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Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus
turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. I have since read about another company, FTT (www.fttinc.com) that has an engine for UAV's producing 37 lbf of thrust, with models producing 100 and 250 lbf under development. This made me wonder how much plane could one usefully fly using 1 or 2 of the 250's. In comparison, I know the VLJ market uses the Williams FJ22 (or similar engines) producing 550-700 lbf or more of thrust. Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. Ignoring such changes as weights & balance, etc (in other words, I am just looking at applying the thrust to the airframe with a normal fuel and passenger load) how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 or would this actually give better performance? Most importantly, what could I read that actually discusses the engineering questions involved in answering this question? (By the way, I was an engineering major for three years before switching majors so I am not afraid of an engineering level textbook if I have to go that route.) Thanks. |
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![]() "es330td" wrote in message ... Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes Here is another GA application of AMT jet engines: http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/jet.html Vaughn |
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These aren't turbojets; they are turbofans. My mistake.
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es330td wrote:
Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. I have since read about another company, FTT (www.fttinc.com) that has an engine for UAV's producing 37 lbf of thrust, with models producing 100 and 250 lbf under development. This made me wonder how much plane could one usefully fly using 1 or 2 of the 250's. In comparison, I know the VLJ market uses the Williams FJ22 (or similar engines) producing 550-700 lbf or more of thrust. Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. Ignoring such changes as weights & balance, etc (in other words, I am just looking at applying the thrust to the airframe with a normal fuel and passenger load) how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 or would this actually give better performance? Most importantly, what could I read that actually discusses the engineering questions involved in answering this question? (By the way, I was an engineering major for three years before switching majors so I am not afraid of an engineering level textbook if I have to go that route.) Thanks. It might fly (with enough runway) but there isn't enough room in the airplane for enough fuel to keep it in the air long enough to get to the next airport. :-) Turbines don't scale down in size very well, and even the bigger ones aren't very fuel efficient at light plane altitudes. Charlie |
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On 20 June, 03:22, Charlie wrote:
es330td wrote: Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. I have since read about another company, FTT (www.fttinc.com) that has an engine for UAV's producing 37 lbf of thrust, with models producing 100 and 250 lbf under development. *This made me wonder how much plane could one usefully fly using 1 or 2 of the 250's. *In comparison, I know the VLJ market uses the Williams FJ22 (or similar engines) producing 550-700 lbf or more of thrust. Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. *Ignoring such changes as weights & balance, etc (in other words, I am just looking at applying the thrust to the airframe with a normal fuel and passenger load) how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? *Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 or would this actually give better performance? *Most importantly, what could I read that actually discusses the engineering questions involved in answering this question? (By the way, I was an engineering major for three years before switching majors so I am not afraid of an engineering level textbook if I have to go that route.) Thanks. It might fly (with enough runway) but there isn't enough room in the airplane for enough fuel to keep it in the air long enough to get to the next airport. :-) Turbines don't scale down in size very well, and even the bigger ones aren't very fuel efficient at light plane altitudes. That is my understanding too, although I do not fully comprehend the issues. http://www.deltahawkengines.com/ or similar seems to me to be a likely future path for GA engines. What's not to like? Many fewer moving parts, more fuel efficient, uses fuel that will be available for ever ... |
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On Fri, 19 Jun 2009 14:52:42 -0700 (PDT), es330td
wrote: Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. I have since read about another company, FTT (www.fttinc.com) that has an engine for UAV's producing 37 lbf of thrust, with models producing 100 and 250 lbf under development. This made me wonder how much plane could one usefully fly using 1 or 2 of the 250's. In comparison, I know the VLJ market uses the Williams FJ22 (or similar engines) producing 550-700 lbf or more of thrust. last time I looked a williams engine started at half a million dollars. disincentive enough for most of us. the cri cri with two turbojects etc etc sounds interesting. however ask what it's fuel endurance was. ....any takers on 18 minutes? there is a model jet engine made local to me which is rebadged and sold all over the world. suave piece of kit. fuel consumption is triple that of an O-200 for far less thrust. you could indeed put a jet on a cessna 172 but where would you go with so little range? |
