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#31
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Dylan Smith wrote:
In article , John Roncallo wrote: Why? Do the Archer's engine components wear less at high RPM than an engine on an Arrow? Yes they probably do wear less. They are under less load for the given circumstance. Cylinder pressures are much higher in an engine at 65% power 2300 RPM than they are at 65% 2480 RPM. But a far greater effect will be the additional wear from friction of running at 2480 RPM instead of 2300 RPM - a significant increase in the number of friction cycles per hour. I'd say the Archer's engine will wear more quickly. Wear is a function of pressure and velocity. Mechanical dynamic friction is a function of mostly pressure. High cylinder pressures cause high mechanical pressures everywhere , journal bearings, piston side forces etc. With both cases of high and Low RPM at equal power output the wear should for the most part be relatively equal. The absolute which case is better argument and where is the exact equal wear points as far as RPM goes will probably never be much more than an educated guess but it should be clear that the lower loaded Archer engine should be allowed more RPM than the higher loaded Arrow engine even if they were the same exact engine, which they are not. John Roncallo |
#32
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Ron Natalie wrote:
"Dylan Smith" wrote in message ... But a far greater effect will be the additional wear from friction of running at 2480 RPM instead of 2300 RPM - a significant increase in the number of friction cycles per hour. I'd say the Archer's engine will wear more quickly. The number of revolutions acquired isn't the driving factor in engine life. Flight school aircraft that are flown frequently and full throttle tend to far exceed TBO where as babied, infrequently flown single owner birds tend not to get anywhere near TBO. This is true but the tach doesn't know any more than RPM. The rest of the story is all assumed. What I'm wondering is did we replace our clubs perfectly good running engine last year at 2000 hr or was it more like (2300RPM/2566RPM)* 2000hr = 1793 hr. My most recent flying and some of the posts in this group are telling me we may have replaced it at 1793 hr. Thanks to all who posted J. Roncallo |
#33
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In article , John
Roncallo wrote: This is true but the tach doesn't know any more than RPM. The rest of the story is all assumed. What I'm wondering is did we replace our clubs perfectly good running engine last year at 2000 hr or was it more like (2300RPM/2566RPM)* 2000hr = 1793 hr. My most recent flying and some of the posts in this group are telling me we may have replaced it at 1793 hr. It doesn't matter how many hours are on the engine, it's why you had to replace it? Was it making metal? Were parts worn out of spec that they could not be replaced? Many things affect TBO. Some engines go significantly beyond TBO, some significantly less. Operation and environment make a difference. |
#34
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EDR wrote:
In article , John Roncallo wrote: This is true but the tach doesn't know any more than RPM. The rest of the story is all assumed. What I'm wondering is did we replace our clubs perfectly good running engine last year at 2000 hr or was it more like (2300RPM/2566RPM)* 2000hr = 1793 hr. My most recent flying and some of the posts in this group are telling me we may have replaced it at 1793 hr. It doesn't matter how many hours are on the engine, it's why you had to replace it? Was it making metal? Were parts worn out of spec that they could not be replaced? Many things affect TBO. Some engines go significantly beyond TBO, some significantly less. Operation and environment make a difference. No it was running just fine. But our club feels that Lawyers will eat us alive if an engine fails and we let it go beyond TBO. I tend to agree, but I would like to see our rules changed to as required or first annual past TBO which ever comes first. John Roncallo |
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