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Saw a story on Innodyn turbines. Are their claims realistic? Will they
succeed? 188 pounds? 7 gallons per 100 hp? Can they scale this ...DOWN? Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Burning 5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? Again, can their 165 hp - 255 hp turbines be scaled DOWN to a Rotax 582/912 size? http://www.innodyn.com/aviation/faq.html (From Products page) Innodyn offers a number of Turbines to meet the experimental pilot's needs. While every model is based on Innodyn's core Turbine design, each is optimized to provide the strongest performance. Each Turbine weighs no more than 188 pounds, and is designed for use with our firewall forward kits. We're confident that our Turbines and firewall forward kits are right for the vast majority of experimental applications. Please feel free to contact us with any questions. Our Turbines are designed for output speeds of 2,000; 2,250; 2,500; 2,750; 3,000; and 3,600 RPM. We recommend the use of 2,750 RPM for fixed-wing aircraft applications. Innodyn 165TE 165 Horsepower Introductory Price: $26,500 Innodyn 185TE 185 Horsepower Introductory Price: $28,000 Innodyn 205TE 205 Horsepower Introductory Price: $29,500 Innodyn 255TE 255 Horsepower Introductory Price: $34,500 Montblack |
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Montblack wrote:
Saw a story on Innodyn turbines. Are their claims realistic? Will they succeed? 188 pounds? 7 gallons per 100 hp? Can they scale this ...DOWN? Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Burning 5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? They'll all weigh the same, regardless of power output. Innodyn took the initiative in inventing 188 pound turbines. |
#3
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"Sparkle" wrote in message
... Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Burning 5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? They'll all weigh the same, regardless of power output. Innodyn took the initiative in inventing 188 pound turbines. The Boeing Model 502 - in the 1950's - weighed 140 lbs. and put out 200 hp. Oh, wait - you said 188 pounds. I stand corrected. Why would they want such a heavy engine? Gawsh, technology has sure come a long way in fifty years. Rich S. P.S. The Boeing Model 500 Turbo-jet weighed 85 pounds, developed 150 pounds of thrust, and was 29" long, 22" in diameter. The extra 55 pounds of the 502 was the gear reduction. |
#4
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Rich S. wrote:
"Sparkle" wrote in message ... Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Burning 5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? They'll all weigh the same, regardless of power output. Innodyn took the initiative in inventing 188 pound turbines. The Boeing Model 502 - in the 1950's - weighed 140 lbs. and put out 200 hp. Oh, wait - you said 188 pounds. I stand corrected. Why would they want such a heavy engine? Gawsh, technology has sure come a long way in fifty years. Rich S. P.S. The Boeing Model 500 Turbo-jet weighed 85 pounds, developed 150 pounds of thrust, and was 29" long, 22" in diameter. The extra 55 pounds of the 502 was the gear reduction. Why aren't more old Boeing engines finding their way into homebuilts? A 140 bound 200HP engine sounds sweet. With a couple of those I could get serious about my dreams to build an ME262... ;o) Tony |
#5
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I was trying to figure out the fuel burn on the AMT ( jet models )
engines. As close as I could figure, they burn about 4 gph. And the thrust was listed in KG and there were other variables related to this thrust ( air temp, etc. ) but a guy put 2 of them ( poor mans dual ignition )on his Cri-Cri aircraft and flew at 150 mph. I think they said he had 35 KG of thrust. Of course, the engines only weigh 5 lbs. each which is pretty cool. Neal Richard Riley wrote: On Thu, 2 Jun 2005 23:33:10 -0500, "Montblack" wrote: :Saw a story on Innodyn turbines. Are their claims realistic? Will they :succeed? : :188 pounds? Entirely possible. :7 gallons per 100 hp? Not without violating the laws of physics. Their compression ratio isn't nearly high enough. ::Can they scale this ...DOWN? Sure : :Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Well, that's kind of what it was derived from - the Solar T62-2A 95 hp from 50 lb weight. :Burning :5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? Not a chance. The smaller a turbine, the more fuel it will burn for the HP (it's really