Funny to hear them called that, Inspector; around here on the 787 Program the cutouts are officially called "chevrons". And interestingly, they are individually sized and contoured to attenuate sound specific to their location around the cowling. Listening to the 787 taxi by at Paine, I'm reminded that the Trents on that bird sound pretty much unlike any other commerical plane I've heard, very quiet with a whispering or blowing overtone and soft "blowing" spool-up...the only thing I can recall hearing sound similar is the Navy's Lockheed S-3B Viking anti-sub plane...we called them "Hoovers" (like the vacuum cleaner) aboard the carriers, as they resembled a loud electrolux or Kenmore
--Tom
The Inspector wrote:
Those are called 'Sharks teeth' and are designed to keep ALL the engine noise within the boundries of an airport , like.....Heathrow. Where as the noise footprint of a stage 2 727 is 54 square miles, if you listen to the video all you hear are the MERLINS, not the 90K # each TRENTS, this beauty has nearly the same thrust as the 747-100's with half the engines. I wonder if they could hear the MERLINS inside the 787?
Couldn't say about the dog in the series, can't stand Robert Conrad and the show seemed to have three rotating scripts so didn't watch it much-also had EAA stuff to do during that time span.