March 16, 2010 at 9:37 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKq51LdJ-ZU
this is just fantastic!!!! I nearly fell off my chair…
By: mike currill - 20th March 2010 at 21:29
I don’t think there are many left and the chances of getting one running even less. From what I’ve heard they are technically a very difficult engine to work on as they had so many idiosyncrasies.
By: Oxcart - 20th March 2010 at 21:05
Are there many Sabres left? And is there any chance of getting one ground running (at least?)
By: mike currill - 20th March 2010 at 18:39
To the best of my knowledge the late improvements to the Sabre still didn’t fully sort it and that it was plagued with problems of of one sort or another throughout its service life. Please don’t hesitate to correct me if I’m wrong, that is how we learn.
By: GrahamF - 20th March 2010 at 16:13
That clip is a snippet off the ‘Tempest at war’ DVD if you like the Tempest which I do the full DVD is a must. It makes you realise that the reticence to put one in the air is only the lack of confidence on the late improvements and developments of this engine.
Graham
By: mike currill - 20th March 2010 at 01:33
I think that would be something to do with the demand being greater than the supply.
By: Stuart H - 20th March 2010 at 00:56
Excellent video. Next time I see one go by, I’ll surely recognise it.
And I’ll be sure to let you know!
Bill Waterton, of Gloster fame, pranged one on his first flight due to an obscure fuel system defect. He reckoned you could keep a 12 cylinder Merlin going by pumping the primer, but not the 24 cylinders in a Sabre.
By: mike currill - 20th March 2010 at 00:12
I totally agree
By: SADSACK - 19th March 2010 at 20:20
re;
I have never known such a small a/c to make so much noise!
By: mike currill - 19th March 2010 at 19:31
No, not agricultural. Most high performance piston engines sound very lumpy at tick over. I’m hearing a thoroughbred here. That lumpy tick over and the subsequent change of note as the revs rise is all part of the “song” of a particular engine.
Am I alone in finding the sound of the different engines and engine/airframe combinations fascinating and highly evocative?
Put a Sptfire and a Hurricane and a P51 in the air together and you can tell which is which without looking. Then there is the difference between say a Merlin and a DB605 and an Allison. I do love the sound of a Spitfire doing a run and break, with that pop pop pop as the engine is throttled back.
I shouldn’t mention jets in a piston thread, but who could forget the howl of a Starfighter in the circuit, or the whistle of a Vampire, among other things.
Perhaps it’s time for a “What ‘plane” thread based on sound tracks!
Rod
No you are not alone, I’m fascinated by that too. I still say the Sabre sounds agricultural at tickover as does the Daimler Benz and the Griffon yet the Merlin sounds reasonably happy. In the case of the Sabre I guess the extra 12 cylinders may have something to do with it.
The Vampire was a noisy little beast and I find it strange that some airshow commentators did/do try to talk over the sound of them.
By: SADSACK - 18th March 2010 at 16:51
re:
Phwoar! I liked that. Not often you see a Tempest in action.
Would be great if we finally got to see a Tempest get air beneath its wings…
too right, theres no other warbird I want to see fly more than a Tempest, other than a Short Stirling.
any news on the UK tempest population?
By: Whiskey Magna - 18th March 2010 at 13:43
No, not agricultural. Most high performance piston engines sound very lumpy at tick over. I’m hearing a thoroughbred here. That lumpy tick over and the subsequent change of note as the revs rise is all part of the “song” of a particular engine.
Am I alone in finding the sound of the different engines and engine/airframe combinations fascinating and highly evocative?
Put a Sptfire and a Hurricane and a P51 in the air together and you can tell which is which without looking. Then there is the difference between say a Merlin and a DB605 and an Allison. I do love the sound of a Spitfire doing a run and break, with that pop pop pop as the engine is throttled back.
I shouldn’t mention jets in a piston thread, but who could forget the howl of a Starfighter in the circuit, or the whistle of a Vampire, among other things.
Perhaps it’s time for a “What ‘plane” thread based on sound tracks!
Rod
By: mike currill - 18th March 2010 at 12:29
I can’t help thinking they sound distinctly agricultural when idling.
By: Christer - 18th March 2010 at 08:21
Great footage but it’s difficult finding a clean sound recording of a Sabre engine starting, taxying, idling or at full power…
I don’t know your definition of “clean sound recording” but there’s one at the Hawker Tempest Page: tempest.wav
I have three more downloaded from the web but I have no time right now to find them again. Maybe later if you like the first one.
By: Sealand Tower - 17th March 2010 at 22:17
Great footage but it’s difficult finding a clean sound recording of a Sabre engine starting, taxying, idling or at full power…
By: DazDaMan - 17th March 2010 at 08:55
Phwoar! I liked that. Not often you see a Tempest in action.
Would be great if we finally got to see a Tempest get air beneath its wings…
By: mike currill - 17th March 2010 at 07:39
That is one strange sounding engine. Wouldn’t that turn heads at an airshow if you could hear it before you could see it? How about sneeking in below the tree line and then hopping up for a low pass at Biggin?
By: SADSACK - 17th March 2010 at 02:03
re;
Oh please may we see a display like that at legends, one day? We can only dream!
now to find typhoon footage…
By: Creaking Door - 16th March 2010 at 23:20
This is a Tempest V…..not an Fw190…..please don’t shoot it down! :rolleyes:
Love the sound of that engine! :diablo:
By: Scouse - 16th March 2010 at 23:12
Bit more meandering round YiuTube and I found this…note the interloper Tempest at about 2mins 5 seconds!
By: Scouse - 16th March 2010 at 23:04
Or better still, Tempest II, of course. Follow some of the links and there is a Tempest II, plus a Tempest V starting sequence. Nice ones:)