Contrails?

Arnold

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Arnold
I am attaching a pic from Luscombe. It was taken 3 years ago but I just noticed there are, what appear to be contrails, coming off the prop. Contrails in that that moisture condensing through aerodynamic effect while aviating. The high speed aircraft involved is a 1946 Luscombe 8A. I just thought it was cool.

L8A Contrail.jpg
 
Low pressure causing moisture in the air to condense. Add carb heat just in case.
 
It was May in NC. Obviously humid, not sure of the temp. The condensation was not visible in flight which is why I just discovered them going through old photos this AM. That said, carb heat is a good idea and I would have used it if I had indications of carb ice.
 
No indications of carb ice. Condensation off prop not visible outside aircraft. Since the engine kept running with no indications of carb ice I'm pretty sure it was unnecessary. Are you suggesting I should have used carb heat profilacticly at cruise power? BTW I posted this because I thought it was a neat photo but if you guys think it is a good jumping off point for a carb heat discussion that works too.

Probably too late for that :)

But, yea.
 
Was this an experimental delivery system? Through the prop tips? I heard about one group in the 50s that tried this and...it did not end well. Seems awfully complex for the plumbing to get from the chem tanks out into the prop.

Joking...of course. Yes, cool picture and a reminder of what 100% humidity is.
 
No problems, then no problems. Cool picture.

(I did encounter what I believe was carb ice during cruise in a '46 Cessna 120 - dunno for sure, but the application of carb heat resumed the noise...)
 
Was this an experimental delivery system? Through the prop tips? I heard about one group in the 50s that tried this and...it did not end well. Seems awfully complex for the plumbing to get from the chem tanks out into the prop.

Joking...of course. Yes, cool picture and a reminder of what 100% humidity is.


That explains it, chem trails. It is a 1946 airplane so right era and the fixed pitch prop provides fewer complexities. I bet I could gain some useful load if I remove that system. Thanks.
 
Was this an experimental delivery system? Through the prop tips? I heard about one group in the 50s that tried this and...it did not end well. Seems awfully complex for the plumbing to get from the chem tanks out into the prop.

Joking...of course. Yes, cool picture and a reminder of what 100% humidity is.

Very cool pic.

But judging by the visual evidence in the picture I would say he needed to turn the injection rate down quite a bit. It's more effective as a fine, even distribution into the atmosphere, rather than the excessively lumpy, high volume shots shown here. Kids these days, they're all in a hurry to get back to their phones...
 
No problems, then no problems. Cool picture.

(I did encounter what I believe was carb ice during cruise in a '46 Cessna 120 - dunno for sure, but the application of carb heat resumed the noise...)

Interesting. I think 120's had a C-85 engine. The Luscombe has an A-65 and a different carb. I don't have a mixture control.
 
That explains it, chem trails. It is a 1946 airplane so right era and the fixed pitch prop provides fewer complexities. I bet I could gain some useful load if I remove that system. Thanks.

Yeah the plumbing is a bit heavy but you're swapping a hollow prop for a solid one so you lose there...
 
Yeah the plumbing is a bit heavy but you're swapping a hollow prop for a solid one so you lose there...

I wonder if I can use the venturi (lower left corner of pic) for distribution. I'm concerned it would mess up my paint.
 
Contrails like this are really cool, there are some epic photos online of C130, Airbus A400, helicopters, etc. with this

Mind you, the 1946 vintage for the early delivery system makes sense, this is contemporary with the first attempts by Bernard Vonnegut to seed clouds with silver iodide as a nucleating agent to alter the weather

I don't think the venturi would work as well, you get a better overall mix rate injecting the stuff straight into the blade thrust at the tips where dispersion velocity is greatest

PS... many WW2 aviators suffered from diarrhea as castor oil was used in the engine lubricants, and flying through that exhaust in big bomber formations would bring about some serious intestinal issues... there were accounts of folks landing behind enemy lines to relieve themselves
 
Lovely thought.


PS... many WW2 aviators suffered from diarrhea as castor oil was used in the engine lubricants, and flying through that exhaust in big bomber formations would bring about some serious intestinal issues... there were accounts of folks landing behind enemy lines to relieve themselves
 
Contrails like this are really cool, there are some epic photos online of C130, Airbus A400, helicopters, etc. with this

Mind you, the 1946 vintage for the early delivery system makes sense, this is contemporary with the first attempts by Bernard Vonnegut to seed clouds with silver iodide as a nucleating agent to alter the weather

I don't think the venturi would work as well, you get a better overall mix rate injecting the stuff straight into the blade thrust at the tips where dispersion velocity is greatest

PS... many WW1 aviators suffered from diarrhea as castor oil was used in the engine lubricants, and flying through that exhaust in big bomber formations would bring about some serious intestinal issues... there were accounts of folks landing behind enemy lines to relieve themselves

FTFY. Many of the rotary engines (yes, rotary, not radial) from early WW1 used castor oil and it was consumed with the fuel and blown out the exhaust. Right into the face of the pilot.

John
 
The venturi reminded me of a story.
Our airport mechanic had a Globe Swift that had one. He was out somewhere and someone asked him what it was. He told them it was a horn to scare the deer off the runway so you could land.
 
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