::EK:: Air Club.... Only 4 Aviation Lovers

gayan kalhara

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Nov 22, 2007
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charithtg said:
Gayan,
the thing about those AC are that they have countless available and cheap modifications in the market. specially engine wise. my guess is that the owner might have put a more powerful engine and hence having a bigger torque and weight than the AC is designed for. a lil tweak here and there could do the trick. but the vibration can be inherited by the engine. could be bad, if not taken seriously.

You are Correct... I have the info.. NOW...

He Removed some Parts From Engine hole. and Placed a Different Ver OF Eng... Bigger than First one.

You know what!. yesterday I received a mail from him. And He told me that He Escaped from a Crash... he he he h... In a Windy Situation He was just about to turn Down and HIT the Ground... he he h e... But Fortunately The Guardian Angel (as His Words) had Controlled tha AC and NOW He is Going to Fix the original Again.. hehe hhehe heh ehe... I TOLD HIM EEEEEH.....

Thnx Bro.. Keep in touch with us... Glad to see you in..
 

gayan kalhara

Member
Nov 22, 2007
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charithtg said:
yes i was and still am. i used to be in the US air force. didn't fly that much but had sum experience in both propeller and jet AC. at the moment im working in the SLAF as a engineering officer.

OH GLad TO SEE YO..........

Did you get the pilot license ::: If yes What is your Grade...

IN SL IS there any Private Flying Schools>>>?????

I had flown Some Light ACs.. (NOT LANDING, One Lift off) Not For a Real DEAL Just 4 Fun.....

In USA....... Since then i love this field and I'm about to Learn further After my O/L/ and A/L,,, In Lufthansa... I got a Scholarship for Faculty of Computer Science. and At that time. I willing to learn this also...

Glad to know you..

Please Keep Posting.....
 

akila101

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Mar 24, 2007
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Canada
gayan kalhara said:
The EK Aviation Club....

All of the Air Craft and Aviation Lovers....

Enna Api Katha karamu...

Share Karagamu, Ape Adahas, Experience and Anith Okkoma.

Air Crafts gana Aviations gana Onema Deyak Katha Karamu...

I Love This Subject... I think You Also...

I always wanted to b a pilot :love:
sadly things change and i am not heading to direction :(
i am planning to take flying lessons hopefully over the next summer or when ever i can :D
i don't want flying to be my career but it'll alwayz be my hobby :D

and thank you for opening such a thread
 

gayan kalhara

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Nov 22, 2007
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Junkers F13



“The F13 was essentially the first aircraft to anticipate the onset of ‘modern’ air transport: cantilever [no wing struts], all metal, low wing, monoplane, streamlined (by the standards of the day),” says aviation historian Dick Hallion, this year’s A. Verville Fellow at the National Air and Space Museum. The metal construction, adds NASM air transport curator Ron Davies, “made it sturdier and less vulnerable to damage than the wood-and-fabric biplanes of its competitors. The metal was especially critical in resisting heat and humidity in tropical countries.”
The F13 first flew in 1919 (as the J13), and by the end of the year was in commercial service in Germany. “It established [founder Hugo] Junkers in a position of global air transport dominance that his firm would not relinquish until the mid-1930s, to Donald Douglas,” says Hallion. The F13 was used in the first airline service in the Americas (Colombia’s SCADTA).
Says Davies, “Unlike postwar transport airplanes that were modified from military types, the F13 was designed to carry passengers in an enclosed cabin. The four cushioned seats had seat belts, and the cabin was lighted and had picture windows.” Now that’s air travel.
After World War I, Germany was prohibited from operating the aircraft, but it sold them or licensed manufacture to 30 countries, including Hungary, Iceland, the Soviet Union, and Japan. In those years, the F13 established air routes in both Europe and the Americas. The last retired in 1948.
 

