Quote:
Originally Posted by Sternjaeger
Bloody norah! nother engineer!
my humble knowledge comes from a thing called experience (in this specific case experience with Merlin and other aviation engines), which is something you can't learn on a manual or at university, but for the sake of science (and in order to pass my exams) I also had my fair share of theory books............
The G loads don't affect only the carburetor btw, but the inlet manifolds as well, so cutouts can be more or less abrupt. I haven't had the chance to fly the sim yet, maybe a video would help understanding better.
gosh, I would spend hours at the pub (or at the hangar with a pint) talking about this stuff mate lol
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Sternjaeger, please don't take this the wrong way, I would really like to understand this and I know you will reply on the videos but can you tell me if you actually worked on Merlins (or just study them), did you ever experience or observe the negative G effect and do you feel that an engine that misfires in level flight would ever have made it onto the Spitfire?
The vast majority of us can only use three ways to assess this: Factual official reports (hard to find), common sense (would it ever have been fitted like that) and first hand reports in biographies which, in the dozen or so I have read including Geoffrey Quill, Alex Henshaw, Al Deer, Johnny Johnson etc, only ever refer to it when pushing over into an aggressive combat dive.
Can you also explain the part about it also affecting the inlet manifold please?
I'd be truly interested to know what you think.