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Mr. Hoover, I've been pondering the thermal barrier and thermal
dispersants that you've advocated several times. Ponder with me for a moment if you will. I've got an experimental engine, with an experimental cooling setup. Do know for guaranteed that the cooling will be sufficient, so I'll be keeping a close eye on the water and oil temperatures. But the coatings will cause more heat to be dumped into both. How would a typical homebuilder know the difference between elevated temps due to a more efficient heat transfer and inadequate cooling? Then there is the issue of what the redline temperatures are set for. In the rotary, it is for the main bearings. Would the barriers and dispersants change the thermal characteristics in such a way that the temps readings taking in the normal places look adequate, but in reality critical parts are being fried? -- This is by far the hardest lesson about freedom. It goes against instinct, and morality, to just sit back and watch people make mistakes. We want to help them, which means control them and their decisions, but in doing so we actually hurt them (and ourselves)." |
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#3
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Jester wrote:
The fluid temps would be higher, even though the actual metal wouldn't be. Just a WAG, but I'm thinking that the temps would be the same because of any thermostat, or other regulation device. Some of us arent using thermostats in the rotaries, because they do in fact restrict coolant flow, particularly when high flow is desired. In those setups, Cooling is controlled with cowl flaps on the cooling airflow exits, or coolant is pumped using an electric water pump with temperature control. What we are interested in is maximal cooling ability, since more than one rotary install has fought with inadequate cooling for a variety of reasons. In theory, coatings can decrease heat transfer to the coolant and oil, while increasing heat discharge out the tailpipe. Oh, the joys of a truly experimental engine install, not a firewall forward package ![]() Dave |
#4
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Ahh, I see. Part of the job of the coatings is to reduce combustion
heat from even transfering to the engine itself? Very nice. It would be neat to see some more testing to be done. Too bad we couldnt get some major companies to do this. I suppose then that they would keep it propietary. Oh well. A lawn mower or some other oft used device sounds like a good test bed, because you wouldnt just be wasting fuel as you would HAVE to use it. I really havent seen too many rotary mowers though. Best of research to all. Jesse M. |
#5
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Ernest Christley wrote: I've got an experimental engine, with an experimental cooling setup. Do know for guaranteed that the cooling will be sufficient, so I'll be keeping a close eye on the water and oil temperatures. But the coatings will cause more heat to be dumped into both. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- I don't understand the above. TBC's applied to the combustion chamber, piston crown, valve heads and the exhaust port, tend to reduce the waste heat that appears in the cooling system while increasing the waste heat that appears in the exhaust. This is based on comments from people running turbos who take a particular interest in the exhaust gas temps and how much energy they can recover from that source. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- - How would a typical homebuilder know the difference between elevated temps due to a more efficient heat transfer and inadequate cooling? -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- I don't know. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- Then there is the issue of what the redline temperatures are set for. In the rotary, it is for the main bearings. Would the barriers and dispersants change the thermal characteristics in such a way that the temps readings taking in the normal places look adequate, but in reality critical parts are being fried? -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- I don't know. My only direct, personal experience with coatings has been with air cooled engines. I began experimenting with Tech-Line's coatings in 2001, using a 6cid lawn-mower engine as my test bed. Most of my time was spent learning how to apply the stuff. Once I was reasonably sure of I was applying the coatings correctly I began trying to quantify the benefit, if any. It took about a year to figure out affordable methods of measuring temperature & torque. About the best I can say is that I saw some improvement, and that the coatings proved to be durable. On that basis I went ahead and assembled a stock VW engine from used (but coated) parts, intending to run it for several hundred hours, tearing it down periodically. Unfortunately, when gasoline went above $2/gal I could no longer afford the luxury of my experiments. At that time the stock engine had accumulated about 75 hrs and was a perfect null, experimentally, in that it showed absolutely no signs of wear or deterioration of the coating(s). My experiments with TLTD (the thermal disbursant) involved heating coated and uncoated coupons of cast aluminum and mild steel with the element from a 100W. soldering iron and plotting their temperature (convection and conduction) against time. My goal was to explore possible solutions to well known problems seen in high-out engines based on VW after-market components. Despite being unable to complete the full series of tests on the stock engine, I have sufficient confidence in the coatings to apply them to several other engines, all of higher output, which I'm in the process of doing. But with gas now over $3 and still rising there's a good chance I won't be able to afford running-in the completed engines, let alone fly behind them. I resorted to experiments because Tech-Line could not offer any advice regarding the use of their coatings on air cooled engines. They did refer me to a couple of coating shops but their claims were a bit extravagant and they were unwilling to put me in touch with any of their air cooled customers. Since you are dealing with a water-cooled engine, perhaps you'll have better luck. -R.S.Hoover Interestingly, this series of postings came alone currently with a friend attempting to introduce me to a network marketed product which claims to gradually coat the piston tops, spark plugs, valves, and "fire deck" (which is their name for the surface of the head inside the combustion chamber) of an engine with a "sacrificial catalyst". My two semesters of college chemistry caused me to dismiss that description is self contradictory (i.e. Bunk!); however, I am willing to accept a description such as "continuously deposited ablative thermal barrier coating". What makes all of that interesting (to me) is that the manufacturer's claim equates to 9% to 10% improvement in torque with the same fuel burn, or an approximate 10% inprovement in fuel consumption. If their theory is correct, and my recollection of Boyle's Gas Law and of the Karnot Cycle suggests that it is, then the much more durable Tech-Line Thermal Barrier coating should have a similar result. I am quite curious whether your results to date pointed in the same direction. Peter Dohm P.S.: There "aint no free lunch" so I would presume that the overall heat retained in the engine would be a little less for a given output; but that a little more heat might be conducted back to the exhaust port area of the head from the exhaust tubing. I have no idea how much of a problem that might be on some engines. |
