Pizzicato Posted December 14, 2019 Posted December 14, 2019 (edited) I was just watching this F-16 video, and was really surprised at the volume of in-cockpit vapour during the takeoff and climb out. It looks like they've got a dry-ice machine running in the cockpit. It's kind of cool in a not-at-all-helpful-to-the-pilot kind of way. Any ideas what's causing this, or how common it actually is? Edit: It's at 1m 28s onwards. Edited December 14, 2019 by Pizzicato i7-7700K @ 4.9Ghz | 16Gb DDR4 @ 3200Mhz | MSI Z270 Gaming M7 | MSI GeForce GTX 1080ti Gaming X | Win 10 Home | Thrustmaster Warthog | MFG Crosswind pedals | Oculus Rift S
Weta43 Posted December 14, 2019 Posted December 14, 2019 I once was a passenger out of Bangkok in an aircraft where the entire inside of the cabin did that as they turned the AC on - yeah, looked like a dry ice machine blowing over the seats. Cheers.
Emmy Posted December 14, 2019 Posted December 14, 2019 Summer In Texas .. It’s the A/C [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] http://www.476vfightergroup.com/content.php High Quality Aviation Photography For Personal Enjoyment And Editorial Use. www.crosswindimages.com
Emu Posted December 14, 2019 Posted December 14, 2019 The ECS in T-45s used to chuck ice out at one point in the late '90s.
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