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Thu Jun 28, 2012 5:04 pm
Jack Frost wrote:In the late 50's the airline I was working at bought 10 new R-2800 engines still in the cans. I don't remember what the dash number was but they were approved to replace the CB/CA-15s on the Convairs 240s the airline operated. They all started having jug problems at about 400 hours. When the Pratt & Whitney Tech Rep was contacted about this, he said we were lucky. That model was built for the P-47 and life expectancy of the aircraft in combat was only about 100 hours and the engines were designed with that in mind!
Jack
Thu Jun 28, 2012 8:50 pm
gary1954 wrote:Jack Frost wrote:In the late 50's the airline I was working at bought 10 new R-2800 engines still in the cans. I don't remember what the dash number was but they were approved to replace the CB/CA-15s on the Convairs 240s the airline operated. They all started having jug problems at about 400 hours. When the Pratt & Whitney Tech Rep was contacted about this, he said we were lucky. That model was built for the P-47 and life expectancy of the aircraft in combat was only about 100 hours and the engines were designed with that in mind!
Jack
that is what I have been searching the web for...hour many hours or missions the aircraft was expected to survive. Is this what was
meant "how long did aircraft last during WWII"? In the grand scheme of things, these aircraft were in essence disposable items....but
boy, prang an aeroplane on a training mission, or during an ultra low buzz down the middle of a sod runway an smacking that
unnecessary hump about halfway down the strip....man will the defecation impact with the rotary oscillator.....
Thu Jun 28, 2012 9:10 pm
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