Lead Sled
Sitt'n on the throne...
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2004
- Posts
- 2,066
Good luck my friend.rumpletumbler said:yeah...I'm on again off again. My last time quitting I was off a year. I'm about to quit again we will see.
'Sled
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Good luck my friend.rumpletumbler said:yeah...I'm on again off again. My last time quitting I was off a year. I'm about to quit again we will see.
Jungle Prop said:This is fascinating, I'm going to 8,000 tonight. Wish me luck.
heh heh, i really found this funny!rumpletumbler said:Its fun to rig a Tomahawk with about 6 JATO pods and climb to the service ceiling without oxygen. Trim the aircraft for what you know to be about a 60kt glide. Then pretend you are Chuck Yaeger and light them all and point it straight up. Hold your breath so you won't pass out. Once you hit about FL350 level the wings and then gasp for air till you pass out. Sometimes it takes a few tries to get it so that you wake up before surface contact is made but thats half the fun.
Jungle Prop said:This is fascinating, I'm going to 8,000 tonight. Wish me luck.
I doubt if you'll be encountering any Commanches up there, even if Flyin Tony remembers to lean the mixture!
And before you start throwing stones, why are you planning on going up to FL470? Just because you can? Going westbound you should be able to stay out of the winds in the high 30s/ low 40s.
Do you know what your TOC is at 47,000'? About seven seconds. Think that's enough time for the CEO and his secretary to get their masks on?
Diesel said:Another tidbit the dixie cup masks in the back work only to FL250 so that doesn't help them at all. Oh and it's wayyyy less than 7 seconds.
Absorption of oxygen depends on what is called partial pressure. Partial pressure is the pressure of the air at that altitude, and the percent of oxygen in the atmosphere. So if pressure decreases, you can either add more pressure (only to a certain point), increase the percentage of oxygen, or both. The quick don masks in the cockpit provide both.Immelman said:Interesting. Being an ignorant one who has not yet taken an altitude chamber ride, I am curious about Time of useful conciousness... Why the heck is it much less than 7 seconds? If I exhale with all my might here at sea level - and hold it - without inhaling first - I have no trouble typing a sentence or two here... takes quite a bit longer than 7 seconds. Does the ambient pressure at 470 really 'suck' the O2 out of you that quickly?
Jungle Prop said:This is fascinating, I'm going to 8,000 tonight. Wish me luck.
navigator72 said:Excuse my lack of knowledge of high altitude flying but didn't Payne Stewart, the golfer run into a rapid decompression sort of thing in his Lear?
Lead Sled said:At altitudes above FL430, as far as I'm concerned, it's mandatory to have one, if not both pilots, on 100% O2.
Diesel said:This is how it works in the X. With the autopilot on if the cabin rises above 14.5 or around there. (also depends on the presurization controller where it's set could be higher or lower) if the cabin rises above 14.5 the aircraft goes into an auto descent feature.
Since we don't have autothrottles like the other guys we have to pull the power levers to idle and extend the speed brakes which is really easy because they are in the way of everything. The plane regardless of power or speedbrakes will automatically turn 90 degrees of the course (to get off track) and then descent at MMO. If the powers at idle and the speedbrakes extended it will do 10,000 feet per minute.