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#1
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whats the difference from IO and O engines?
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#2
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O is for "opposed", like flat VW and aircraft engines.
I is for "Injected" so, an O470 is an Opposed, 470 cu. in. engine, by default, its carburetted an IO470 is an Fuel Injected, Opposed, 470 cu.in. engine. |
#3
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Lets Fly wrote:
whats the difference from IO and O engines? As someone else has already explained, fuel-injection vs. carburetion. You might be interested in the information at http://www.prime-mover.org/ There's a lot of basic engine information there. Under the Lycoming section, look for the "key reprints" in particular. I think the answer to your question is in there somewhere, among many other things. Dave |
#4
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For the Lyc 360, the difference is 20 horsepower.
-Robert |
#5
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
For the Lyc 360, the difference is 20 horsepower. ....or, you could say the difference is 'I'. |
#6
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...or, you could say the difference is 'I'.
Yes, I be the difference. |
#7
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![]() "Lets Fly" wrote in message ... whats the difference from IO and O engines? The I. |
#8
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Fuel injected engines usually burn less fuel for the same horsepower
due to more even fuel flow. |
#9
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For the Lycoming series its horsepower, not fuel flow. In fact, every
plane I've ever flown from Bonanzas to J-3's have burned 1/2 of 10% of its horsepower (200hp burns 10gal/hr 65 hp burns 3.5 gal/hr, 250 hp burns 12.5 gal/hr). All this same for carb and fuel injected. The difference between an IO-360 and O-360 is 200 hp for the IO and 180 hp for the O. The 200hp burns about 10 gal/hr in cruise and the 180hp burns about 9 gal/hr. Otherwise the IO-360 and O-360 are 100% the same engine. Stick a FI system on the 360 and you get an extra 20 hp. -Robert |
#10
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And slightly less fuel burn than if it had a carburetor, just as Doug said!
I'm not following. You're saying 10 gal/hr is less than 9 gal/hr? -Robert |
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