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On Jun 19, 3:52*pm, es330td wrote:
Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. I have since read about another company, FTT (www.fttinc.com) that has an engine for UAV's producing 37 lbf of thrust, with models producing 100 and 250 lbf under development. *This made me wonder how much plane could one usefully fly using 1 or 2 of the 250's. *In comparison, I know the VLJ market uses the Williams FJ22 (or similar engines) producing 550-700 lbf or more of thrust. Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. *Ignoring such changes as weights & balance, etc (in other words, I am just looking at applying the thrust to the airframe with a normal fuel and passenger load) how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? *Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 or would this actually give better performance? *Most importantly, what could I read that actually discusses the engineering questions involved in answering this question? (By the way, I was an engineering major for three years before switching majors so I am not afraid of an engineering level textbook if I have to go that route.) Thanks. I don't think turbojets or turbofans make much sense for typical light plane operations. The specific fuel consumption is just to high. The high fuel burn only makes sense at very high cruise speeds. There's another area where surprisingly enough, they do make sense and that is sailplanes. Here they are used in two very different ways. First is the self launcher where a ~200 Lbf thrust jet burns up the entire fuel supply getting the glider to say, 4000 feet AGL. The residual weight after fuel depletion is much smaller than a piston/ prop system and retracting the tiny jet engine requires a far smaller door in the fuselage. The second way is as a "sustainer" engine. Here a tiny 50 Lbf thrust jet can push a sailplane along at over 120 knots burning something like 16 Gal/Hr once the glider is launched by some other means. Most sailplanes have wing tanks for at least 40 gallons so the range is 240nm +. That's much faster and further than the typical retractable 2cyl 2-stroke turning a 40" prop can go. The strategy is to launch with a tow plane, soar all day until the thermals quit, then fire up the little jet and fly home before sunset. That would get you home in time for the barbecue without having a retrieve crew hit the road with your trailer. The jet sailplane idea is under intense development by all the major glider manufacturers. |
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es330td wrote:
Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. ... Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. ...how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 ... Thanks. The underlying principle is straight-forward. Recips are (more or less) constant max HP devices. Turbojets are (more or less) constant max thrust devices. Horsepower is a constant times thrust times speed. Or if you can work in SI units, it's simpler: using power in watts using thrust = force in newtons (Newton is about the weight of an apple) using speed = meters per second, THEN power = thrust X speed On the face of it, that leads to a paradoxical result for recips: At a slow enough speed, the thrust from a given horsepower is sky-high! (But props stall out at a fair fraction of stall speed, then thrust drops off at slower speeds.) At a HIGH enough speed, the thrust from a given horse power is teensey-weensey. Which leads to the first deduction: recips are best at slow airspeeds and jets are best at high airspeeds. There's a paradoxical result for turbojets too..... For a constant thrust, the higher the speed, the higher the power it represents! Now an example - the one you offered: 2 X 51 lbs thrust allows a top speed of 130 MPH from a cri-cri How many horses does this mean at this particular speed? (I'll convert to SI for convenience) 51 lb = 51/2.2 kg = 51/2.2 X 9.8 newtons = 227 newtons. 130 MPH = 130 / (60X60) miles/sec = 130 X 1760 X 36/39.37 /(60X60) m/s = 58 meters/sec Remembering power = thrust X speed and we already know speed and thrust, so we can find power, like this: power = 2 X 227 X 58 = 26.4 kW = 26.4 / 0.760 HP = 34.6 HP Is that ALL? It implies the cri-cri is a lowish drag machine! But there are 1-seaters that make 190 MPH on a VW of similar power. Now, we ought to work your other example: the C-172 with a 360 engine. This is (say) 180 HP. Can't remember the top speed of the C-172, so I'll guess 135MPH Here we have numbers for power and speed, so we can work out thrust. I'll do it again in SI for convenience: 135 MPH = 60.2 m/s 180 HP = 137.3 kW so THRUST = power / speed = 137300 / 60.2 = 2281 newtons 2281 newtons = 2281/9.8 X 2.2 lbs = 512 lbsf. As much as THAT? This implies that the C-172 is a pretty draggy