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#1
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I've been under the impression that 4 stroke engines get better gas
mileage in aircraft due to their higher BSFC numbers. But I've recently realized that since the 4 stroke engines are so much heavier than a same horse powered 2 stroke you end up having to design a larger aircraft (and engine) to carry the original intended payload plus the additional weight of the engine. So in the end, a purpose built 2 stroke airplane will be smaller, lighter may even get better gas mileage. Unfortunetly, most designs that use 2 stroke engines are high drag ultra lights so going distances isn't really what they do, but it would seem to me there is some potential for a low weight, low drag, in the neighborhood of 500lb empty, 2 seat aircraft designed for one or two 2-stroke power plants. The Pulsar XP seems close because I've seen some with Rotax 582's. The aicraft that attempt to exploit these engines in this way always look like the wings are too small compared to the proportions we're all used to seeing on C172 and other similar formula aircraft. Examples are the cri-cri, BD-5, AR-5 http://www.ar-5.com/sportav93.html |
#2
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![]() "Jay" wrote in message om... but it would seem to me there is some potential for a low weight, low drag, in the neighborhood of 500lb empty, 2 seat aircraft designed for one or two 2-stroke power plants. The Pulsar XP seems close because I've seen some with Rotax 582's. The aicraft that attempt to exploit these engines in this way always look like the wings are too small compared to the proportions we're all used to seeing on C172 and other similar formula aircraft. Examples are the cri-cri, BD-5, AR-5 Yes, the cri-cri immediately cames to mind, it is a high wing load design that seems to try to minimise drag by minimising the airplane. But you left out the other end of the wing loading scale, where you will find many self-launching motorgliders, some have fixed engines in pusher or tractor configurations, but some of the neatest ones have retractable engines. With their very low drag in the glider mode, they raise the possibility of a "sawtooth" cruise mode where the engine is used for climb only, and is shut down for long periods in between climbs. Vaughn |
#3
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"Jay" wrote ...
I've been under the impression that 4 stroke engines get better gas mileage in aircraft due to their higher BSFC numbers. But I've recently realized that since the 4 stroke engines are so much heavier than a same horse powered 2 stroke you end up having to design a larger aircraft (and engine) to carry the original intended payload plus the additional weight of the engine. So in the end, a purpose built 2 stroke airplane will be smaller, lighter may even get better gas mileage. Not so, Jay. The two stroke burns fifty percent more fuel then the four stroke so you have to carry fifty percent more fuel weight. For an airplane with fuel for a four hour cruise, both airplanes weigh about the same. Rich |
#4
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Richard Isakson wrote:
"Jay" wrote ... I've been under the impression that 4 stroke engines get better gas mileage in aircraft due to their higher BSFC numbers. But I've recently realized that since the 4 stroke engines are so much heavier than a same horse powered 2 stroke you end up having to design a larger aircraft (and engine) to carry the original intended payload plus the additional weight of the engine. So in the end, a purpose built 2 stroke airplane will be smaller, lighter may even get better gas mileage. Not so, Jay. The two stroke burns fifty percent more fuel then the four stroke so you have to carry fifty percent more fuel weight. For an airplane with fuel for a four hour cruise, both airplanes weigh about the same. Rich pretty generalstatement, have you been around many two strokes ? the reason i ask is my 618 GT 500 burns right at 3 1/4 GPH, as does a frineds 912 powered GT 500, and mine will double his climb rate ! -- Mark Smith Tri-State Kite Sales http://www.trikite.com 1121 N Locust St Mt Vernon, IN 47620 1-812-838-6351 |
#5
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Great anecdotal evidence Mark, thats what I'm talking about! Same
fuel burn, double the climb. The key of course is that less work (useless work) is being done because your kite has less mass. You're moving the same payload, just less airplane. I'm sure you can land way slower at the end of the day. Mark Smith wrote in message the reason i ask is my 618 GT 500 burns right at 3 1/4 GPH, as does a frineds 912 powered GT 500, and mine will double his climb rate ! |
#6
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Jay wrote...
