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Wels

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About Wels

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  • Gender
    Male
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    Lossex ;-), near Hannover, Germany
  1. I remember a text and a documentary with several pilots, both saying that the ME109 did not turn worse than the Spitfire, of course i did not find it again *ahem*. One also stated the ME had some serious advantages because of its 'Schlitzfluegel' in tight turns, preventing stalls. Also a sudden push of the stick, or flying canopy-down did not have an effect on the engine of the ME, while the Spit's engine without fuel injection would have sputtered, making the plane lost energy qickly. The anger of Galland vs. Goering is legendary, he would have said all (and he indeed did) to provoke him. Of course he was in the position to dare that without having to fear too much.. Will post the article if i find it in the 'net.
  2. Video of first flight : http://s306.photobucket.com/albums/nn277/kolomay/?action=view&current=AlbatrosErstflug_Preview.mp4 That's some sound !
  3. Graphic Settings

    Hmm, don't remember - it has something to do with higher resolution settings, but you should just of all see them at high res - anyone ? Should be no big deal to correct this though - Greetings, Wels
  4. Koloman Mayrhofer's OEFFAG Albatros D.III flies, with an original Austro-Daimler engine : http://www.theaerodrome.com/forum/replica-aircraft/35610-albatros-d-ii-d-iii-news-112.html Greetings, Wels
  5. Hello, in the first era there was piano wire used, which originated in France. Then, like Bletchley said, some of the british planes were equipped with streamlined wires, while german and austro-hungarian used braided cables, i think after 1915 (piano, before) Anyway some tests have shown that there were no real advantages, the piano and streamlined steel wires twisted and vibrated in flight, taking away some of the advantage, while the air flowed well around braided cables, since micro turbulences in the air around the slightly thicker bundles allow the air to stream past those micro swirls without much resistance. However, different manufacturers within one nation used all kinds of different wires for their machines, especially airships tried out all kinds of wires for the vibrating engine gondolas, and within the rigid framework. Thanks for posting those sheets ! Regarding engines i have seen a lot of bullet and crash damage on photos, but i do not know which would be mmore prone to failure. Usually rotary engines lost almost a quarter of their performance after the first four hours of service, which is why they had to be thoroughly maintained, exchanging cylinders and pistons all the time. On one hand some rotaries were known for still running, even after one or two cylinders being damaged - certainly no damage of cylinder housing; others are said to virtually disintegrate in mid-air, losing all their parts accelerating along the lines of centripetal forces. Others just blocked and jammed, often tearing the engine off the fuselage by the violent stop .. There is a reason rotaries were never used again, after WW1. Engine fires usually develop after a leaking fuel system, so in-line engines were as prone to that as rotaries or so it think. I also believe most fires started not by burning engines, but a holed fuel tank or shot off pipes (and maybe carburettors sppilling). Engines of the time mostly used air pressure applied to the tank, to force the fuel through the pipes. Imagine a holed fuel tank, with enough pressure to make the highly inflammable fuel being sprayed all over the fuselage, engine, and you; and then being ignited by igneous bullets, spark plugs or the bushes running over those bare metal surfaces for the rotary ignition system. Just some thoughts, i really do not know this for sure - Greetings, Wels P.S. And Happy Easter :)
  6. Computer help needed!

    I do not know whether you build your own computer, but often those beeps refer to either damaged, overheated, or just contact-lacking Ram-bars. My first idea would be to plug out the mains connector (important!), then unscrew the housing, and remove the Ram bars. You can do a cleaning with a vacuum cleaner (careful) to remove the (often astounding) puffs and hairballs that have accumulated in the PC as well. Dry-clean the ram bars, especially contacts, and plug them in again. When you then plug it in the mains, and start it, and no beeps, voilà. If it still beeps, take out one of the RAM bars (AFTER again UNPLUGGING of course), and try agin - maybe only one bar gave up. Another idea is the small accumulator, or a graphic card fail - or the processor lacking contact, or a failing CPU ventilator - that depends on your mainboard. Usually the number of beeps indicate the problem, so you could look for a manual of your mainboard on the internet, if you do not have it as a hardcopy. Good luck ! Wels
  7. To Bletchley

    It is not the length of the camshaft, but that the camshat itself is being used to fix the propellor on - the camshaft turns 1/2 of the engine's crankshaft revolutions. The elongated camshaft is just protruding out of the engine block to mount the propellor on it - usually the crankshaft sticks out like in every car or usual engine, but not on this one. For 4 cycle engines, no matter how many cylinders, the crankshaft turns twice for every turn of the camshaft, so fixing the prop to the camshaft is a good idea to reduce (indeed halve) prop revolutions, without using a gear. Engine 3000 revs, fix prop on camshaft = propellor 1500 revs. I am just not sure about the exact engine of Renault the german book is speaking about. There's a bad photo though - Thanks and greetings, Wels
  8. To Bletchley

    In a german mechanics book from 1920, i have just read that the WW1 "Renaultmotor" with 8 and with 12 cylinders (both V-arrangement) had an elongated camshaft as a propellorshaft, so the propellor turned with half of the revolutions of the engine, making a geared drive superfluous. Did not know that before, which engine was that, exactly ? Could it by any chance be the one used in the RE8 ? Thanks and greetings, Wels/Catfish
  9. Or ROFF .. Richthofen over Flanders Fields ... no one will be able to find any similarity off this name oops wait
  10. Thank you, will look for it
  11. Hi, thanks for posting ! Where was this shown at the aerodrome ? Is there any possibility to find other Jasta or FFA logbooks, of those times ? In the Bundesarchiv, or is this a private collection of Mss Bock and Tornuss ? Thanks and greetings, Wels
  12. From the name of the uploader of said (and other likewise) videos, they should probably ban the poster - obvious agenda .. Greetings, Catfish
  13. Will be driving "home" today, so Merry Christmas to all here !! Thanks and greetings, Catfish
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