more complex than that, but that's a good rule of thumb). You could easily get a turbine to burn 5 GPH - while producing about 20-25 HP. : :Again, can their 165 hp - 255 hp turbines be scaled DOWN to a Rotax 582/912 :size? Sure. As long as you aren't worried about fuel burn. : :http://www.innodyn.com/aviation/faq.html : ![]() :Innodyn offers a number of Turbines to meet the experimental pilot's needs. :While every model is based on Innodyn's core Turbine design, each is ![]() : :Each Turbine weighs no more than 188 pounds, and is designed for use with ![]() :forward kits are right for the vast majority of experimental applications. :Please feel free to contact us with any questions. : :Our Turbines are designed for output speeds of 2,000; 2,250; 2,500; 2,750; :3,000; and 3,600 RPM. We recommend the use of 2,750 RPM for fixed-wing :aircraft applications. Before you invest a moment more of your time or a cent more of your money, ask two questions: 1) Have they ever delivered one of their engines to anyone, anywhere? 2) If you were to build a homebult with a turbine engine could you get it insured by any aviation underwriter currently in business? Hint - the answer to the second question is not "yes". |
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wrote)
I was trying to figure out the fuel burn on the AMT ( jet models ) engines. As close as I could figure, they burn about 4 gph. And the thrust was listed in KG and there were other variables related to this thrust ( air temp, etc. ) but a guy put 2 of them ( poor mans dual ignition )on his Cri-Cri aircraft and flew at 150 mph. I think they said he had 35 KG of thrust. Of course, the engines only weigh 5 lbs. each which is pretty cool. IIRC, LBS thrust = ("roughly" ...be gentle) 65% for its horsepower equivilant. 100 lbs thrust will be about 65 hp. Is this close to being a workable rule of thumb? http://www.amtjets.com/gallery_real_plain.html (I want one!!!) http://www.flight.cz/cricri/english/index.php (more Cri-Cri pics) Montblack |
#7
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M IIRC, LBS thrust = ("roughly" ...be gentle) 65% for its horsepower
equivilant. 100 lbs thrust will be about 65 hp. Is this close to being a workable rule of thumb? Montblack I understand it is speed dependent. At standstill it is 100 lbs = 0 HP and at 600+ mph it is close to 100lb = 100 HP. I'm no expert so be gentle on me too! ;-) John |
#8
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Montblack wrote:
IIRC, LBS thrust = ("roughly" ...be gentle) 65% for its horsepower equivilant. 100 lbs thrust will be about 65 hp. Is this close to being a workable rule of thumb? Nope. Power = Force x Velocity For a "thrust" engine, the equivalent "power" it's producing will be dependent upon how fast it's going. At 60 MPH, 100 LB of thrust is equivalent to about 16 HP. At 150 HP, 100 LB of thrust is about 40 HP, so you can see that a rule such as you postulate isn't going to work. -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://marc.zeitlin.home.comcast.net/ http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2005 |
#9
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Anthony W wrote:
Rich S. wrote: "Sparkle" wrote in message ... Would a (80-100 hp) turbine weighing 100-140 pounds be a hit? Burning 5-6-7-8 gallons per hour? They'll all weigh the same, regardless of power output. Innodyn took the initiative in inventing 188 pound turbines. The Boeing Model 502 - in the 1950's - weighed 140 lbs. and put out 200 hp. Oh, wait - you said 188 pounds. I stand corrected. Why would they want such a heavy engine? Gawsh, technology has sure come a long way in fifty years. Rich S. P.S. The Boeing Model 500 Turbo-jet weighed 85 pounds, developed 150 pounds of thrust, and was 29" long, 22" in diameter. The extra 55 pounds of the 502 was the gear reduction. Why aren't more old Boeing engines finding their way into homebuilts? A 140 bound 200HP engine sounds sweet. With a couple of those I could get serious about my dreams to build an ME262... ;o) Tony I'm not sure, but I'll venture a guess ... fuel consumption is probably outrageous. Matt |
#10
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Why aren't more old Boeing engines finding their way into homebuilts? A 140 bound 200HP engine sounds sweet. With a couple of those I could get serious about my dreams to build an ME262... ;o) Tony I'm not sure, but I'll venture a guess ... fuel consumption is probably outrageous. Matt Either that or they cost a fortune to maintain. Tony |
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