The key of course is that less work (useless work) is being done because your kite has less mass. All other things being equal in a *stabilized climb* to get double the climb rate you need to halve the weight. (Ps = ROC = speed*(thrust-drag)/weight) There's more to this story than a weight delta. Dave 'fundamentals' Hyde |
#7
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Jay wrote:
Great anecdotal evidence Mark, thats what I'm talking about! Same fuel burn, double the climb. The key of course is that less work (useless work) is being done because your kite has less mass. You're moving the same payload, just less airplane. I'm sure you can land way slower at the end of the day. Mark Smith wrote in message the reason i ask is my 618 GT 500 burns right at 3 1/4 GPH, as does a frineds 912 powered GT 500, and mine will double his climb rate ! Kite ?? a similar plane has apssed all the FnAA testing just as the big boys did, and its empty weight is 595, not a kite by most folks standards, and the fuel burn isn't exactly anecdotal, but carefully measured, including injection oil for about fifty hours of flight time, part of which was 1000 mile round trip to Osh kosh, it will haul two large people, comfortable too, and roomy, if a nit clumsy to get in due to sitting empty on the tail, carries 17 gallons of fuel too, and with a reserve, will fly five hours at 85 cruise, 5400 RPM,,,,,at 3 1/4 GPH surely not sluggish even with full fuel and two up either, maybe twice the fun of GA at half the cost, can't say it is checp though, gravity being what it is ! -- Mark Smith Tri-State Kite Sales http://www.trikite.com 1121 N Locust St Mt Vernon, IN 47620 1-812-838-6351 |
#8
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Yes, the 2 stroke burns 50% more fuel for the same HP, but the point I
was trying to make was that since the 2 stroke powered aircraft can be built lighter all around (on account of its lighter engine), you can use a smaller engine (which consumes less fuel) and still fly the same payload. This relationship is unique to aircraft since weight means SO much. "Richard Isakson" wrote in message ... "Jay" wrote ... I've been under the impression that 4 stroke engines get better gas mileage in aircraft due to their higher BSFC numbers. But I've recently realized that since the 4 stroke engines are so much heavier than a same horse powered 2 stroke you end up having to design a larger aircraft (and engine) to carry the original intended payload plus the additional weight of the engine. So in the end, a purpose built 2 stroke airplane will be smaller, lighter may even get better gas mileage. Not so, Jay. The two stroke burns fifty percent more fuel then the four stroke so you have to carry fifty percent more fuel weight. For an airplane with fuel for a four hour cruise, both airplanes weigh about the same. Rich |
#9
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Jay wrote:
Yes, the 2 stroke burns 50% more fuel for the same HP, but the point I was trying to make was that since the 2 stroke powered aircraft can be built lighter all around (on account of its lighter engine), you can use a smaller engine (which consumes less fuel) and still fly the same payload. This relationship is unique to aircraft since weight means SO much. Except that they don't burn 50% more fuel for the same horsepower. Matt |
#10
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Hi guys
In the past year or 2 I've done a fair bit of back of envelope cals involving gyro's and small GA aircraft... And as one poster mentioned.....4 hour flight endurance seemed to be the breaking point..... Less than 4 hours, and your payload (and therefore possibly to some extent the actual aircraft structure) was less for a 2 stroke than a 4 stroke.... More than 4 hours flight time and the 4 strokes were overall lighter load.... It just kinda stood out to me that the guy said 4 hours, because thats the number I usually came out with... Now, I was typically comparing the lower end (HP wise, with 80 HP or so generally being the max) 2 strokes vs 4 strokes, using published/internet values (but not neccessarily from one source)... FWIW (probably not much in reality ![]() take care Blll |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Lowest cost per mile flown motor- 2 stroke | Bruce A. Frank | Home Built | 0 | July 2nd 03 06:25 AM |