![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
To All:
For those of us who own a lathe and milling machine, somewhere in our past there is probably a tiny steam engine. Indeed, there's probably more than than one. A company in England provides the basic castings as a kit. As the machinist, you are expected to provide all else, from the machine to do the work to the KNOWLEDGE needed to operate the machine. Producing such an engine, from the basic one-cylinder model to larger engines of remarkable complexity, serves as silent testimony as to our abilities. It strikes me as little more than a step along the way to produce a FULL SIZE engine such as the Pobjoy. The crankshaft calls for a professional piece of goods, probably obtainable from a Chinese manufacturer, but the cylinders, being identical, call for much less in the way of skills and tooling. With cast-iron cylinder barrels and cast aluminum heads, the bulk of the engine can be produced on the tooling found in the shops of literally thousands of amateur machinists found in every country around the world. While the copyright to the engine is presently held by the same company that produces the Rotax, there are enough example of the Pobjoy in aviation museums that it would be a relatively minor chore to produce a set of drawings. Indeed, knowing the engine's bore & stroke even a good PHOTOGRAPH gives a wealth of data leading to a usable drawing. So long as those drawings contained significant differences from the original there should be no question as to violation of those rights. Such differences could be calling out parts and bearings NOT used in the original Pobjoy. With suitable drawings in hand we could produce the required molds needed to produce the required castings. The drawings will also tell us what gears and bearings are required, allowing us to order them from suppliers who deal in such components. The drawings will also show what type of valve guides are needed and even the valves, springs and rocker-arms. With a bore of 75mm and a stroke of 87, we can determine what EXISTING pistons my be used as well as the size of the carburetor that is required. The 'Experiment- Amateur-built' licensing category exists to promote aeronautical education in America. Learning how radial engines work and even building one yourself is no more difficult, in my opinion, than building your own airframe. -Robert S. Hoover |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Veeduber" wrote in message ... To All: For those of us who own a lathe and milling machine, somewhere in our past there is probably a tiny steam engine. Indeed, there's probably more than than one. A company in England provides the basic castings as a kit. As the machinist, you are expected to provide all else, from the machine to do the work to the KNOWLEDGE needed to operate the machine. Producing such an engine, from the basic one-cylinder model to larger engines of remarkable complexity, serves as silent testimony as to our abilities. It strikes me as little more than a step along the way to produce a FULL SIZE engine such as the Pobjoy. The crankshaft calls for a professional piece of goods, probably obtainable from a Chinese manufacturer, but the cylinders, being identical, call for much less in the way of skills and tooling. With cast-iron cylinder barrels and cast aluminum heads, the bulk of the engine can be produced on the tooling found in the shops of literally thousands of amateur machinists found in every country around the world. While the copyright to the engine is presently held by the same company that produces the Rotax, there are enough example of the Pobjoy in aviation museums that it would be a relatively minor chore to produce a set of drawings. Indeed, knowing the engine's bore & stroke even a good PHOTOGRAPH gives a wealth of data leading to a usable drawing. So long as those drawings contained significant differences from the original there should be no question as to violation of those rights. Such differences could be calling out parts and bearings NOT used in the original Pobjoy. With suitable drawings in hand we could produce the required molds needed to produce the required castings. The drawings will also tell us what gears and bearings are required, allowing us to order them from suppliers who deal in such components. The drawings will also show what type of valve guides are needed and even the valves, springs and rocker-arms. With a bore of 75mm and a stroke of 87, we can determine what EXISTING pistons my be used as well as the size of the carburetor that is required. The 'Experiment- Amateur-built' licensing category exists to promote aeronautical education in America. Learning how radial engines work and even building one yourself is no more difficult, in my opinion, than building your own airframe. -Robert S. Hoover There is also the Lawrance 5-cyl. radial, about 35 HP from 75 cubic inches, and a crankcase just under 9" in diameter. As far as crankshafts, most radials used built-up cranks which can be machined fairly easily. In the size of engine under discussion, the parts that need to be ground can be finished on any commercial tool & cutter grinder, and then assembled. BTW, 75 cubic inches works out to 250cc per cylinder - how many 250 singles, 500 twins, and 1000-1200 fours are out there that could donate pistons, pins, & rings; valves, springs & keepers, etc.? Another Bob |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 29, 3:12*pm, Charles Vincent wrote:
