  3. RacerX_GTO

    RacerX_GTO F1 World Champ
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    Not without great risk to American fighter engines. FOD being sucked inside the intake issue.

    What most Americans do not know is, Russian fighters are like the AK-47, you can drop them in mud and they will still fire without fail. Russian fighter engines are designed to suck in a certain amount of FOD whereas an American fighter and its precision tolerances, the engine is done. US fighters need super-clean, FOD-free runways.
    US Navy carriers, before air ops, deck crews will "walk the FOD", shoulder to shoulder in a straight line looking for debris.
     
  4. Ryan S.

    Ryan S. Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Has it always been this way? Im wondering if they ever practiced stuff like this in the 50s with Sabre Jets or something just in case.....
     
  5. jcurry

    jcurry Two Time F1 World Champ
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  6. BMW.SauberF1Team

    BMW.SauberF1Team F1 World Champ

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    How can their engines be designed for that? I know some of the Russian jets close off the turbine intakes and open a second set of intakes mounted on top of the wing to reduce taking in debris, but I've never heard they can otherwise take in more directly by design...
     
  7. Tcar

    Tcar F1 Rookie

    Common in Sweden... SAAB fighters are often hangared off highways, even 2 lane highways in the woods.


    From that vid, it looks like the only planes exposed to FOD are the following plane. The lead take off has clear air.
     
  8. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    Yes, quite a number of times, especially A-10s on German Autobahns...

    At the risk of repeating myself, the 1970's were pushing us slightly on the paranoid side, more so when you were raised on the french/german border, because, as said one of my teachers in history: from the czech border, which was the limit of the iron curtain, to our homes, the warsaw pact tanks were exactly at one day drive...

    But boy, what a treat the seventies were for a young aviation fan; want to see aeroplanes? Just walk into the garden and wait, something will come in the sky soon. And as there were almost no altitude limitations, you saw them in large dimension; some of these guys were flying really low, especially the Canadians with their overall-green CF-104s (wraparound camouflage)...somehow, I miss those days.

    Rgds
     
  9. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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    A-10s in S. Korea as well. In fact, many of their highways have sections designed precisely for that, with "pads" at each end of the landing zone for refueling and re-arming. These pads are often blocked from view by rolling gates and large signs.
     
  10. jcurry

    jcurry Two Time F1 World Champ
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    A couple yrs ago while in Moscow having lunch with some colleagues, we were reminiscing about the good ol days of the cold war and how much fun it was working in aerospace at the time.
     
  11. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    I was living in the eastern tip of France during the seventies; we were surrounded by airbases; USAF was not far in Bitburg, Ramstein, etc...the Canadians were at Bad-Solingen, Zweibrücken, etc...Belgians were not that far either, not to mention the Luftwaffe, and the French too...
    During some days, when there was real aerial activity, you could see 50 aircraft per day: F-4, F-104s, Mirages, and later on F-16, F-15, A-10...to say nothing of C-130s, etc...
    After 1990, well...let's say one per week? At most.

    Last time I have seen something really truly extraordinary was when I climbed on of a train in Hyères, Provence, late in an evening in august 1994 and by chance was just under the french "aeronavale" rehearsing their aerial figures for the 50th anniversary of the Provence landings. Their F-8 Crusader where really old at the time, but absolutely stunning to Watch.

    Rgds
     
  12. donv

    donv Two Time F1 World Champ
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    I believe the Swiss do it regularly. Or was it the Finns?
     
  13. Gatorrari

    Gatorrari F1 World Champ
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    The Swedes are know for it, but I believe the Finns do it as well.
     
  14. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    The swiss DID it regularly; I seem to recall that they stopped to do it in 1991. Perhaps the F-18 is less adapted to this than was that most elegant classic aeroplane, the Hawker Hunter....

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHwwAV12TIA

    Rgds
     
  15. beast

    beast F1 World Champ

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    A-10 operating off a dry lake bed.

    [ame]www.youtube.com/watch?v=zi5_bcb08o0[/ame]
     
  16. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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  17. solofast

    solofast Formula 3

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    Turbine engines aren't like AK-47's, ALL turbine engines are susceptible to FOD. Russian engines aren't any different than ours when it comes to FOD. The stuff about them being more robust is just a lot of hooey, likely written by folks who don't have a clue...

    The aerodynamics dictate the shape of blading and the blading tolerances have nothing to do with FOD resistance. Our engines are designed to stay on the wing longer and FOD causes blade damage that limits low cycle fatige life. Since we don't want to pull an engine for FOD, our guys are more diligent about FOD because of the costs involved, not because our engines are less tolerant. Our operational scenario is very different than theirs and costs enter into it. If you damage a blade and end up with an LCF problem that reduces your life to say 500 cycles, but your TBO is 400 mission cycles anyway, then it isn't a problem, you just pull the engine and replace the blade at overhaul. If your engine life is 2000 cycles a FOD event that results in a 500 cycle life is a big deal, because you're now pulling an engine because of that. The Russians had shorter TBO's so it wasn't that FOD did less damage, it's just that it wasn't as big a deal since you're going to do a tear down sooner so you can accept more damage before it starts to be a big deal.