airframe, about four times as draggy as a cri-cri anyway..... Well, by now, we are about ready to guess an answer to your question: how fast will a C172 go with HALF the thrust it has at top speed with a 180HP engine? Almost ready. We also need to remember that air drag varies as the square of speed. So we can say that the thrust needed at any speed is the drag at that speed, and for the C-172, drag is 512 lb at 135 MPH so at some speed V, the drag is 512 times (V/135) squared For 250 lbf thrust, we get 250 = 512 times (V/135)^2 Rearranging: (V/135)^2 = 250/512 V/135 = 0.70 so V = 94 MPH top speed. Not much of a range between stall and top speed in this low power c-172 huh? To finish up, we can work out the power delivered to a C-172 by some jet at 94MPH top speed power = speed times thrust. power = 94MPH X 250 LBF X some unit conversion constant We know 180HP = 135MPH X 512 LBF x the same conversion constant So the conversion constant is 180 / (135X512) And FINALLY: the power needed to drive a C-172 at a top speed of 94 MPH = speed X thrust X conversion constant = 94 X 250 X 180/(135X512) = 61 HP This is a third of the horses to get over 2/3 the top speed! Hope this helps Brian Whatcott Altus OK |
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On Jun 20, 12:18*pm, Brian Whatcott wrote:
es330td wrote: Nicolas Charmont equipped a Cri-Cri homebuilt with two AMT Olympus turbojets each producing 51 lbf of thrust that were originally designed for model airplanes and it flies at 130 mph. ... Say, for example, one took a 250 lbf engine and mounted it on top a C172 wing. ...how would the performance of this plane compare to a standard C172 with a 180 hp O-360 piston engine? Would it get off the ground in a normal distance or do I need a 5000 foot runway? *Would it be underpowered as compared to the O-360 ... Thanks. The underlying principle is straight-forward. Recips are (more or less) constant max HP devices. Turbojets are (more or less) constant max thrust devices. Horsepower is a constant times thrust times speed. Or if you can work in SI units, it's simpler: using power in watts * using thrust *= force in newtons * * * * * (Newton is about the weight of an apple) using speed *= meters per second, THEN power = thrust X speed On the face of it, that leads to a paradoxical result for recips: At a slow enough speed, the thrust from a given horsepower is sky-high! (But props stall out at a fair fraction of stall speed, then thrust drops off at slower speeds.) At a HIGH enough speed, the thrust from a given horse power is teensey-weensey. Which leads to the first deduction: * * recips are best at slow airspeeds *and jets are best at high airspeeds. There's a paradoxical result for turbojets too..... * * For a constant thrust, the higher the speed, the higher the power it represents! Now an example - the one you offered: 2 X 51 lbs thrust allows a top speed of 130 MPH from a cri-cri How many horses does this mean at this particular speed? (I'll convert to SI for convenience) 51 lb = 51/2.2 kg = 51/2.2 X 9.8 * newtons = 227 newtons. 130 MPH = 130 / (60X60) * *miles/sec = 130 X 1760 X 36/39.37 /(60X60) m/s = 58 meters/sec Remembering power = thrust X speed and we already know speed and thrust, so we can find power, like this: power = 2 X 227 X 58 = 26.4 kW = 26.4 / 0.760 HP = 34.6 HP Is that ALL? It implies the cri-cri is a lowish drag machine! But there are 1-seaters that make 190 MPH on a VW of similar power. Now, we ought to work your other example: the C-172 with a 360 engine. This is (say) 180 HP. Can't remember the top speed of the C-172, so I'll guess 135MPH Here we have numbers for power and speed, so we can work out thrust. I'll do it again in SI for convenience: 135 MPH = 60.2 m/s 180 HP = 137.3 kW so THRUST = power / speed = 137300 / 60.2 = 2281 newtons 2281 newtons = 2281/9.8 * X *2.2 lbs = 512 lbsf. * *As much as THAT? This implies that the C-172 is a pretty draggy airframe, about four times as draggy as a cri-cri anyway..... Well, by now, we are about ready to guess an answer to your question: how fast will a C172 go with HALF the thrust it has at top speed with a 180HP engine? Almost ready. We also need to remember that air drag varies as the square of speed. So we can say that the thrust needed at any speed is the drag at that speed, *and for the C-172, drag is 512 lb at 135 MPH so at some speed V, the drag is 512 times *(V/135) squared For 250 lbf thrust, we get 250 = 512 times (V/135)^2 Rearranging: (V/135)^2 = 250/512 V/135 = 0.70 so V = 94 MPH top speed. Not much of a range between stall and top speed in this low power c-172 huh? To finish up, we can work out the power delivered to a C-172 by some jet at 94MPH top speed power = speed times thrust. power = 94MPH X 250 LBF X *some unit conversion constant We know 180HP *= 135MPH X 512 LBF x the same conversion constant So the conversion constant is 180 / (135X512) And FINALLY: * the power needed to drive a C-172 at a top speed of 94 MPH = speed X thrust X conversion constant = 94 X 250 X 180/(135X512) = 61 HP This is a third of the horses to get over 2/3 the top speed! Hope this helps Brian Whatcott Altus OK What a great post. It took me a minute to get back into physics mode mentally but this was a great explanation. |
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