Cherrybomber13 wrote:
I'll say this. Bill and Charlie are former Sikorsky mechanics and have real experience working on these kinds of birds everyday for a living. We are also lucky enough to have an engineer working with us going over the prints etc. There are no 2 better men around the CASC that I would trust my body, eyes, limbs etc to then these guys. Hence My comment in the video. If your gonna play with the big boy toys make sure you have some training or someone to help you.
The bottle needed to be dumped and it was under extreme pressure (700 psi) and the fittings were heavily rusted and corroded. We tried 12/24 volts to pop the solenoid, then it was decided to hit it with 110 and whammy it released. No further work on the center section could be performed until it was safe.
I would not recommend doing this without some prior knowledge of the system and how it works.
Yep, 110 will do it every time and its the EASY of the methods. We would time change bottles all the time as mechanics and you cant ship them loaded so we would discharge them. 2 short leads to the squib and hook it to a extension cord and wala, plug it in. But the mounting method would vary. Usually just lay it in a trash can and put some tires on top of it was the quick and easy way.
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Long Live the N3N-3 "The Last US Military Bi-Plane" 1940-1959
Badmouthing Stearmans on WIX since 2005
