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#61
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![]() "Richard Lamb" wrote in message k.net... Peter Dohm wrote: "Richard Lamb" wrote in message nk.net... Peter Dohm wrote: "Richard Lamb" wrote in message link.net... Peter Dohm wrote: "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message ... The basics: Piston engines produce more power per pound if they rev higher. (HP = RPM x torque/5252) Propellers are MUCH more efficient if they turn slow. This begs for a PSRU. BUT, a PSRU adds weight, cost and complexity. Resonances, particularly torsional resonances are a real problem. Lots of examples of PSRU's on 12, 14 and 18 cyinder engines Few workable examples with fewer cylinders suggesting PSRU's don't like power pulses. If a shaft has a strong resonant fundamental, don't excite it or lower the fundamental below the input frequency. Tuning a PSRU/shaft/propeller system is like tuning a piano - it's an art not a science. The 9 cylinder 1820 and 1840 CID radials used on B-17's were geared approximately 16:9. However, your point is well taken, and I also am unable to name any 4 or 6 cylinder engines that have stood the test of time with reduction drives. I also believe that tuning any drive system, including a PSRU, is a science--when fully understood. And therein lies the rub: There's plenty left to learn--especially if it must also be light. So, in practice, you are right--it is still an art. :-( Peter Rotax - the 912/914 Jabaru - (but the 6 cylinder will be a better seller - IMHO) Believe it or not, a few VW's with belts. And a couple of Subes with Rotax B boxes scabbed on. The one that DIDN'T work was the Geo Metro 3-banger (broke the crank). But that issue was already known - don't cut off any flywheel on 3 holers. With the full flywheel, the 3 cylinder runs fine. Richard OK, you caught me fair and square on poor phrasing. I tend to think of higher power applications, but you are right that some of the more conservative and lower powered systems with flywheels still in place and a little looser coupling seem to run quite reliably. I don't know how much power is lost to friction, but some of the v-belt reduction drives even seem to work quite reliably without any external crankshaft support! Peter You didn't follow the link that blueskies posted, didja Peter. The BD-5 story - in all it's glory! And a few other odds and ends, That was not a high powered setup, but kicked a bunch of engineers around. http://www.prime-mover.org/Engines/T.../contact1.html Richard Actually I did, some months ago following an earlier post, and subsequently also learned that the Contact! article is quite famous. One of the more interesting points was that trying to make the shaft and/or transfer drive more rigid was not helpful on the BD-5. Softening the system eventually did resolve the breakage problem within the drive train; but IIRC the drive system to airframe resonance (evidenced initially by loosened rivets) was not fully resolved during the author's tenure. That was the article that really convinced me that I didn't necessarily know enough to design a clutchless system with a high degree of confidence--even by leaving the flywheel in place. However, the set of books mentioned elsewhere in this thread, by Mr. Horton, could prove to contain the necessary formulas and explanations to reduce this problem to a cookbook science. A quick web search confirmed his belief that one of the books may now be virtually unobtainable. I am willing to entertain his book suggestion because, in my earlier career as an electronic technician, a technical tome entitled "Shielding and Grounding Techniques in Instrumentation" made previously insurmountable grounding problems easy to solve. It is probable that work on mechanical resonance, done for World War II, may have been covered in books published during the succeeding quarter century. Peter My pardon, sir! Richard No appology needed - I manage to miss plenty! Peter |
#62
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message ... "ADK" wrote in message news:X6TXf.28774$%H.11944@clgrps13... This is probably going to open old wounds. What I would like is experienced input on the advantages, for economic, efficiency and longevity etc. of different types of redrives. I am leaning towards a cog-belt reducer in a 6 cylinder, liquid cooled, configuration driving a long drive shaft to the prop. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Warning,Warning, Danger, Danger, Will Robinson! Yep, that is a really big can of worms. The redrive is not as big a problem as you think. You get into a mess when you start talking about long drive shafts. Torsional resonance has brought many of the great minds of the flying industry to their knees. No joke. I don't have all of the links at hand, but someone here does. Start by googling torsional resonance. Then, be afraid. Be very afraid. I you don't get afraid, keep looking, until you get afraid, because you need to get afraid, or you don't understand the problem. -- Jim in NC The long driveshaft is a problem. Unlike a car, in an aircraft you put the driveshaft in between the crankshaft and the flywheel. Not the place for a driveshaft. My recommendation is to couple the driveshaft to the engine/reduction unit with one of the shot filled fluid couplings. They kill any feedback and pretty well damp the reinforcement that makes the driveshaft go totally bonkers. Then use the largest diameter tubular driveshaft you can fit into the space available. That will tend to put the resonant frequencies into a range you won't pass through or run in normally. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#63
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![]() "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk at wow way d0t com wrote in message ... snip That was a problem on some of the early T-18's that were using cut down propellers - resonance was fatiguing the propeller which would then shed a blade, which would then encourage the engine to attempt to part company with the airframe... That used to happen so frequently with Formula air racers where they chopped the props for the O-200's to get the RPM up to get additional HP out of that little engine that they started using a safety cable around the engine. That way when the prop shed a blade and the engine jumped out of the engine mount the cable held it somewhere near where it was supposed to be so you could get the airplane on the ground in a survivable fashion! Not something you want to play with normally. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#64
