AfterBurner
#1

Here is what a real Mig-17 Afterburner looks like. :twisted:

[Image: Mig-17.jpg]
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#2

Man, where are my sausages?
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#3

KG64_Cnopicilin Wrote:Man, where are my sausages?
that's what she said
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#4

RadPig94 Wrote:
KG64_Cnopicilin Wrote:Man, where are my sausages?
that's what she said
Confusedhock: When a girl looks for her sauseges , we can start to worry .. D:
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#5

Andris6000 Wrote:
RadPig94 Wrote:
KG64_Cnopicilin Wrote:Man, where are my sausages?
that's what she said
Confusedhock: When a girl looks for her sauseges , we can start to worry .. D:
Big Grin
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#6

Hi,

I have been flamming vegetables lately, mmmmm-good. Corn on the cob is so good grilled. :lol:


The color of the flame changes in flight compared with take-off and according to speed. Let's see any modder mod the whole change.

:wink:
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#7

Here are some videos of the MiG-17 with afterburner at various speeds etc. 1st Video shows a good example of what we have in-game whilst flying at near the speed of sound(I assume) 2nd video at slow take off speeds. 3rd video at medium speed pass.

http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup ... id=7064970

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTz8bowJgw0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6Sxgx2syx0

Now if modders can make example of all of those stages that would be awesome.
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#8

Verhängnis Wrote:Here are some videos of the MiG-17 with afterburner at various speeds etc. 1st Video shows a good example of what we have in-game whilst flying at near the speed of sound(I assume) 2nd video at slow take off speeds. 3rd video at medium speed pass.

http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup ... id=7064970

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTz8bowJgw0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6Sxgx2syx0

Now if modders can make example of all of those stages that would be awesome.

Thought that was funny on the third video; the Phantom suffered an Afterburner no light on the number one engine. You can see the number two light off no problem, but number one wasn't playing nice that day.
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#9

Hi, Grant


I know that on some jets, the electronics can sometimes have one after-burner on and the other off in unusual circumstances to maintain stability, such as when a gust of cross-wind is encountered. It's obviously unclear about the exact circumstances of this situation.


I wonder how far the modding of after-burners in IL-2 can go? Could the Mig-17 have special timing on after-burner ignition? Would it change in different conditions? I think it would.
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#10

Fireskull Wrote:Hi, Grant


I know that on some jets, the electronics can sometimes have one after-burner on and the other off in unusual circumstances to maintain stability, such as when a gust of cross-wind is encountered. It's obviously unclear about the exact circumstances of this situation.


I wonder how far the modding of after-burners in IL-2 can go? Could the Mig-17 have special timing on after-burner ignition? Would it change in different conditions? I think it would.

When I was in the USAF, I was a mechanic on the F-4 Phantom. The afterburners were always used together on take-off. The only reason for it not to be lit is an AB no light. I saw it so many times, we used to take bets on how many acft could get off the ground in a days flying without one failing.
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#11

Thanks, Grant

That means that the Mig-17 after-burner failure rate must be considerable, too, unless the Soviets knew something about it that we didn't at the time and had better AB.
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#12

US_GRANT Wrote:When I was in the USAF, I was a mechanic on the F-4 Phantom. The afterburners were always used together on take-off. The only reason for it not to be lit is an AB no light. I saw it so many times, we used to take bets on how many acft could get off the ground in a days flying without one failing.
ah yes, the work of unpreparedness. i heard these jets weren't originally supposed to be used for fighting. am i wrong? also, can the F-86 outmaneuver an F-4?
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#13

RadPig94 Wrote:
US_GRANT Wrote:When I was in the USAF, I was a mechanic on the F-4 Phantom. The afterburners were always used together on take-off. The only reason for it not to be lit is an AB no light. I saw it so many times, we used to take bets on how many acft could get off the ground in a days flying without one failing.
ah yes, the work of unpreparedness. i heard these jets weren't originally supposed to be used for fighting. am i wrong? also, can the F-86 outmaneuver an F-4?


How does that relate to the topic about Mig-17 after-burner?
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#14

Fireskull Wrote:
RadPig94 Wrote:How does that relate to the topic about Mig-17 after-burner?
hmm you're right :roll:
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#15

RadPig94 Wrote:
US_GRANT Wrote:When I was in the USAF, I was a mechanic on the F-4 Phantom. The afterburners were always used together on take-off. The only reason for it not to be lit is an AB no light. I saw it so many times, we used to take bets on how many acft could get off the ground in a days flying without one failing.
ah yes, the work of unpreparedness. i heard these jets weren't originally supposed to be used for fighting. am i wrong? also, can the F-86 outmaneuver an F-4?

That sounds like a discussion for a separate forum post.
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