Search the archive:
YaBB - Yet another Bulletin Board
 
   
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
Making of 'Top Gun' part 1 (Read 502 times)
Oct 15th, 2012 at 7:38am

wahubna   Offline
Colonel
WMU Bronco
Michigan

Gender: male
Posts: 1064
*****
 
Come on, you know you have seen Top Gun. Part 1 of how it was made:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=LCNzRSaDKAw#!
 

‎"At that time [1909] the chief engineer was almost always the chief test pilot as well. That had the fortunate result of eliminating poor engineering early in aviation."- Igor Sikorsky
...
IP Logged
 
Reply #1 - Oct 15th, 2012 at 8:37am

expat   Offline
Colonel
Deep behind enemy lines!

Gender: male
Posts: 8499
*****
 
Interesting, I always thought the ejection sequence was Hollywood BS, turns out it is a read problem with the F14  Shocked

Matt
 

PETA ... People Eating Tasty Animals.

B1 Boeing 737-800 and Dash8 Q-400
IP Logged
 
Reply #2 - Oct 15th, 2012 at 9:36am

ViperPilot   Offline
Colonel
KLMO Denver, CO USA

Gender: male
Posts: 211
*****
 
expat wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 8:37am:
Interesting, I always thought the ejection sequence was Hollywood BS, turns out it is a read problem with the F14  Shocked

Matt


With the TF30 equipped Tomcat compressor stalls were a very real problem, often with tragic circumstances.
F-14A pilots were trained to be very judicious with Throttle settings, especially in the extremes of the flight envelope.
No Zone 5, then cut to idle here. Once the F-14A went into a flat spin the huge wing box created turbulence which decreased lift and made her unrecoverable. Most of the -A models that were lost were due to this occurrence.

It wasn't until the GE F110 was installed in the -D model that the Throttle restrictions were lifted. The F110 is much more robust and with its higher thrust, the F-14D got closer to a 1:1 thrust ratio without the reliability problems of the TF30.

Smiley
 

[...
"I created the Little Black Book to keep myself from getting killed..."
-- Captain Elrey Borge Jeppesen

P4 3.0 SINGLE CORE, 2GB Corsair RAM, ATI Radeon 4650 1GB, OCZ 600w PSU, Samsung 160GB HD XP SP3

Proud User of: FS8 FS9 CFS CFS2 IL2
IP Logged
 
Reply #3 - Oct 15th, 2012 at 1:05pm

expat   Offline
Colonel
Deep behind enemy lines!

Gender: male
Posts: 8499
*****
 
ViperPilot wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 9:36am:
expat wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 8:37am:
Interesting, I always thought the ejection sequence was Hollywood BS, turns out it is a read problem with the F14  Shocked

Matt


With the TF30 equipped Tomcat compressor stalls were a very real problem, often with tragic circumstances.
F-14A pilots were trained to be very judicious with Throttle settings, especially in the extremes of the flight envelope.
No Zone 5, then cut to idle here. Once the F-14A went into a flat spin the huge wing box created turbulence which decreased lift and made her unrecoverable. Most of the -A models that were lost were due to this occurrence.

It wasn't until the GE F110 was installed in the -D model that the Throttle restrictions were lifted. The F110 is much more robust and with its higher thrust, the F-14D got closer to a 1:1 thrust ratio without the reliability problems of the TF30.

Smiley


Nice info  Smiley

Matt
 

PETA ... People Eating Tasty Animals.

B1 Boeing 737-800 and Dash8 Q-400
IP Logged
 
Reply #4 - Oct 15th, 2012 at 4:11pm

wahubna   Offline
Colonel
WMU Bronco
Michigan

Gender: male
Posts: 1064
*****
 
expat wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 1:05pm:
ViperPilot wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 9:36am:
expat wrote on Oct 15th, 2012 at 8:37am:
Interesting, I always thought the ejection sequence was Hollywood BS, turns out it is a read problem with the F14  Shocked

Matt


With the TF30 equipped Tomcat compressor stalls were a very real problem, often with tragic circumstances.
F-14A pilots were trained to be very judicious with Throttle settings, especially in the extremes of the flight envelope.
No Zone 5, then cut to idle here. Once the F-14A went into a flat spin the huge wing box created turbulence which decreased lift and made her unrecoverable. Most of the -A models that were lost were due to this occurrence.

It wasn't until the GE F110 was installed in the -D model that the Throttle restrictions were lifted. The F110 is much more robust and with its higher thrust, the F-14D got closer to a 1:1 thrust ratio without the reliability problems of the TF30.

Smiley


Nice info  Smiley

Matt


If Maverick had been flying a real F-14 with the throttle inputs he does, it would have blown up. Those TF30s shed blades/parts a lot when stressed as in when the throttle is rapidly moved. Those engines were just horrible and should never have been kept in the F-14s for as long as they were. Im convinced that if they had put a decent engine in them when the problems first came up you would still be seeing F-14s flying off carriers today.
 

‎"At that time [1909] the chief engineer was almost always the chief test pilot as well. That had the fortunate result of eliminating poor engineering early in aviation."- Igor Sikorsky
...
IP Logged
 
Reply #5 - Oct 15th, 2012 at 5:17pm

ViperPilot   Offline
Colonel
KLMO Denver, CO USA

Gender: male
Posts: 211
*****
 
Could you imagine if the Tomcat had a 1:1 or better thrust ratio with F110's? Accelerating in a climb, with a 4 Phoenix, 2 Sparrow and 2 Sidewinder loadout? If I saw that on my six I would just go ahead, pull on the Loud Handle, and wait for the chute to open.

I know they got expensive and time consuming to work on, but that's no excuse. The F-14 should NEVER have been retired. PERIOD.

Cry
 

[...
"I created the Little Black Book to keep myself from getting killed..."
-- Captain Elrey Borge Jeppesen

P4 3.0 SINGLE CORE, 2GB Corsair RAM, ATI Radeon 4650 1GB, OCZ 600w PSU, Samsung 160GB HD XP SP3

Proud User of: FS8 FS9 CFS CFS2 IL2
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print