Originally posted by Widewing:
I have referred the source to several friends who own and fly Mustangs, or who have extensive time in the type. However, I suspect that Mr. Hall has made an error, or he has been misinterpreted. I'll post what I learn here.
My regards,
Widewing
Ok, I have had several responses, and I found the original story as related by Jim Goodson, who flew with Godfrey.
The damage received to Godfrey's Mustang was from flak. Apparently a coolant line was nicked by a shell splinter and developed a relatively minor leak. Typically, a fighter like the Mustang would get into trouble once the cooling system pressure began to fall. If it falls too far, the Glycol will boil in the cylinder head, raising the temperature rapidly. Add to that a slight leak, and you have the makings of big trouble.
Goodson relates that he had used his primer pump to keep cylinder head temps down after taking a hit in his oil cooler. He barely made it back to Britain from the easten edge of France. However, he was flying a P-47D-10 at the time, which has an air-cooled R-2800 radial engine. This motor can survive at high temps much longer than a Merlin. My experience with radials is based upon over 2,000 hours of flying in aircraft powered by the R-2800 and R-1820 as Flight Engineer and Crew Chief.
Godfrey was advised to try the primer to keep the cylinder temps within limits. He did so and managed to get to the North Sea.
However, his hand was in severe pain and the coolant level had dropped to a point where pumping raw fuel into the cylinders was no longer of any value. As the engine began to knock and seize up, he prepared to bail out and stood up in the cockpit, Just then, he spotted the coast of England ahead. His engine quit shortly thereafter and he dead-sticked into a meadow just in from the coast.
In this case, Godfrey suffered a minor leak. Had he lost most of his coolant, he would have watched the engine seize within minutes.
Now, here's what Dudley Henriques has to say. Dudley has about 5,000 hours in Mustangs, having owned a few.
"I've heard this story several times. I wouldn't recommend it!!!
:-))
Excessive overheat in the 51 can mean big time trouble. 121c degrees is the magic number. Anything over 110c is suspect. With a maximum overheat you get a pop off valve release and plenty of white smoke past your ears. With the rad switch on auto, the flap opening is controlled by coolant temp. You can over ride and hold it open for a short time if it's set on auto and see if that brings the temp down. If that fails, and it most likely will at that point, you have a big problem going!! On the right side of the seat you have an emergency coolant flap release you can yank, but once you do, this can't be reset in flight...it's a one shot deal. This extends the coolant flap opening.The problem with the flap release is that if the actuator hasn't failed, you now have to use higher power settings to compensate for the open door. It's a bit tricky.
Bottom line on overheat in the 51 is that if it's an actuator failure or anything else morting the coolant system, I'd go through the procedure above and get the damn thing on the ground in one hell of a hurry! :-) I don't know about Godfrey, but if it was me, I'd give a lot of thought to using that damn sensitive primer on an already excessively hot and running Merlin.
:-))))"
Gene Greisell adds:
" A Merlin suffering a total coolant loss had, as you said, very few minutes to live. Between 30 seconds to 2 minutes before it seized, IIRC. A slow leak - as you suggested - might - allow, with a combination of low power gliding and rich mixture (and flapping ones arms out the cockpit maybe), to achieve a considerable range, but somehow I don't think 400 nmiles could be made unless the leak is so insignificant as to be barely noticeable."
You can read Goodson's account of these two events in his book, Tumult in The Clouds.
My regards,
Widewing
[ 12-30-2001: Message edited by: Widewing ]