Larry in TN
En-Route
Any of you ever fly a DC-8? My I'll never do that again story as a Controller was the day I discovered, the hard way, that DC-8's don't have them and can't down fer sheet when you really need it.
I've flown the DC8-61/62/63 as FE and the DC8-62/71/72/73 as pilot.Before the CFM-56 reengine, the DC8's would reverse the 2 inboard engines to slow down and descend simultaneously. A captain told me with the new engines, there was a lot more residual thrust at idle, so it made for a really bumpy ride. Since the passengers didn't like it, they wouldn't do it anymore.
You could reverse the inbounds on all of them. Loud and lots of vibration. With passengers, I'd never do it without warning them first. It was not something that was normally done, if it could be avoided. Come back to flight-idle and point the nose down and it descended a lot faster than the modern jets do.
The DC8 does have spoilers--ground spoilers. It has no speed brakes which, on most jets, are the same panels when extended in flight. The inflight speed brakes would be limited to a lower angle in flight as compared to the extension of the same panels on the ground. The ground spoilers would also have some additional ground-only panels on many airplanes.
Good ol' DC8. Nothing like burning 15,000 pounds (~2240 gallons) of Jet A in your first hour of the flight! Depending on the wing, you'd have 8 to 10 fuel tanks.
If you ever get bored, read about how the intermediate-level fuel transfer system works.