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#12
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01-27-2016, 05:13 PM
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Re: Strategic Tu-95 Bomber Skids Off Runway and Explodes
List Of Military Aircraft Operated By The U.S Airforce http://www.combataircraft.com/en/Mil...United-States/ |
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#15
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01-30-2016, 06:02 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,706 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4602 Post(s)
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Re: Strategic Tu-95 Bomber Skids Off Runway and Explodes
According to the Air Force, the B-52's will be 96 years old before they are retired. By then they will be down to a small fleet of rebuilt machines, but still, they will be flying long after the men who engineered them and built them are all dead.
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#16
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01-30-2016, 06:16 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,706 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4602 Post(s)
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Re: Strategic Tu-95 Bomber Skids Off Runway and Explodes
Anyone who has been around Soviet aircraft (and I have, the Mig 15, and the Antonov AN2.) will tell you how well engineered they really are. I was VERY impressed with the sheet metal work I saw. And the systems are equally impressive. Every hydraulic line has a loop or curve in it, so it is easy to disconnect from the adjoining fitting. On U.S. aircraft, the lines are all straight, which means it is a real fight to get lines off of fittings without damaging the sealing area of the line. Another thing U.S. aircraft have decals all over telling you "For servicing of this unit, consult the maintenance manual" for whatever thing you are looking at. (gear actuator, strut, hydraulic system, etc) On the Soviet aircraft, the decals give you specific information. Material used, limits, servicing procedures, how to tell if the unit is properly serviced, etc. You don't have to go look at a manual. If you are out in a field somewhere with no manuals accessible, you can still keep the aircraft flying with the information they provide. (Of course, best case (and preferred) is that you ALWAYS use the approved manual. But with a U.Sl aircraft, with no manual, you are screwed, because no servicing point has actual information. (Except maybe fuel systems) (But nothing else) But still, if a Russian aircraft and a U.S. aircraft are parked at a remote runway in Colorado, the Soviet plane is GOING TO FLY. The U.S. only MIGHT be able to fly, if everything is going ok. I've seen the machines, and as an aircraft mechanic, I can see the differences. Also, this does NOT look like an engine explosion. It looks like an explosion in the fuselage, right at the trailing edge of the wing. You can see that the aircraft instantly has a wing collapse, and that is why it does a ground loop. It looks like the explosion took off the left wing, and then the aircraft rotated around the portion on the ground, because the right wing and the nose still had the gear under them. |
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#19
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02-05-2016, 09:05 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,706 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4602 Post(s)
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Re: Strategic Tu-95 Bomber Skids Off Runway and Explodes
I think it will be a good aircraft. I have heard that there are development problems, but the Russians say those have been solved, and I understand it is going to be in service in the Russian Air Force within a few years. I understand they will also be building them in India. The descriptions of their systems sound very advanced. I have heard that they are very expensive, but when you get into this class of aircraft, they are ALL expensive. But high-tech systems always cost a lot. There is no way around it. The research that is required and the engineering is the biggest expense.
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