Originally posted by Golfer
First part should have read:
The Concorde uses afterburners to accerate to Mach2+ and it maintains that speed. Maintaining mach 2 is a far cry from simply making it to Mach 1 and it is not a fair statement to say that the Concorde requires the 4 Olympus motors just to get to Mach 1.
From
http://www.concordesst.com“Concorde is the only civil airliner in service with a 'military style' afterburner system installed to produce more power at key stages of the flight. The reheat system, as it is officially known, injects fuel into the exhaust, and provides 6,000Lb of the total available thrust per engine at take off. This hotter faster exhaust that is used on take off and is what is mainly responsible for the additional noise that Concorde makes. The reheats are turned off shortly after take off when Concorde reaches the noise abatement area. The reheats are turned back on, by the piano switches behind the thrust leavers, for around 10 minutes once the aircraft is clear of land, to push the aircraft through Mach1 and on to Mach1.7 where they are no longer required.”
Originally posted by Mark Luper
Yup, Viking really doesn't know much about going supersonic. BTW you did know that supersonic speed changes with altitude didn't you?
Mark
Not directly, it changes with the density and temperature of the air (which changes with altitude), but that doesn’t change the effects of hitting Mach 1 with a plane not designed for transonic flight. The drag increase is tremendous, and if any common airliner has ever hit Mach 1 (as Toad suggests) the plane will start to fall apart rapidly.
In a strong tail wind situation a subsonic airliner can still have a ground speed of beyond Mach one, but not the air speed. So even if radar or gps tells you you’re going supersonic, you’re not.
And as Ripsnort’s post explains Gibson’s 727 started to fall apart long before he allegedly went supersonic, and the plane lost a lot more than one slat. However I’m a lot more willing to believe that the 727 went transonic very close to supersonic and was just experiencing local supersonic airflow that rendered the elevators useless (just like on a P-38 for example). That the aircraft itself went supersonic I find highly unlikely … seeing how it survived.
Btw. Golfer, it's pretty scary that you are allowed to fly an aircraft. One would think it would require a modicum of intelligence and knowledge of the physics involved.
Last post for tonight. Good night Gentlemen.