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favorites

Posted:
Mon Sep 25, 2017 7:38 pm
by yancovitch
nothing special...just appreciating......i just discovered that to see enlarged shot, one has to be in full screen mode...or am i wrong?

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Re: favorites

Posted:
Tue Sep 26, 2017 9:37 am
by Roypcox
The bottom photo looks like an AC-47. There it looks pretty innocent but at the target site it is unbelievable what this aircraft can do. It has saved many of our troops in the fire fights in Nam. It was an honor to fly this old ship or one like it but I am sad that we had to use it. A young teenager once asked a soldier "What did you do in the war" his answer "I Killed people" I hope we never have to use weapons like this again but that doesn't seem to be realistic at this point in time. Thanks for posting this beautiful pic of a time honored aircraft!!!!roy
Re: favorites

Posted:
Tue Sep 26, 2017 2:35 pm
by yancovitch
thanks for that wonderful response....
Re: favorites

Posted:
Tue Sep 26, 2017 5:35 pm
by OldAirmail
WOW!
You're doing GREAT!
I've been pretty busy lately
(and am likely to stay busy doing other things), but maybe I'll try to get some flight time in this weekend.
Re: favorites

Posted:
Wed Sep 27, 2017 1:51 pm
by Roypcox
One thing I failed to cover about the AC--47 It had the ability to fire 6000 rounds per minute and with all guns firing at once that would be 18,000 rounds a minute. You had to almost stand on the left rudder to keep it on target. Ammo weight was a problem we took off many times over weight but that old aircraft could handle it. The old story goes that the only replacement for a C-47 was another C-47. Donald Douglas was an absolute genius in the design of this plane. After world war II the airlines couldn' wait to get there hand's on them. The govt was almost giving them away. I had heard that some wen't for as little as a few thousand dollars. I was so honored to fly this old bird, it brings to me old eyes!!!roy
Re: favorites

Posted:
Wed Sep 27, 2017 2:22 pm
by Jean Loup
yancovitch wrote:nothing special...just appreciating......i just discovered that to see enlarged shot, one has to be in full screen mode...or am i wrong?

In this rotary motor, the crankshaft is fixed to the firewall & the prop is fixed to the block, cilinders turning at the propeller speed. You could not get a picture with still cilinders & blurred propeller mixed together.
Re: favorites

Posted:
Wed Sep 27, 2017 5:57 pm
by yancovitch
yer absolutely right.....

Re: favorites

Posted:
Wed Sep 27, 2017 8:10 pm
by yancovitch
just checked it out....the cylinders are moving with the prop...for some reason, when the shot is taken, the motor blur doesn't show ...hmmmmm....