They do have an OHV version I believe. * At the RPM's these engines run at i.e. direct drive prop, I am not sure the L head is that much of a compromise. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All of the Pobjoy's were geared, OHV engines. They produced 80hp @ 3300 rpm (prop speed of 1400rpm). Weight was 130 lbs. -R.S.Hoover |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Veeduber wrote:
On May 29, 3:12 pm, Charles Vincent wrote: They do have an OHV version I believe. At the RPM's these engines run at i.e. direct drive prop, I am not sure the L head is that much of a compromise. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All of the Pobjoy's were geared, OHV engines. They produced 80hp @ 3300 rpm (prop speed of 1400rpm). Weight was 130 lbs. -R.S.Hoover I was referring to the HCI Radials which are ungeared. I have seen the Pobjoy. I have collected everything I can get my hands on with regard to small radial engines. I have even managed to find factory blueprints for parts of the Kinner and a Leblonde. No prints sadly for the Pobjoy, just some contemporaneous technical reviews that do have three views of the engine. There was a Pobjoy on display in a museum outside San Jose, but that is a trek from your 20. Charles |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 29, 12:50*pm, "Bob Murray" wrote:
"Veeduber" wrote in message ... To All: For those of us who own a lathe and milling machine, somewhere in our past there is probably a tiny steam engine. *Indeed, there's probably more than than one. *A company in England provides the basic castings as a kit. *As the machinist, you are expected to provide all else, from the machine to do the work to the KNOWLEDGE needed to operate the machine. Producing such an engine, from the basic one-cylinder model to larger engines of remarkable complexity, serves as silent testimony as to our abilities. It strikes me as little more than a step along the way to produce a FULL SIZE engine such as the Pobjoy. *The crankshaft calls for a professional piece of goods, probably obtainable from a Chinese manufacturer, but the cylinders, being identical, call for much less in the way of skills and tooling. *With cast-iron cylinder barrels and cast aluminum heads, the bulk of the engine can be produced on the tooling found in the shops of literally thousands of amateur machinists found in every country around the world. While the copyright to the engine is presently held by the same company that produces the Rotax, there are enough example of the Pobjoy in aviation museums that it would be a relatively minor chore to produce a set of drawings. Indeed, knowing the engine's bore & stroke even a good PHOTOGRAPH gives a wealth of data leading to a usable drawing. *So long as those drawings contained significant differences from the original there should be no question as to violation of those rights. *Such differences could be calling out parts and bearings NOT used in the original Pobjoy. With suitable drawings in hand we could produce the required molds needed to produce the required castings. *The drawings will also tell us what gears and bearings are required, allowing us to order them from suppliers who deal in such components. *The drawings will also show what type of valve guides are needed and even the valves, springs and rocker-arms. *With a bore of 75mm and a stroke of 87, we can determine what EXISTING pistons my be used as well as the size of the carburetor that is required. The 'Experiment- Amateur-built' licensing category exists to promote aeronautical education in America. *Learning how radial engines work and even building one yourself is no more difficult, in my opinion, than building your own airframe. -Robert S. Hoover There is also the Lawrance 5-cyl. radial, about 35 HP from 75 cubic inches, and a crankcase just under 9" in diameter. As far as crankshafts, most radials used built-up cranks which can be machined fairly easily. *In the size of engine under discussion, the parts that need to be ground can be finished on any commercial tool & cutter grinder, and then assembled. BTW, 75 cubic inches works out to 250cc per cylinder - how many 250 singles, 500 twins, and 1000-1200 fours are out there that could donate pistons, pins, & rings; valves, springs & keepers, etc.? Another Bob Seem to me that the most modern motorcycle cylinders would be the best. Metallurgy is still advancing rapidly and there are a lot of innovations in recent bikes. Some even use "diamond-like coatings" on high wear parts like cams and followers. Recall that the Merlin and Allison V-12's of WWII used dual overhead cams and 4 valves per cylinder which is the norm for motorcycles today. I worked up a CAD drawing of a radial using 5 banks of 4-cylinder 500cc motorcycle cylinder blocks. (7 banks didn't leave enough room for intake and exhaust plumbing between the blocks.) The result is an amazingly small 20 cylinder liquid cooled radial engine. 