I read somewhere recently that a 707 often required as much as 8000 ft for takeoff. Was that due to it being underpowered or an inefficient wing?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfTdRF66QPo
Go to about 4:30 and see the water injected engines. Injected pretty significant amounts of water, just to increase thrust.
Good God it's hard to believe they haven't re-engined those yet to something more efficient.
Oh, they have, those were the original KC-135 A model. The tanker full of fuel had to heft A LOT more weight than a typical 707. For a lot of take-offs, the KC-135 As would have a very low initial level off, just to build to the book climb speed.
It's all a matter of how loaded they are.
You want to see something take a lot of runway. Be around a IAD when the transpacific nonstops depart (usually about mid-day). Those 747SPs use just about every inch of runway and they can't take any tailwind.
There's only a handfull of the SP's left, none in airline service. NASA has one, and a few VIP ships.
There's only a handfull of the SP's left, none in airline service. NASA has one, and a few VIP ships.
There's only a handfull of the SP's left, none in airline service. NASA has one, and a few VIP ships.
I was talking about the B-52
I was talking about the B-52
And none, including ours, has the original P&W JT9D-7A engines.
There never were more than a handful. Boeing only made 70-odd.
I used to ride 135's from Eielson to Grissom on a hop to visit at home in OH. Eielson had more than 15,000 ft of runway and I have seen tankers use most of that. As already stated they would pop off the ground and fly low and slow till they build enough airspeed to adequately climb.
The -400's aren't any better than the SPs either.
It's all a matter of how loaded they are.
You want to see something take a lot of runway. Be around a IAD when the transpacific nonstops depart (usually about mid-day). Those 747SPs use just about every inch of runway and they can't take any tailwind.
My dad was a 747 pilot with Pan Am and I recall him saying that the SP climbed like a bat out of hell. I understood that it was powered like a regular 747 but shorter and lighter. Of course, if you loaded it with lead it might have trouble taking off!
The -400's aren't any better than the SPs either.
Yeah, the SP was designed for short island runways in the pacific.
No, it was designed as a longer range version of the -100.
Well, there's 2 ways to do that, make it smaller with the same fuel or make it heavier with more fuel. The long range routes are the Pacific Routes, and they didn't want to have to refuel at the islands in the middle of the So Pacific. Since the runways were short and the load on those routes not so great, they chose the lower cost
B747SP
The Boeing 747SP is a modified version of the Boeing 747 jet airliner which was designed for ultra-long-range flights. The SP stands for "Special Performance". Compared with its predecessor, the 747-100, the 747SP retains its wide-body, four-engine layout, along with its double-deck design, but has a shortened fuselage, larger tailplane, and simplified trailing edge flaps. The weight saved by the shortened fuselage permits longer range and increased speed relative to other 747 configurations.[2]
Known during development as the short-body 747SB, the 747SP was designed to meet a 1973 joint request from Pan American World Airways and Iran Air, who were looking for a high-capacity airliner with sufficient range to cover Pan Am's New York–Middle Eastern routes and Iran Air's planned Tehran–New York route. The aircraft also was intended to provide Boeing with a mid-size wide-body airliner to compete with existing trijet airliners.
SP not made obsolete by -200. Braniff bought SPs well after the -200 came out. I was there working at Braniff at the time. SPs we had definetly did not use -100 engine.
SP had superior range, but sacrificed in pax/cargo capability.
If I want a Wikipedia answer I can look up the bull**** too.
KC -135s have been re engined with CFM56 engines (not the guard ones).
So, how are the 747-100 JT9D-7As different from the 747SP JT9D-7As?
Both models transitioned to other engines later in the run, but the design and purpose was reflected in the initial Pan Am order.
You can get the details from Boeing. No need to go to Wikipedia or some random worker's memory.
Urban legend has it that Hursey Gate was named after an SP that was killed when a 135 didn't make it into the air. The gate was pretty much off the north end of the runway.
My dad was a 747 pilot with Pan Am and I recall him saying that the SP climbed like a bat out of hell. I understood that it was powered like a regular 747 but shorter and lighter. Of course, if you loaded it with lead it might have trouble taking off!
On the transatlantic routes they could leave entire fuel tanks empty.
Stated urban legend because I couldn't prove it other than what I had been told when stationed there.I don't know why it would be an Urban Legend and the gate it hit was at the south end. They moved it after that to the north end. I think you can read about it on the Eielson history page.
Put enough fuel in it to reach Tokyo from Washington, DC non-stop and it doesn't climb that well. On the transatlantic routes they could leave entire fuel tanks empty.
They know they're out of a job.So much for old Pan Am pilots knowing their history.