Suboptimal
Suboptimal
Extreme compression relief, makes starting it easier.
Did the cylinder really seize and get pushed away from the block? That must be exciting to hear/see.
Exiting to hear/see & that exciting extra split second to actually comprehend what you already understand happened.
Basically dafooqing.
On jet engines the cowling/housing is suppose to contain the blade shrapnel.
On a piston engine, as seen in the picture, the cylinder is never suppose to become detached from the engine block. There are a few ways a cylinder can detach, but most likely is lack of maintenance.
Pilot: Mayday mayday mayday, we’ve had an engine out
Tower: Is it a full or partial engine out?
Pilot: Partially out of the cowling
While I love this, I can’t pass up the opportunity to explain “pop goes the weasel”.
The song references the cost of food items in its first verse, followed by “that’s the way the money goes, pop goes the weasel”. What exactly a weasel was is up for debate; it could be rhyming slang for a coat, or it could mean the pre-electric type of iron that was heated on a stove before use on clothing. In any case, “pop” was slang for pawning an item for money.
So I had to have a look.
And there’s a few theories, the coat theory, but the others are pretty interesting too:
There has been much speculation about the meaning of the phrase and song title, “Pop Goes the Weasel”.[1][6] Some say a weasel is a tailor’s flat iron, silver-plate dishes, a dead animal, a hatter’s tool, or a spinner’s weasel.[1][23][17] One writer notes, “Weasels do pop their heads up when disturbed and it is quite plausible that this was the source of the name of the dance.”[1]
Emphasis is mine.