20 cylinders is enough that you could stop worrying about 2-plugs per cylinder. If you fouled a couple, you probably wouldn't notice. Looking through race parts catalogs turned up automatic transmission planetary gear sets that are rated for 1500hp but are only 6" in diameter and weigh about 15 pounds. The gear ratios are just right for a PSRU. If they stand up to the hammering from a drag racer, handling a couple of hundred HP should be a breeze. To build this engine would require making a case, crank and rods with the planetary in a nose case with thrust bearings. (Of course a lot of other fiddly bits would need to be made as well.) However, the heads, cylinders and pistons are the hard part and they are available cheap. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 30, 9:21*am, bildan wrote:
To build this engine would require making a case, crank and rods with the planetary in a nose case with thrust bearings. *(Of course a lot of other fiddly bits would need to be made as well.) *However, the heads, cylinders and pistons are the hard part and they are available cheap. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I disagree with regard to the heads and cylinders. But you are correct when it comes to the gear reduction unit. As several others have pointed out, publicly and in private messages, there has been significant advances in metallurgy since the Pobjoy first ran in 1926. The Pobjoy had its share of problems, from its inception until its production was finally dropped in 1946. But those problems would probably not apply if the engine were produced today. For example, the use of a planetary gear reduction system would eliminate the wear problems encountered with the original herringbone gear, while a modern, fully sealed valve train would improve the engine's mean time before failure. As for the question of using existing cylinders and heads, an aircraft engine uses a different design philosophy than is used when producing any other type of engine, although a stationary industrial engine comes very close. Ideally, the heads should follow standard aircraft engine practice in the use of forgings rather than castings, although if the engine were kitted, even partially so -- perhaps a pre-assembled lower end plus a kit of parts for the cylinders and heads -- the price may be low enough to satisfy the home-builder's budget limitations. For example, if the heads were already machined, it does not take a great deal of skill to swage the valve seats into place nor to stone them. Volkswagen parts could be used for almost the entire valve train. As a point of interest, while the basic idea is to produce an engine sufficiently low in cost as to fulfill the needs of home-builders around the world, should we be able to tap into a manufacturer at this level, it is most likely they might be convinced to use their facilities to produce the Fat-fin head needed to make the Volkswagen engine more suitable than the existing engines by producing heads having an honest sixty-five horsepower's-worth of fin area. Indeed, this could be a method of subsidizing the cost of a 'replica' radial -- OR OTHER ENGINE -- in that home-builders in those parts of the world where Volkswagen components are still in good supply would probably buy enough Fat-fin heads that their sale would provide the start-up funds needed to get a more appropriate engine into production. Toward this end, while I mentioned the Pobjoy because of its excellent ratio of power-to-weight, I also mentioned that an in-line engine such as the de Havilland would be the least expensive. This is another case where modern-day metallurgy may prove beneficial, in that Lost Foam Casting might be used to produce the head and lower end, using aftermarket air-cooled cylinders. The key to success in this case would be the existence of a suitable crankshaft. That is, one in which the throws are spaced sufficiently far apart to allow the use of finned barrels. -R.S.Hoover |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 31, 12:35*am, Veeduber wrote:
, I also mentioned that an in-line engine such as the de Havilland would be the least expensive. The key to success in this case would be the existence of a suitable crankshaft. *That is, one in which the throws are spaced sufficiently far apart to allow the use of finned barrels. If I'm looking at this properly a standard VW water-cooled inline crank (or most any similar 5 main bearing inline 4 crank) can be used in a 90 deg. "V" 4. This would give plenty of room for fins. I think all of the water-cooled VW cranks have 86mm or longer strokes and the matching stock rods are between 7mm and 30mm longer than air-cooled units, which should give good low speed torque. If it were a push rod motor parts count would not be much greater than an inline? A stub attached to the flywheel end of the crank and ground with the mains to match a stock Continental front bearing, IMHO, would take care of prop loads. ====================== Leon McAtee |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 31, 12:35*am, Veeduber wrote:
