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Re: Navy Pilot and Lugging
- Subject: Re: Navy Pilot and Lugging
- From: wmostellar@xxxxxxxx (William E Mostellar)
- Date: Fri, 21 Aug 1998 09:36:00 -0400
Wow Joe - When were you in the Navy and what did you fly? I just got out
of the Air Force and am waiting on my interview with Delta.
Before the flames begin, I've been wanting to take a survey of this
digest to find out how many pilots there are. I started driving BMW's
because they are the closest cars I could find to the jets I flew.
To avoid congestion on the digest, please send me an email at
[email protected] if you are a pilot. I'll publish the numbers.
Rejoice!
Bill & Cecilia Mostellar
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Date: Thu, 20 Aug 1998 11:10:37 -0700 (PDT)
From: Joe Mazza <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Today's Flame Topic: Why is lugging bad?
I'm not a tech so I can't explain it any better than any other
armchair mechanic. But having been a Navy pilot for many years, I can
vouch for the fact that lugging (technically called "overboost" in a
big radial engine: too much manifold pressure for too few revs*) was
frowned upon by the manufacturer (Pratt & Whitney) and required an
inspection if admitted to by a pilot, and sometimes an engine change.
*There were manifold pressure limits for corresponding RPM's that you
could not exceeded. (You had to memorize them.)
Joe
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