avatar_Thorvic

BAE Nimrod

Started by Thorvic, March 23, 2008, 02:16:47 PM

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Thorvic

Builds up OK as well, although it does NEED the extra nose weight. The Heritage White Metal undercarriage and resin nose gear bay might be handy for the AEW3 version.

This was my build from earlier in the summer:-



Geoff
Project Cancelled SIG Secretary, specialising in post war British RN warships, RN and RAF aircraft projects. Also USN and Russian warships

kitnut617

That sure does look good Geoff,  nicely done  :bow:
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Captain Canada

Oh yeah, that is a real beauty, Geoff. Where on earth do you keep all these giant birds you build ?

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Hobbes

#33
I don't suppose there's a Nimrod AEW in 1:144? Otherwise I might have to pick up an Airfix Nimrod sometime soon...

Howard of Effingham

Quote from: Aircav on August 24, 2008, 09:52:05 AM
The conversion is here http://cammett.websds.net/ and its about £25

:banghead: mine only cost £XX  from antics in coventry :banghead:

;D and i have some NASCAR decals too.....  ;D
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Mossie

Quote from: Hobbes on August 26, 2008, 05:29:21 AM
I don't suppose there's a Nimrod AEW in 1:144? Otherwise I might have to pick up an Airfix Nimrod sometime soon...

Welsh Models do a vacform Nimrod in 1/144, but I don't know of an AEW kit or conversion in that scale.
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Daryl J.

How about a 6 engined Nimrod?

That conversion above looks great too btw.



Daryl J.

RLBH

Or, go the other way: a two-engined Nimrod. The Treasury hears that two engines are often shut down once on station to save fuel and stay on station longer (true), and decides that it would be a good idea to save money by removing the other two.

Of course, it's expensive to remove one engine from each wing, and connect the wing back on, so both engines are taken out of the same wing  :rolleyes: ;D

Well, maybe not. But there might be some sort of sensible reason...

Hobbes

The two remaining engines would have to be a bit bigger. If you think the MRA4 has big intakes, imagine having CFM56s buried in the wing roots  ;D

kitnut617

Quote from: Hobbes on August 29, 2008, 12:24:56 AM
--- imagine having CFM56s buried in the wing roots  ;D

hmm!  If the engines are short enough to fit in between the wing spars that's a possibility, but if not I can see a major problem getting enough strength into some very large banjo hoops that would be needed for the spars
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Aircav

Could always mount four turboprops above the wings, he,he.  ;D
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royabulgaf

I don't know if this is the right place to post.  I ordered the Cammett conversion a week ago, and I got it yesterday.  I live in the US.  Hats off to cammett.
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elmayerle

Quote from: kitnut617 on August 29, 2008, 04:52:05 AM
Quote from: Hobbes on August 29, 2008, 12:24:56 AM
--- imagine having CFM56s buried in the wing roots  ;D

hmm!  If the engines are short enough to fit in between the wing spars that's a possibility, but if not I can see a major problem getting enough strength into some very large banjo hoops that would be needed for the spars

If they'll fit beween the wing spars, I can just see two CFM56s installed with bifurcated inlets and exhausts (using existing structure) to keep the structural changes down.  That would look distinctively different.
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kitnut617

Quote from: elmayerle on August 30, 2008, 11:20:37 PM

If they'll fit beween the wing spars, I can just see two CFM56s installed with bifurcated inlets and exhausts (using existing structure) to keep the structural changes down.  That would look distinctively different.

If they fit, it would have to have streamlined fairings leading over the front spar similar to a Meteor,  would you have the inlet set quite a bit forward of this streamlining and in front of the wing leading edge or could it have the inlets set further back over the wing ? What would be better aerodynamically ?  What aerodynamic interference do you think could happen between the nacelle and fuselage ?
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Weaver

Actually, it would be relatively easy, structurally speaking, to convert the MRA.4 wing to take one, bigger engine in each wing root. The intake/exhaust paths arn't "holes in the spar" as they were on the MR.2, rather the spar has a separate "spectacle frame" section which joins the outer wing to the centre box. You could "just" unbolt the "spectacle frame" and replace it with a "monacle frame" relatively easily.

Why you'd want to is another matter of course, since you'd lose a chunk of airfoil section over the new, bigger engine, and the BR.715s are very efficient anyway.....
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