On May 30, 9:21*am, bildan wrote: To build this engine would require making a case, crank and rods with the planetary in a nose case with thrust bearings. *(Of course a lot of other fiddly bits would need to be made as well.) *However, the heads, cylinders and pistons are the hard part and they are available cheap. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I disagree with regard to the heads and cylinders. *But you are correct when it comes to the gear reduction unit. As several others have pointed out, publicly and in private messages, there has been significant advances in metallurgy since the Pobjoy first ran in 1926. The Pobjoy had its share of problems, from its inception until its production was finally dropped in 1946. *But those problems would probably not apply if the engine were produced today. *For example, the use of a planetary gear reduction system would eliminate the wear problems encountered with the original herringbone gear, while a modern, fully sealed valve train would improve the engine's mean time before failure. As for the question of using existing cylinders and heads, an aircraft engine uses a different design philosophy than is used when producing any other type of engine, although a stationary industrial engine comes very close. Ideally, the heads should follow standard aircraft engine practice in the use of forgings rather than castings, although if the engine were kitted, even partially so -- perhaps a pre-assembled lower end plus a kit of parts for the cylinders and heads -- *the price may be low enough to satisfy the home-builder's budget limitations. *For example, if the heads were already machined, it does not take a great deal of skill to swage the valve seats into place nor to stone them. Volkswagen parts could be used for almost the entire valve train. As a point of interest, while the basic idea is to produce an engine sufficiently low in cost as to fulfill the needs of home-builders around the world, should we be able to tap into a manufacturer at this level, it is most likely they might be convinced to use their facilities to produce *the Fat-fin head needed to make the Volkswagen engine more suitable than the existing engines by producing heads having an honest sixty-five horsepower's-worth of fin area. *Indeed, this could be a method of subsidizing the cost of a 'replica' radial -- OR OTHER ENGINE -- *in that home-builders in those parts of the world where Volkswagen components are still in good supply would probably buy enough Fat-fin heads that their sale would provide the start-up funds needed to get a more appropriate engine into production. Toward this end, while I mentioned the Pobjoy because of its excellent ratio of power-to-weight, I also mentioned that an in-line engine such as the de Havilland would be the least expensive. This is another case where modern-day metallurgy may prove beneficial, in that Lost Foam Casting might be used to produce the head and lower end, using aftermarket air-cooled cylinders. *The key to success in this case would be the existence of a suitable crankshaft. *That is, one in which the throws are spaced sufficiently far apart to allow the use of finned barrels. -R.S.Hoover With respect, motorcycle heads are CNC machined from high strength forged alloy billet. To my knowledge, no such head has ever failed even under severe racing conditions. The only 'top end' failures I'm aware of resulted from revving way over red line RPM which caused valve failure. I know of a few which suffered bent rods when the owner tried to start a hydraulically locked engine after fuel had drained into a cylinder. I would SWAG that top end motorcycle heads and cylinder blocks are over designed for aircraft use by around 5X. The motorcycle news group I belongs to recently asked if anyone had EVER overhauled their engine due to simple wear. No one reported they had even though some reported over 300,000 miles on their bikes. One reported tearing down a high-mileage engine after the bike was wrecked just to find out what the tolerances were - and to possibly re-use the parts. He reported no measurable wear. These are enormously strong engines and I think homebuilders should take a serious look at them. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Another home-made helicopter | Dave Whiley | Aviation Photos | 0 | November 19th 07 11:45 PM |
Home Made Helicopter | J.F. | Aviation Photos | 0 | November 17th 07 02:02 PM |
Good news for scratch builders of metal airplanes - Home Depot rents bending brakes | flybynightkarmarepair | Home Built | 7 | January 6th 07 04:22 PM |
Home made plane crashes | Bill Smith | Piloting | 0 | August 7th 06 06:07 AM |
Home made aviation websites are cool! | CFLav8r | Piloting | 2 | January 21st 04 05:31 AM |