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Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 15:23
by TSR2
BAe Test flight, looks very interesting, so no doubt we'll sell theidea to the USA
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-11431662
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 15:45
by DaveB
Sell it??? Er, no. We'll give it to them or they'll simply take it
ATB
DaveB

Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 16:07
by FlyTexas

How about 100 of 'em. When can you deliver?
Brian
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 16:39
by airboatr
DaveB wrote:or they'll simply take it
ATB
DaveB

Rest easy Dave, we'll at least give you beads and shinny bits of metal.

Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 18:53
by FlyTexas

Historically speaking those
are our standard forms of payment.
Brian
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 19:09
by airboatr
Dare I mention where we got the idea from?

Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 29 Jan 2012, 19:27
by aeroart
Very interesting. Certainly reduces complexity, and probably allows more of the engine's power to be directed where it should be -- pushing the airplane. Maybe a little more air blowing possible to include boundary layer control?
Art
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 30 Jan 2012, 08:12
by emfrat
Silly me! - I thought it was ailerons, elevators and rudders that controlled movement in the air, not flaps. Now I 'll never get a job with the Beeb
ATB
MikeW
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 01 Feb 2012, 01:47
by aeroart
Fortunately, journalism majors don't design airplanes or name the parts.
My "favorite" is when they call F-16s and similar, "fighter jets." That would make the Spitfire and Mustang "fighter props." Another was when the FAA figured out what had happened to that DC-9 that was trying to do outside loops off Los Angeles, and crashed into the Pacific. One news guy was saying how it was the failure of the mechanism that operated the "horizontal tail wing."
It also says very little about journalists when they say that an airline which is having financial problems is experiencing turbulence or is in a tailspin. I also saw that sort of thing in Aviation Week & Space Technology, a highly-respected industry magazine. I sent an email to the editor, stating that a professional publication shouldn't be resorting to cutesy journalism. I never heard from him. Wasn't that odd?
Art
Re: Engineering foir the future?
Posted: 10 Feb 2012, 13:46
by Garry Russell
When an sircraft ran off the local runway due to port engine failure, the sole passenger, an American engineer said on the TV news that things started to go wrong when the left engine entered a mode of non operation

...Ah, right..... it stopped
