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  • #16
    Re: British Response?

    Originally posted by 440_Magnum
    I would be curious to see the highest speeds of a Centaurus Sea Fury, if you do get to look them up. I know they were never really gold contenders (unless others broke). I'd like to know how they compare to the basic 3350 convsrions, not the more elaborate ones like Spirit of Texas with the cowl intake, or Fury with the unique exhust ejectors. Southern Cross might be an apt comparison. I'd also love to know more about what racing mods were applied to the Centaurus back in those days, if any. If there weren't many, then a Centaurus Sea Fury compares pretty favorably to a stock or near-stock Mustang, it seems to me.
    Of the very top of my head, the best 'finish' by a Centaurus powered Sea Fury (aside from the two victories in the distance races by Miss Merced) was a second place at the '73 Mojave race by Baby Gorilla...but that was a relatively small field and even Shelton's winning speed was only in the 370-380 mph range.

    I'm trying to remember something that maybe Frank Sanders said...or heck, even Sherm Cooper said way back when...that the Sea Fury airframe was great, but the limitation was in the engine because there really WEREN'T any modifications you could do to it for more horsepower. Remember...Kerch and Cooper had plans to put a -4360 on Miss Merced clear back in 1971. They just never got that far because of the crash at Mojave, followed by Cooper's fatal accident.

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    • #17
      Re: British Response?

      The "pig" comment made me chuckle. These are maximum level speed performance figures for the fast piston fighters. These are stock, in military trim.

      Spitfire 378
      Nakajima KI-84 392
      FW-190 408
      P-38 414
      F-8F 421
      P-47D 426
      P-51D 437
      F4U-4 446
      Sea Fury 460

      And for grins:
      F-7F 460
      F-82 461

      Yes, I know the thread is about race performance, but perhaps "Pig" is a mis-characterization.

      Ken

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      • #18
        Re: British Response?

        Originally posted by Ken Dwelle
        The "pig" comment made me chuckle. These are maximum level speed performance figures for the fast piston fighters. These are stock, in military trim.

        Spitfire 378
        Maybe for an early mark. This document from flight testing of a Griffon-engined Mk XIV shows a top speed of 448 mph



        Interestingly enough, this comparison chart shows the Hornet I to have a top speed of some 470 mph. Now wouldn't one of those be a sight coming round the pylons!

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        • #19
          Re: British Response?

          Fuzzy history, in my head, daa-ooh .....on the importing of 24? sea furies from Irak in the 80's.

          Any one remember the details, "where are they now"....


          Blew my mind when i heard Getchell's light off at the nut tree!!!


          BM

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          • #20
            Re: British Response?

            I the words of a, once famous, cartoon character...

            ".....fortunately, I keep my feathers numbered for just such an emergency!..."

            I stand corrected...
            Sierra Bravo..departing the pattern...
            Eddie's Airplane Patch-Birthplace of the "Sonic Boom".......and I'm reminded every friggin' day!

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            • #21
              Re: British Response?

              Shouldnt the Me 109 be on this list?
              "dont believe ANYTHING you hear and about HALF of what you see"...................J. Mott 1994

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              • #22
                Re: British Response?

                Originally posted by Bill Marsh
                Fuzzy history, in my head, daa-ooh .....on the importing of 24? sea furies from Irak in the 80's.

                Any one remember the details, "where are they now"....


                Blew my mind when i heard Getchell's light off at the nut tree!!!


                BM
                I believe you're referring to when Dave Tallichet imported 18 (I think that was the number) Furies from Iraq back in the 1970's?

                Virtually all of those airframes have been returned to the air, if I'm not mistaken.

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                • #23
                  Re: British Response?

                  Originally posted by sierra fox
                  Shouldnt the Me 109 be on this list?

                  398 Mph

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: British Response?

                    Thanx Speed D

                    Was on the prior web site i believe , pylon1, that the real demise for the bristol was ....... $2M ?? to reverse engineer the sleeves via the investment casting route.


                    tuff call for such a beautiful motor



                    BM

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: British Response?

                      Originally posted by Bill Marsh
                      Thanx Speed D

                      Was on the prior web site i believe , pylon1, that the real demise for the bristol was ....... $2M ?? to reverse engineer the sleeves via the investment casting route.


                      tuff call for such a beautiful motor



                      BM
                      I would concur...
                      One year we got to talking to a gentleman from the UK who owns a Sea Fury(in the McDonald's near Stead no less). I believe his name was John Bradshaw(I would say Ken Dwelle knows him from the 2000 Critical Mass team). He suggested there was quite a bit of research on the Bristol Centaurus into metallurgy and such -a knowledge which many have forgotten in this day(or do not understand), but that it was quite reliable if one didn't oil starve it.

                      Anyone know how Mr. Bradshaw is doing?

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                      • #26
                        John Bradshaw's Fury

                        The aeroplane is still active, now based at Bournemouth. John doesn't have a current Display Authorisation (DA) from the CAA, so its very few public appearances at airshows over the past few years have been static only.

                        It's been advertsed for sale several times over the past few years, with no takers as yet AFAIK.

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                        • #27
                          Sleeve valves

                          A lot of work was done by the late Paul Morgan (of Ilmor engines, builder of Mercedes F1 and Chevrolet CART engines) to manufacture new sleeve valves for the Centaurus engine. I've heard that they managed to manufacture new sleeves, but were having problems with the sleeves 'ovalling' when the holes for the valves were punched. This problem was being worked on at the time of Paul Morgan's untimely death in 2002 in 'Baby Gorilla', at which point the work was abandoned.

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                          • #28
                            Re: Sleeve valves

                            Originally posted by Mike51
                            A lot of work was done by the late Paul Morgan (of Ilmor engines, builder of Mercedes F1 and Chevrolet CART engines) to manufacture new sleeve valves for the Centaurus engine. I've heard that they managed to manufacture new sleeves, but were having problems with the sleeves 'ovalling' when the holes for the valves were punched. This problem was being worked on at the time of Paul Morgan's untimely death in 2002 in 'Baby Gorilla', at which point the work was abandoned.
                            Which airplane was Baby Gorilla? I remember the name, but not the plane.
                            _________
                            -Matt
                            Red Bull has no earthly idea what "air racing" is.

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                            • #29
                              Re: British Response?

                              Ex Loydd Hamilton stocker. N260X if I remember.
                              Leo Smiley - Graphics and Fine Arts
                              airplanenutleo@gmail.com
                              thetreasuredpeacock.etsy.com

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                              • #30
                                Re: British Response?

                                Originally posted by Ken Dwelle
                                The "pig" comment made me chuckle. These are maximum level speed performance figures for the fast piston fighters. These are stock, in military trim.

                                Spitfire 378
                                Nakajima KI-84 392
                                FW-190 408
                                P-38 414
                                F-8F 421
                                P-47D 426
                                P-51D 437
                                F4U-4 446
                                Sea Fury 460

                                And for grins:
                                F-7F 460
                                F-82 461

                                Yes, I know the thread is about race performance, but perhaps "Pig" is a mis-characterization.

                                Ken
                                And I bet, for reasons of discussion, that these are probably at a higher altitude?

                                Can we find any graphs like the above for all these aircraft?

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