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#1
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That price Ian gave and trust of 42 lbs. was before the motor was completed.
The ad even says available this fall. Its on Jet Cat USA web page, and its a old ad. I have been in touch with the dealer and the price is about $3200 bucks and the Jet Cat P200 now produces 50 lbs of thrust. There are several other companys that make small Jet turbines, I have seen thrust ratings now at 150 lbs. which would be more than enough for self launch. The fin idea was thought of, but remember that some of the thrust comes from the sucking action of the motor. The exhaust is 660 C's. If you mount it like a motorglider engine it will have to high enough so you don't burn your tail feathers off, if it drops out of the belly, then self lauch could cause fob injestion. Shop around and go out to a rc field where you can see and talk to the guys who have them. Overhaul is now at 50 hrs. Thats only for inspection and maybe a bearing. No big thing. 50 hrs is alot of time....about 600 climbs of 2500 ft. Mounted on a retractable pod boom with a arm that extends might be a idea. Food for though. Tom |
#2
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Of course you could mount it on an offset mounting so that the exhaust goes
to one side of the tail. I'm sure the yaw induced would actually be quite small. Ian "TomnKeyLargo" wrote in message ... That price Ian gave and trust of 42 lbs. was before the motor was completed. The ad even says available this fall. Its on Jet Cat USA web page, and its a old ad. I have been in touch with the dealer and the price is about $3200 bucks and the Jet Cat P200 now produces 50 lbs of thrust. There are several other companys that make small Jet turbines, I have seen thrust ratings now at 150 lbs. which would be more than enough for self launch. The fin idea was thought of, but remember that some of the thrust comes from the sucking action of the motor. The exhaust is 660 C's. If you mount it like a motorglider engine it will have to high enough so you don't burn your tail feathers off, if it drops out of the belly, then self lauch could cause fob injestion. Shop around and go out to a rc field where you can see and talk to the guys who have them. Overhaul is now at 50 hrs. Thats only for inspection and maybe a bearing. No big thing. 50 hrs is alot of time....about 600 climbs of 2500 ft. Mounted on a retractable pod boom with a arm that extends might be a idea. Food for though. Tom |
#3
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#5
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#6
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![]() It might get a pit toasty for the wing runner in self-launch mode, but how about one at each wing tip? It seems most gliders these days already have some sort of interchangable tip, so make a new set with a jet built in. Fuel storage would be the main issue. If you give up the water ballast option though, there's plenty of room in the wing. Chris Slingsby wrote: I would think that mounting a couple of small jets at or just behind the wing/fuselage junction could also serve to remove some of the low speed turbulence in that area. Also, if the engine had a tight cowling around it then perhaps some water could be sprayed or drizzled onto the outside of the engine and the resulting steam would mix with the exhaust to provide some additional thrust. SWB Turbines in Neenah, WI (SWBTurbines.com)has a Mamba turbojet which puts out 11 Lbs. of thrust. It is only 3.5 inches in diameter and would fit nicely at the wing junction interface. SWB also has 45, 60 and a 100Lb thrust engine. |
#7
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Earlier, Eric Greenwell wrote:
I still think someone with a metal vee-tail glider ought to jump on this idea, and just mount the engine on a short pylon. Please send one (1) turbojet engine in a stamped, self-addressed envelope... ![]() Bob K. |
#8
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Sailplanes = The Quiet Challenge
Jet Engines = Converters (they convert fuel to noise, especially the ones in T-37 tweety birds) Why would I want to fly something noisy? Many of us in America already 'suffer' from towplane noise, so why add the ear-splitting noise of a turbine? I would rather see the further development of electric self-launchers and greater use, in America, of ground launches. Leave the turbines to the Caproni (sp?) afficianados and U-2/TR-1 pilots. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA LS-1d, 'W8' |
#9
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Seems to me that a flameout at one tip might be a concern...
How about right at the end of the tailboom? It would require specific engineering: the glider would have to be designed for it, both to fit the engine there and from a c.g. point of view - although now that I think of it, my glider already has tail weights to bring the c.g. aft! The hot exhaust would be no issue. You'd have to duct inlet air from the top of the tailboom to avoid ingesting foreign objects. Existing gliders might be a little tough to retro-fit, but I'd imagine some clever shops could do it (converting all the certificated gliders to Experimental in the process, presumably...) As Chris says, you'd put the fuel in the wings, displacing some (probably not all) of the water, or put it between the wings in the fuselage. You'd have the engine so far from the pilot and fuel, the exhaust aft of the structure, and no complicated swinging arms, bomb bay doors, etc. The noise in the cockpit would be pretty nasty, though... Chris Ashburn wrote in message ... It might get a pit toasty for the wing runner in self-launch mode, but how about one at each wing tip? It seems most gliders these days already have some sort of interchangable tip, so make a new set with a jet built in. Fuel storage would be the main issue. If you give up the water ballast option though, there's plenty of room in the wing. Chris Slingsby wrote: I would think that mounting a couple of small jets at or just behind the wing/fuselage junction could also serve to remove some of the low speed turbulence in that area. Also, if the engine had a tight cowling around it then perhaps some water could be sprayed or drizzled onto the outside of the engine and the resulting steam would mix with the exhaust to provide some additional thrust. SWB Turbines in Neenah, WI (SWBTurbines.com)has a Mamba turbojet which puts out 11 Lbs. of thrust. It is only 3.5 inches in diameter and would fit nicely at the wing junction interface. SWB also has 45, 60 and a 100Lb thrust engine. |
#10
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