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#1
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I don't have heat inside my canard plane. Now am considering piping
hot engine oil to the cabin through a small oil cooler with a blower. I am looking at a Harley Dyna oil cooler - about the right size. My question is whether such a cooler will stand the typical aircraft oil pressure. My engine oil pressure goes up to about 80 psi when cold then goes down to about 60 psi. I have seen Harleys with oil cooler pressure gauges 60psi. But shouldn't they have an extra safety stress factor? Any bike experts out there? I already had an engine heat exchanger with the fan there that I tried but there was too much CO coming through - so I removed the air plumbing. ----------------------------------------------------------- SQ2000 http://www.abri.com/sq2000 |
#2
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![]() wrote I don't have heat inside my canard plane. Now am considering piping hot engine oil to the cabin through a small oil cooler with a blower. I am looking at a Harley Dyna oil cooler - about the right size. My question is whether such a cooler will stand the typical aircraft oil pressure. My engine oil pressure goes up to about 80 psi when cold then goes down to about 60 psi. I have seen Harleys with oil cooler pressure gauges 60psi. But shouldn't they have an extra safety stress factor? It seems like I recall someone saying that the oil cooler did not put out enough heat in the winter to be very useful. It would seem like the bike cooler would be tough enough. I would use it, but put two in line petcocks in the line to bypass the cooler, and put them where you can reach it while you are flying. If it did leak, you could turn it off, but as big of a consideration is the fact that you will not want to be using it in the summer, anyway! -- Jim in NC |
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#4
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message ... wrote I don't have heat inside my canard plane. Now am considering piping hot engine oil to the cabin through a small oil cooler with a blower. I am looking at a Harley Dyna oil cooler - about the right size. My question is whether such a cooler will stand the typical aircraft oil pressure. My engine oil pressure goes up to about 80 psi when cold then goes down to about 60 psi. I have seen Harleys with oil cooler pressure gauges 60psi. But shouldn't they have an extra safety stress factor? It seems like I recall someone saying that the oil cooler did not put out enough heat in the winter to be very useful. It would seem like the bike cooler would be tough enough. I would use it, but put two in line petcocks in the line to bypass the cooler, and put them where you can reach it while you are flying. If it did leak, you could turn it off, but as big of a consideration is the fact that you will not want to be using it in the summer, anyway! -- Jim in NC Not enough heat? Try flying a GLIDER at -50F. Can you say, "electric socks"? |
#5
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![]() "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message ... Not enough heat? Try flying a GLIDER at -50F. Can you say, "electric socks"? Bill, That is why I do my glider maintenance in the winter. Wave flying is just to cold for my old bones. Wayne HP-14 "6F" http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder |
#7
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I have never heard anyone who was happy with the little quartz heaters
typically used in EZ's and the like. The concensus seems to be that the amount of heat put out is very limited and consumes an enormous (at least from a GA perspective) amount of electricity. "XYZ" wrote in message . .. Why go to all the plumbing hassles, use electric heat, cheaper, lighter, safer.... -- Have a great day Scott "Anthony W" wrote in message news:wTCcj.2631$si6.495@trndny08... wrote: I don't have heat inside my canard plane. Now am considering piping hot engine oil to the cabin through a small oil cooler with a blower. I am looking at a Harley Dyna oil cooler - about the right size. My question is whether such a cooler will stand the typical aircraft oil pressure. My engine oil pressure goes up to about 80 psi when cold then goes down to about 60 psi. I have seen Harleys with oil cooler pressure gauges 60psi. But shouldn't they have an extra safety stress factor? Any bike experts out there? I already had an engine heat exchanger with the fan there that I tried but there was too much CO coming through - so I removed the air plumbing. That same cooler is sold for other bikes that have higher oil pressure. Harleys usually only have 4 or 5 PSI oil pressure because the roller bottom end doesn't need pressure only volume. My local VW shop has plate type oil coolers much cheaper than the Harley ones. It wouldn't hurt to check out your local VW shops and auto parts stores then there's always aircooled.net . Tony |
#8
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2007, XYZ wrote:
Why go to all the plumbing hassles, use electric heat, cheaper, lighter, safer.... Because a (for example) 80 amp alternator puts out only a nominal 960 watts at 12v. Even if you could use all that for heating -- which of course you can't -- it would be a pretty anemic heater. -Dan |
#9
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As the original poster that was my problem too. I only have a 60A
alternator and could not afford the heat from a typical fan heater. I need that alternator for important things - like keep flying. On Jan 2, 1:46 pm, Dan Youngquist wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2007, XYZ wrote: Why go to all the plumbing hassles, use electric heat, cheaper, lighter, safer.... Because a (for example) 80 amp alternator puts out only a nominal 960 watts at 12v. Even if you could use all that for heating -- which of course you can't -- it would be a pretty anemic heater. -Dan |
#10
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wrote:
As the original poster that was my problem too. I only have a 60A alternator and could not afford the heat from a typical fan heater. I need that alternator for important things - like keep flying. On Jan 2, 1:46 pm, Dan Youngquist wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2007, XYZ wrote: Why go to all the plumbing hassles, use electric heat, cheaper, lighter, safer.... Because a (for example) 80 amp alternator puts out only a nominal 960 watts at 12v. Even if you could use all that for heating -- which of course you can't -- it would be a pretty anemic heater. -Dan I wonder if one of these would draw too much power? http://www.dickssportinggoods.com/pr...ductId=2841142 |
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