gayan kalhara

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Nov 22, 2007
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I think the best British Naval fighter used during the war was the Fairey Firefly

http://www.fleetairarmarchive.net/Ai...lying_RNHF.jpg

First flew on December 22nd 1941 (soon after Pearl Harbour was bombed) and was a two-seater naval fighter - it was built under the understanding that (in the Royal Navys opinion at the time) all Navy fighters should have a navigator onboard to navigate for the pilot while at sea (several incidents of pilots becoming disorientated and lost while flying bombing missions and long-range partols in bad weather in combat conditions led to this decision) so the Firefly was no different.
The Firefly became fully operational in October 1943 on board the carrier HMS Indefatigable (the aircraft carrier my grandfather served on was the HMS Implacable - the Indefatigables sister ship) and escorted bombers during their attacks (most notably against the Tirpitz in 1944)
The fireflys were often used to 'scout ahead' to claer enemy fighters from the area before the bombers came through

It was used as a nightfighter in 1943 and often intercepted V1s and Heinkel He111s during raids

whilst stationed in the Pacific in 1945 Fireflys took part in the destruction of an Oil refinery in Sumutra - they had a tremendous operation record whilst fighting in the Pacific proving to be a versatile opponent for the Japanese - operating both day and night as a recon plane or fighter bomber

In June 1945 Fireflies of 1771 Squadron, operating from HMS Implacable, took part in attacks in the Carolinas, while in July 1772 squadron aircraft, from HMS Indefatigable, were flying strikes against shipping and ground targets in the Japanese home islands, becoming the first FAA aircraft to fly over the Japanese mainland. On 24 July, 1945 aircraft from 1772 Squadron became the first British aircraft to fly over Tokyo
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They were also used to drop supplies to prisoners of war during these historic trips over Tokyo

It performed well in dogfights despite the Firefly's size and was armed with four 20mm cannons as well as rockets and mines (for the bomber role)

These are its stats:

Speed: 316mph
Ceiling: 28,000ft
Range: 1300miles
Wingspan: 44ft
Length: 37ft 7in
Weight: 14,020lb

It was so successful as a Naval fighter that it continued to be used on Royal Navy carriers during the Korean war

I think this plane was the best naval plane designed by Britain solely for use on carriers (i.e the American planes such as Hellcats and Corsairs don't count!
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gayan kalhara

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Nov 22, 2007
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shabi911 said:
if we dont fly well in sky and keep our sky clean from bad guys in world we will be sorry some day

But when the SAMs (Missiles) or AAs (Anti Air Guns) take the front you will hit the Ground At FIRST... he he he

Nice Thought bro... keep rocking....
 

Hashan dis

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  • Sep 10, 2008
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    Name: Gloster Meteor F Mk.8

    Constructor:
    Gloster / Armstrong Whitworth Armament:
    4*g 20mm

    Length: 13m59 Max Speed: 962 km/h Ceiling: 13400 m height: 3m96 Weight Max: 7122 kg Range: 965 km Span: 11m32 Crew: 1 Engines: 2

    meteor.jpg
     

    Hashan dis

    Well-known member
  • Sep 10, 2008
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    The F6F design began as a development of the F4F powered by the R-2600 engine, but soon evolved into a much larger and more capable aircraft, with the R-2800 engine. The F6F was designed and put into service in a very short period, assuring the ascendance of the USN over the A6M 'Zero' from the second half of 1943 onwards. It was credited with 76% of all aircraft destroyed by USN carrier fighters. In line with Grumman tradition, the F6F was a rugged aircraft that lacked easthetic appeal. Typical features were a tail-down attitude in level flight, because of the engine trust line, and the biggest wings fitted to a WWII fighter. Some were converted into unmanned flying bombs, used in Korea. In 1954 the aircraft retired from the U.S. fleets as a night-fighter. A total of 12275 built.
    Type: F6F-5 Hellcat
    Country: USA
    Function: fighter
    Year: 1944
    Crew: 1
    Engines: 1 * 1620 kW Pratt&Whitney R-2800-10W Double Wasp two-row radial engine with supercharger.
    Wing Span: 13.06 m
    Length: 10.24 m
    Height: 4.11 m
    Wing Area: 31.03 m2
    Empty Weight: 4152 kg
    Max.Weight: 6991 kg
    Fuel capacity: 946 L (250 US gal) internally; up to 3x 150 US gal in external drop tanks
    Max. Speed: 611 km/h
    Rate of climb: 17.8 m/s
    Ceiling: 11400 m
    Max. Range: 2100 km
    Armament: 6 * 12.7 mm Browning M2 machine guns, 1814 kg payload.




