April 14, 2008 at 5:24 am
LOT Polish Airlines
Boeing 737-55D
Scandinavian Airlines (SAS)
McDonnell Douglas MD-82
Virgin Atlantic Airways
Airbus A340-642
Gulf Air
Airbus A330-243

All Nippon Airways (ANA)
Boeing 777-381ER
Japan Airlines (JAL)
Boeing 777-346ER
Cathay Pacific Airways
Airbus A340-642
By: flcriminal - 14th May 2008 at 18:33
Last two from April
Cathay Pacific Airways
Airbus A340-642
Japan Airlines (JAL)
Boeing 777-346ER
By: flcriminal - 14th May 2008 at 17:29
Tunisair
Airbus A320-211
Virgin Atlantic Airways
Airbus A340-642 G-VWEB

All Nippon Airways (ANA)
Boeing 777-381ER
Scandinavian Airlines (SAS)
McDonnell Douglas MD-82
Hope You like it
By: flcriminal - 13th May 2008 at 21:32
Few more from April
Clickair
Airbus A320-214
Alitalia
McDonnell Douglas MD-82
British Airways
Boeing 777-236(ER) G-YMMP
DHL (European Air Transport)
Airbus A300B4-203(F)
British Airways
Boeing 757-236 G-CPEN
Lufthansa
Boeing 737-530
Bellview Airlines
Boeing 767-241(ER)
bmi Regional
Embraer ERJ-145MP
By: flcriminal - 5th May 2008 at 22:00
Virgin Atlantic Airways
Airbus A340-642
Turkish Airlines
Airbus A321-231
British Airways
Boeing 747-436
Royal Jordanian
Airbus A310-304
TAM Linhas AΓ©reas
Airbus A330-223
British Airways
Boeing 757-236
Air Astana
Boeing 757-2G5
By: flcriminal - 30th April 2008 at 21:25

By: Manston Airport - 30th April 2008 at 15:52
Two more great shots flcriminal like the BMI A330 with the AC 767 in the background π
James
By: flcriminal - 29th April 2008 at 20:24
BMI British Midland
Airbus A330-200 G-WWBD
United Airlines
Boeing 777-200 N775UA
By: Manston Airport - 29th April 2008 at 18:55
This is what i found
“According to my MD manual the device is properly called a spray deflector and is one item on the exterior preflight inspection.
I have the video of the wet runway tests with and without this device. It is quite a difference. The spray is thrown in a much lower arc with the deflector attached and it makes ingestion by the engines much less likely.
Without the deflector the material would not travel much farther, mostly just higher. And if it goes higher it takes longer to arc over the top and fall back to the runway. Longer time = more opportunity for the engines to get there and ingest it.
At 120 knots a plane is traveling just over two hundred feet per second. Let’s picture a nosewheel tire with a tread width of ten inches, rolling 200fps through slush lying one-quarter inch deep on the runway. The tire will throw six thousand cubic inches (that is about 26 gallons) of slush per second up, and out to the side. Well, since the engines will arrive where the nosewheel is now in less than one second. The need to keep the spray low becomes pretty obvious when you think of it that way.
Forget gravel and other FOD, I don’t think jet engines would be happy being fed 26 gallons of water per second.
When the DC-9-80 entered line service this spray deflector created a small problem. The standard DC-9 towbar was about an inch too narrow of throat to fit over it. A whole new series of towbars was distributed.”
Thank you for the information flcriminal π and some more great shots there like the AC A330
James
By: flcriminal - 28th April 2008 at 20:12
Thanx a lot for nice comments
One more:
Air Canada Airbus A330-300 C-GHKX
By: steve rowell - 28th April 2008 at 01:45
All excellent shots!!
By: flcriminal - 27th April 2008 at 21:48
Few from yesterday 26.04.2008
Etihad Airways Airbus A340-600 A6-EHH
United Airlines Boeing 747-400 N194UA
Singapore Airlines Airbus A380 9V-SKC
Aeroflot Airbus A320 VP-BQU
By: flcriminal - 20th April 2008 at 06:43
04.04.
Korean Air
Boeing 747-4B5
12.04
Luxair – Luxembourg Airlines
Embraer ERJ-145LU
Swiss International Air Lines
British Aerospace Avro RJ100
Delta Air Lines
Boeing 767-332(ER)
By: flcriminal - 17th April 2008 at 17:42
Air-India
Boeing 777-337ER
United Airlines
Boeing 777-222
By: A330Crazy - 15th April 2008 at 19:10
Excellent catch with the Gulf air 330! Dont suppose you were there the other day for the VIP MD-11 were you?
By: flcriminal - 14th April 2008 at 21:21
Nice shots there like the Gulf Air A330 shot π Just wondering whats that on the SAS MD82 nose wheel is it some sort of brake? :confused:
James
This is what i found
“According to my MD manual the device is properly called a spray deflector and is one item on the exterior preflight inspection.
I have the video of the wet runway tests with and without this device. It is quite a difference. The spray is thrown in a much lower arc with the deflector attached and it makes ingestion by the engines much less likely.
Without the deflector the material would not travel much farther, mostly just higher. And if it goes higher it takes longer to arc over the top and fall back to the runway. Longer time = more opportunity for the engines to get there and ingest it.
At 120 knots a plane is traveling just over two hundred feet per second. Let’s picture a nosewheel tire with a tread width of ten inches, rolling 200fps through slush lying one-quarter inch deep on the runway. The tire will throw six thousand cubic inches (that is about 26 gallons) of slush per second up, and out to the side. Well, since the engines will arrive where the nosewheel is now in less than one second. The need to keep the spray low becomes pretty obvious when you think of it that way.
Forget gravel and other FOD, I don’t think jet engines would be happy being fed 26 gallons of water per second.
When the DC-9-80 entered line service this spray deflector created a small problem. The standard DC-9 towbar was about an inch too narrow of throat to fit over it. A whole new series of towbars was distributed.”
By: Manston Airport - 14th April 2008 at 15:51
Nice shots there like the Gulf Air A330 shot π Just wondering whats that on the SAS MD82 nose wheel is it some sort of brake? :confused:
James
By: tomfellows - 14th April 2008 at 14:36
Excellent photos. That Gulf F1 scheme gets better every time I see it.
By: PMN - 14th April 2008 at 11:34
Very nice work indeed! π
Paul