#6
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wrote in message
ups.com... Dear Peter, Coatings were originally developed as a means of prolonging the life of the blades in the hot-section of turbines was metal spray using plasma-arc, which meant the base metal had to withstand some significant temperatures during the coating process. Tech-Line's approach (and others) successfully bonds a zirconium-ceramic alloy to a properly prepared aluminum surface at a temperature of only 350F. Since this is clearly impossible I'm sure most folks have discounted such coatings out of hand :-) The thermal barrier coating material comes as a thick water-based 'paint' having unusual wetting qualities. After being sprayed or brushed onto a properly prepared surface the stuff is allowed to dry. The coated pistons & heads are then put into an oven, brought up to the cited temperature and held there for a given amount of time. The result is an apparently alloyed ceramic-metallic surface. I don't know how it works but here are some guesses based on my experiments. The most critical factor appears to be the proper preparation of the surface, which must be abraded with a sharp, relatively fine-grained media, such as #120 aluminum-carbide. Examined under a 30x binocular inspection scope your nicely machined surface has been converted to an infinity of edges so fine that they refract light. (If you put an abraded but un-coated sample into the oven for the required amount of time, on examination you will see that the refraction vanishes; the surface still appears abraided but is now smoother.) Getting the coating material to 'wet' the abraided surface can be difficult. The metal must be perfectly clean -- touching an abraided surface with your bare hand is enough to cause the coating to fail (but leaves a nifty metallized fingerprint :-) The coating material appears to consist of a combination of finely divided (ie, powdered) frits. During the heat-soak period -- after the coated part is brought up to the required temperature -- the frits appear to melt in a eutectic-like process, with those which melt at a low temperature forming a solution which cascades the melting of those having a higher melting temperature. I can't say if the result is a true alloy or simply an exotic form of hard-facing but the result is a durable, heat-resistant surface. You can bend it or beat it with a hammer and it stays put. You can also heat it with an O/A torch immediately adjacent to an untreated coupon and see the latter melt (!) will the treated surface remains unchanged. Obviously, impossible, right? :-) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------ So what does all that mean? According to Sir Harry Ricardo (and others) during the intake cycle the residual heat causes the incoming charge to expand, effectively reducing the engines volumetric efficiency. In a similar vein, the instant combustion is initiated the surrounding structure begins absorbing heat produced by the combustion process, so that by the time the process ends the temperature within the combustion chamber -- and the pressure resulting from it -- are reduced. In the Otto cycle engine TBC's yield slightly higher torque for the same fuel consumption. I've no idea how much of this may be attributed to improved VE or increased BMEP -- and on a small engine, with home-made sensors it's impossible to quantify those results -- but with a test club turning the same rpm I've seen a reduction of fuel consumption of 3% to 7%. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- As you've pointed out, there's no such thing as a free lunch. Thermal barrier coatings cause more heat to appear in the exhaust port and exhaust stack. The need to coat the head & neck of the exhaust valve is clearly indicated but even so, the stock VW valve is a rather dinky bit of goods having a stem only 8mm in dia. On the advice of Tech-Line I've treated the valve stems and guides with tungsten disulfide, a dry-film lubricant that is merely burnished into the clean, unabraided metal surface. I've also modified the VW's lubrication system so as to increase the amount of oil reaching the rocker galleries by about 8x. The valve gallery was abraided with coarse media (sand, in this case -- I was worried about media residue contaminating the oil) cleaned ultrasonically and treated with a thermal dispursant. On the stock test engine the oil temp was 8% to 10% higher, compared to an untreated engine. As for the exhaust stacks, while monel or stainless steel might serve, my budget dictated plain carbon steel. This was treated with another type of thermal barrier coating and held up quite well, assuming the coating was properly applied. The tricky bit here was getting a uniform coating on the interior of the tubes, which proved impossible when the stack was made up of welded sections. Although unsuitable for flight, I fell back on cheap, after-market headers and 'J-tubes.' These are seamless, mandrel-bent tubes which were easy to prep and coat. (As a point of interest, the test engine had a unique 'bark' unlike anything I'd heard before. To keep peace in the family I fitted mufflers to the stacks.) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- Finally, as with most experiments I had more failures than successes. But there were enough of the latter to convince me that, when properly applied, coatings would do no harm and had the potential to provide some improvement in the durability of an engine assembled from after-market VW components. -R.S.Hoover Thanks, Those are truly fascinating results, and I wish that your experiments could continue. If a local EAA chapter in your area has 501c3 status, and if enough of the lurkers are interested, anything is possible, although not necessarily probable. That would at least allow the original goal of determining durability to be met. Obviously the addition of the mufflers during the experiment add a "fudge factor", but the circumstance you described is interesting in that it suggests that the residual pressure from combustion is higher in the treated engine at the time that the exhaust valve opens. All of this suggests, at least to me, that the claims made by both Tech-Line and the maker of the MPG-CAPS applied through the fuel system are true. BTW, I am currently trying MPG-CAPS in my car, which does appear to run better and more smoothly at the lowpower levels at which cars normally operate; however I doubt that I will ever be able to accurately quantify the effect on fuel consumption. I am sorry that I don't have more training and/or real world engine experience to contribute. Peter |
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