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I've seen just one photo of it, and Good knows that I'm a ww2 tech nerd for the last 40 yearsI've seen no evidence at all of anything other than the ferry tank and presumably this is just an artistic error. But I want to know if anyone else has ever seen any tank that looks like this banana thing
Agreed - Republic Delivered ONLY the 200 gal bullfrog (Gabreski).Anyone else ever see any other images or info on this tank in the above image? I cannot find any info on this, despite Greg claiming he has 4 documents on this.
I personally think this tank doesn't exist or never made it through development. Even if it does exist, we have no evidence it was pressurized, or otherwise worked correctly. It hardly looks like it would jettison.
Personally I think this is a error in artistic rendition or something in this manual.
Agreed - Republic Delivered ONLY the 200 gal bullfrog (Gabreski).
Greg needs to come forward with his other 3 supposed documents on this tank.Agreed - Republic Delivered ONLY the 200 gal bullfrog (Gabreski).
Any discussion of pressures, bleeds from instruments, paper tanks, glass fibre tanks, shackles, mountings, approvals and designs, secret projects and ideas is a welcome and well used distraction from the plain and obvious fact that a 1943 P-47 couldnt engage in combat over Schweinfurt for 15 minutes and then make it back to the UK. The other "thang" that must never be discussed is if the "bomber mafia" werent committed to unescorted bombers being self defending what would they be committed to, as a doctrine? The P-38 was like rocking horse manure in 1942, the P47 was just being sent to UK (operational in Spring 1943)and the P-51 was in the process of fitting a Merlin. The P-51 may have turned out to be the best escort fighter of the war, because of what happened, no one in the USA in the mid 1930s could have strategy based on producing it.Complete rubbish about tank pressurisation it seems. For a start jet airliners have tank venting to prevent air pressure over or under pressure which can cause structural damage in flight.
Jet airliners have multi KW electric immersed fuel pumps that generate 50psi at very high flow.
So why is pressurised tanks mentioned? It is purely because the easiest way to move fuel from an underslung external tank is to air pressurise the tank and let air pressure push the fuel up into a normal aircraft tank. This saves all the problems with pumps in external tanks. Vapour pressure is a problem with fuel and at high altitude, it is more so, and an air pressurised external tank will work best.
Eng
Complete rubbish about tank pressurisation it seems. For a start jet airliners have tank venting to prevent air pressure over or under pressure which can cause structural damage in flight.
Jet airliners have multi KW electric immersed fuel pumps that generate 50psi at very high flow.
So why is pressurised tanks mentioned? It is purely because the easiest way to move fuel from an underslung external tank is to air pressurise the tank and let air pressure push the fuel up into a normal aircraft tank. This saves all the problems with pumps in external tanks. Vapour pressure is a problem with fuel and at high altitude, it is more so, and an air pressurised external tank will work best.
Eng
Critical thinking 101: applying poisoning the well, ad-hom attacks, and circular reasoning usually indicates a weak argument.
I gave you the bacon 'cause I can understand your post. It deserved more than an informative.The jet aircraft fuel pump configuration is why they do not need pressurised tanks and there are a number of other factors involved.
In a nutshell - WW2 fighters suffered from vapour lock, especially from drop tanks, because they used suction pumps. Modern jet aircraft can not suffer from vapour lock because they use pressure pumps.
In all post 1950 jet aircraft the fuel pump is mounted either inside the fuel tank at the lowest point of the fuel tank or below the lowest point of the fuel tank. This means that the pump is never sucking fuel in. The in flow is supplied by the fuel itself and gravity. Even if the pump was to suck air for a second the moment as the wing drops low the moment the wing becomes level again the fuel flow recommences.
On most ww2 aircraft, especially fighters, the fuel pump was a suction pump fitted between the tanks and the engine and I cannot think of any ww2 fighter that did not share a single pump between all tanks. This pump was usually fitted above the lowest point in every tank and was "far" above the lowest point of any drop tank and the lowest point in the tank is where the fuel is drawn from. Once primed it works perfectly until it loses suction for any reason and then it would not again lift any fuel unless there is an initial flow supplied to the pump by gravity to re-prime it.
The second major factor that Greg totally ignores is that a perfect suction pump can only lift fluid the equivalent of one atmosphere of the fluid - in the case of water about 32ft or 9.75metres at standard sea level pressure of 1013hpa. In simple terms this is because the pump creates a suction and the atmospheric pressure forces the fluid to flow towards the suction.
Because avgas has a lower specific gravity than water (0.72) the pump can lift fuel further - about 44 feet/13m.
As an aircraft climbs the atmospheric pressure drops and the ability of the pump to lift liquid drops by the same amount. At 20C ground temperature the temperature at 20,000ft is -20C and the air pressure drops to just 445 hpa. At that altitude a perfect water pump will lift water 14 feet or avgas 19 feet so a perfect pump is now less than 1/2 as efficient as at sea level.
The temperature at 30,000ft is -40C and the air pressure drops to just 265 hpa. At that altitude a perfect water pump will lift water 8.3 feet or avgas 11.5 feet. A perfect pump is now less than 1/3 as efficient as at sea level.
The temperature at 40,000ft is -55C and the air pressure drops to just 150 hpa. At that altitude a perfect water pump will lift water 4.7 feet or avgas 6.4 feet. A perfect pump is now only 1/7 as efficient as at sea level
The third major factor, and the most important, that Greg ignores is that fuel contains many different compounds and those various compounds gasify (boil) at different air pressures and temperatures. This is produces what is called vapour lock and is discussed at Vapor lock - Wikipedia. There are only two ways to prevent vapour lock. Change the fuel specification to something far closer to diesel or kerosene, which will destroy the engine, or pressurise the fuel tank.
WW2 fighters suffered from vapour lock because they used suction pumps. Modern jet aircraft can not suffer from vapour lock because they use pressure pumps.
I gave you the bacon 'cause I can understand your post. It deserved more than an informative.
I had a conversation with someone about "why don't I like Greg A&A". I pointed out that I never once said that. I did tell him, after reading comments posted here, an aviation ignoramus like me wouldn't know if he was wrong or right on a topic. That is why I stopped watching his videos. This came up after a couple of G A&A episodes on the P-47 were released.
BTW I think G A&A's video on the Wright Brothers is great.
I personally prefer Professor Propwash's "DUDE!" greeting, myself.I don't like his "greetings" intro. It's only slightly less-pretentious than "salutations". I bet he doesn't talk to his passengers like that. What the hell is wrong with a "hey guys" or "hiyas"?
C'mon, man. What is this, Buckingham Palace?
I personally prefer Professor Propwash's "DUDE!" greeting, myself.
I think he flies cargo, not passengers. I like his videos. They helped to explain the function of turbochargers and superchargers. I'm just not a fan of the conspiracy theory take.bet he doesn't talk to his passengers like that
I don't like his "greetings" intro. It's only slightly less-pretentious than "salutations". I bet he doesn't talk to his passengers like that. What the hell is wrong with a "hey guys" or "hiyas"?
C'mon, man. What is this, Buckingham Palace?
I think he flies cargo, not passengers. I like his videos. They helped to explain the function of turbochargers and superchargers. I'm just not a fan of the conspiracy theory take.