agile! now you look like a learned fitter who knows what he's talking about, please enlighten us how the water gets pumped around the system to heat the tank situated 5metres away,also what qualified engineer do i want gas or electric, obviously my time spent keeping vulcans and lightnings airbourne as an aircraft mechanic propulsion is of little value here.
There is a Vulcan, XL318, just 600 yards from me at the moment!
You would have liked the program I was watching last night about the development and final demise of the Concord whose Olympus 593 engines were a development of the Olympus used in the Vulcan. The wing profile is also very similar.
Whilst the Vulcan may have been a massive beast and probably the first to fly by wire it consumed vast quantities of fuel and I dont see it as having much historical significance and I thought it was a total waste of money to renovate XH558 to flying condition. It hardly made half of its planned appearances.
Here it is leaving LHR
I would not have thought it would have cost much more to get a couple of Concords back into service and they could have produced much needed prestige showings round the world.
From some way away the look surprisingly similar! Both were the first of their kind to fly by wire too.
Or if not a couple of Concords then four Harriers. They played a major part in winning the Falklands when the pilots discovered they could be vectored. One of those close by too and neighbour worked on their radar.
You need a boiler engineer!
Tony