    f6f.jpg
     

    Hashan dis

    Well-known member
  • Sep 10, 2008
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    EuroFighter Typhoon / EF2000


    The first flight of the prototype Eurofighter Typhoon took place on March 27, 1994, when Messerchmitt-Bülkow-Blohm (MBB) chief test pilot Peter Weger took the prototype on a test flight around Bavaria. The basic configuration is reminiscent of the British Aerospace (BAe) EAP agile combat aircraft demonstrator, which flew back in August, 1986. In fact, the EAP was used to test many Eurofighter systems before final configuration of the latter plane was decided. (The relationship is similar to the F-17 and F/A-18, where the basic planform is the same but many design changes were made.)
    The EuroFighter, formerly known as the EF2000, is built by a consortium made up of BAe (UK), MBB and Dornier (Germany), Aeritalia (Italy), and CASA (Spain). It was initially designed for air-superiority and air defense roles, but a changing world situation has also resulted in an emphasis on excellent air-to-surface capabilities as well.
    The STOL (Short Take-Off and Landing) aircraft has a fundamentally unstable aerodynamic design; while this requires computer assistance for stable flight, gives the Eurofighter superior agility. Two Eurojet EJ200 advanced technology turbofans each provide 20,250 pounds of afterburning thrust; with a maximum take-off weight of 37,480 pounds fully loaded, this means the Eurofighter has power to spare. Although it's not actually a stealth aircraft, careful shaping and use of composites and low-detectability technologies (the airframe surface is only 15 % metal) means the Eurofighter is extremely light and has a much smaller radar profile than 1980s-era fighters.
    The fly-by-wire control system ensures the pilot can't stall or overstress the plane, and there's even a button that will automatically return the plane to a wing-level, nose-up attitude if the pilot becomes disoriented after a high-G maneuver. All important switches are mounted on the throttle or stick, giving the Eurofighter true HOTAS (Hands On Throttle And Stick) control. Three panel-mounted MFDs are supplemented by a HUD and a helmet-mounted sight for aiming ASRAAM missiles.
    Analysts generally agree that the only fighter with a demonstrable superiority to the Eurofighter is the American F22, which costs twice as much and doesn't have the EF2000's air-to-surface capability.

    TypeEurofighter Typhoon CountryBritain/Germany/Italy/Spain ExportGreece (60); Austria (18); Saudi Arabia (72 - replacing the Tornado) FunctionMulti-role fighter Year2004 Crew1 Engines2× Eurojet EJ200 afterburning turbofans, 60 kN dry, 93 kN with afterburner.
    Length15.96 m Height5.28 m Wing span10.95m Wing area50.0 m2 Wing loading311 kg/m² Wing aspect ratio2.205 Canard Area2.4 m2 Tail Plane AreaN/A
    Maximum speedMach 2.0+ (2390 km/h at high altitude) Maximum speed at low altitudeMach 1.2 (1470 km/h, 915 mph at sea level) Supercruise speedMach 1.3+ at altitude with typical air-to-air armament Minimum speed203 km/h Rate of climb255 m/s Service ceiling18290 m (60,000 ft) Time to 10600m/Mach 1.5< 2,5 min Runway length500 m (take off under 8 seconds) Range1390 km
    Basic mass empty9750 kg (21,495 lb.) Empty Weight10995 kg Max take-off mass23500 kg Max external stores6500 kg (14,300 lb.) Internal Fuel Weight5000 kg Thrust/weight1.22
    G-limits9/-3 Maximum instantenous turn rateUnknown Maximum sustained turn rateUnknown
    Armament1x 27 mm Mauser BK-27 cannon

    ef2000.jpg