    When a blade encounters FOD they get damaged. Period. The Russians don't design their engines any differently than ours from that standpoint. Blade thickness near the leading edge is what determines FOD resistance, but the reality is that if you try to do anything to try to make the leading edges thicker, the aerodynamics goes in the toilet because of shock losses.. If you try to make the blade thinner your stress levels go through the roof and you'll have LCF problems before you have an issue with FOD..

    I designed fan blades at P&W for the TF30 and F100 and F401 and shock losses and flutter drove the design process. Bottom line is that there is very little room in the design space for trying to make engines more FOD resistant given the aerodynamics that fighter engines require.

    The Russians understand that too and the Mig-29 has doors that close the inlets during takeoff. This is a feature that is dictated by their desire to use the aircraft in places where there might be more FOD. What is clear is that the engines in the 29 can't stand any FOD either or wouldn't have gone to all the trouble to put in a heavy and expensive system like that to prevent FOD damage if they were robust enough to withstand that damage. The Russians use doors, we use FOD walks, different ways to accomplish the same thing. We'd rather not carry that extra weight, they want to operate in areas where there is more FOD. Different strokes for different folks.

    ALL military engines operate with some FOD damage and there are procedures to address that damage in the field. They all have nick a blend limits specified once the engines are fielded. I WROTE the nick and blend limits for the F100 way back in the mid 1970's. We specified how much blending could be done on each blade and how many blades could be damaged before you lost performance. Our allowables for nick and blending weren't as big as the early engines because we had higher blade stress, but that was dictated by the aerodynamics as we went away from the multiple circular arc airfoils that were common in earlier engines and we developed arbitrary blade design codes that could work backwards to define the airfoil you wanted to by first specifying the flow field you wanted (UDO300). We modified the airfoil shapes and then ran stress analysis to set the new limits and it was amazing how much you could allow on a blade if you knew it was coming out of the engine the next time it was in out of the airplane.

    For a little bit of history, if you go back to the mid to late 70's the USA was working on "high through flow" aerodynamics and higher stage loadings, wider chord blades and higher pressure ratios per stage and higher tip speeds..... Aerodynamics that are commonplace today... I was looking at a cross section of an early HTF test rig and my counterpart at Wright Field mentioned that "the Russians are already doing this" and he said that "the FTD guys are good"... (FTD = Foreign Technology Division, the guys at the field that keep tabs on the other guys)... ie... we stole that stuff from the Russians...

    The bottom line being that our aerodynamics aren't any different than the Russians and haven't been for the last 30 years or so... We all have to bend the same air and at some point the physics takes over and the differences become pretty small.. How you operate and how you contend with FOD are different, but the damage is the same..
     
  18. wizzard

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    The Russians want to be able to operate from unimproved airstrips. To that end the SU 27, for example, has "flaps" or more like barn doors located in the air intake for the engines. During the takeoff run these doors are closed from the front and open on top of the wing, which means that they are pulling air from above the wing-hence cleaner air with less FOD. When airborne the doors revert to a position whereby the engines pull air directly from in front. A genius solution for dirty airstrips.
     
  19. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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  20. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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  21. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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    #21 Wade, Mar 20, 2017
    Last edited: Mar 20, 2017
    Here's the Finns:

    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_hgjY_za9vA[/ame]

    But I think this might be a repost.
     
  22. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    Hmm...not wanting to contradict you for the sake of it, but I seem to recall from the A-10 program that the main reason for having high-mounted engines was to mask the heat signature from the engines to infra-red seakers from the ground with the tailplane?

    Rgds
     
  23. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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    Could be. But there's very little heat from the high-bypass turbofans to begin with (with consideration to 70's technology and with comparison to other fighter/bombers of the day). Speaking of turbofans, A-10 engines have a huge radar cross section, and we were told that the their high-mounted position plus shielding from the wings helped reduced that from ground radar.

    When I was assigned to an A-10 squadron in Korea, we spent more time with the Army than any other branch of service, including our own (forward operating and unconventional locations). Very rewarding experience overall.
     
  24. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    Yes, it was - and still is - a very special aeroplane, and as the years pass by, it proved more and more very well suited to its task.
    I'm not a US taxpayer, so I am rather detached from to maintenance cost question, but I would hate to see it go; I know it is about 40 years old now, so should be considered "vintage" (= entered service before the CDs...but at a time when music was much better!) but it still is an unique design, able to do what it was designed to do very well.

    Rgds
     
  25. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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    And the newest airframe is 25 years old.

    Special indeed, and loved by many. I wish I took more photos...
     

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