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![]() "Richard Lamb" wrote in message ink.net... Big John wrote: ADK Look up Molt Taylor and his Aerocar system. He used a pusher arrangement and seemed to have most of the problems solved with long shaft back to prop. His bird may still be flying some place to exhibitions? Am sure someone will jump in here and give data on his bird and how he coupled shaft to engine with a "power glide" clutch or some such. It allowed a small amount of slippage at each power stroke to prevent the pulse being transmitted to drive shaft and prop as I recall. Best of luck with a difficult problem. Big John Ok, I think it's also used on the Imp and Mini-Imp. The "clutch" consists of two (wavy surfaced) plates with lead shot loaded between them. As the thing spun up, centrifugal force packed the shot solid, but there was enough "give" with the shot to absorb the "jerk" (4th derivative?). Richard no idea why that came out in past tense... It is indeed used on the Imp and the MiniImp. Molt used it on most of his designs and spent quite a few years getting the bugs worked out of it. It is NOT "two wavy surfaced plates" but just a little different. The driven part is a cylindrical case with a charge of shot in it. When the case is driven the "fluid" shop is packed tightly against the outer diameter of the spinning cylinder. The output shaft has a single "wavy" plate on the end of it. This plate is enclosed in the cylinder with the shot. As the shot gets packed into the rim of the case it grips the plate and transmits the power to the output shaft. If you try to drive it backwards all the plate does it turn in the loose shot and warm it up a bit. Like a "sprague clutch" from a helicopter, it only transmits power in one direction. By varying the load of shot in the cylinder you can vary the coupling coefficient and "set" the breakaway torque for the unit. It cannot transmit damaging torques from torsional vibration back through the coupling because the output shaft "breaks away" before a crippling torque is reached. You don't want it to break away at too low a torque either, or you will basically have a "slipping" clutch in your drive train. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#65
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![]() "George" wrote in message m... Richard Lamb wrote: ADK wrote: IF you had to design a PSRU, to drive a pusher propellor via shaft, what would your experience dictate? Thinking along the lines of a gearbelt, chain or gear. Please, I would appreciate the collective experience available on this group. I have decided on the aircraft, but want to make it the most reliable and safest it can be. "ADK" wrote in message news:X6TXf.28774$%H.11944@clgrps13... This is probably going to open old wounds. What I would like is experienced input on the advantages, for economic, efficiency and longevity etc. of different types of redrives. I am leaning towards a cog-belt reducer in a 6 cylinder, liquid cooled, configuration driving a long drive shaft to the prop. The collective experience is zilch = nada = squat = undefined. THAT is what everybody had been trying to tell you. Wait a second. Look around the airport. How many shaft driven propellers do you see? Have you ever seen? If you are heart set on doing it, I sincerely wish you luck. But I can't offer any further advice - 'cuz they ain't none... Richard Richard, Didn't the military do this once?? Seems there was the P-39 Aircobra, shaft driven from a rear mounted engine?? Are the gray cells working that far back?? Not that it would be applicable to an experimental, but at least It was once done? George Yep. And Molt Taylor did it on several different airplanes and with several different engines. There have been several pushers with engines mounted near the CG and the props back on the tail with long drive shafts. Several of them worked very well. There is a gain in efficiency when you do that. Unfortunately the increased weight of the drive train and the additional cost and complexity of the requisite drive train generally overcame any efficiency gain and none of them has ever gone into "production." The P-39 was a special case. It had an aft mounted engine and a big driveshaft that passed between the pilots legs! It scared a lot of pilots thinking about what they would lose if the drive shaft pickled on them. They also used the drive shaft for a gun barrel for a large bore cannon so that it could fire straight ahead through the spinner and be easy for the pilot to aim. Just point the airplane at your target and cut loose. The additional weight of the complex drive train raised hob with the performance and our pilots didn't like them at all. The Russian pilots loved them. They could aim the whole airplane fairly well and when you ran out of cannon shells they would just ram the enemy fighter. That brought down both of them, but the russians didn't mind. They were fighting in their own backyard and the German's were not. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#66
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![]() "Peter Dohm" wrote in message ... The 9 cylinder 1820 and 1840 CID radials used on B-17's were geared approximately 16:9. However, your point is well taken, and I also am unable to name any 4 or 6 cylinder engines that have stood the test of time with reduction drives. GO-300, GO-435, GO-480, etc. There are lots of geared flat aircraft engines. Note that all of the ones I mentioned are sixes. Fours are tougher and twins are about impossible. Gearbox design is pretty critical. Also, all of these engines got a bad reputation from pilots who didn't know how to fly them. You never want to unload the gears. Put them is an unloaded situation and the gears will lash with each power pulse and quickly eat the gearbox. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#67
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![]() "Richard Lamb" wrote in message k.net... Best tool available to the amateur is a variable speed strobe - Party Light! That way you can actually look and SEE what's happening. Richard I used to use a tool called a "Strobotach" which was a variable speed strobe unit used for a non-contact tachometer. Very useful for analyzeing periodic motions. :-) Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#68
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Ernest Christley wrote:
Ian Stirling wrote: Best tool available to the amateur is a variable speed strobe - Party Light! That way you can actually look and SEE what's happening. That'll spot ordinary vibrations. Torsional ones are a little bit harder. Especially if you want, as you probably should, a graph of maximum stress anywhere in the shaft/PSRU/Prop system vs RPM. A few fine white lines down the length of the shaft will clear up that problem. Will they? It'll obviously show huge torsional movement, but many, especially shorter shafts may fail before it becomes visible. |
#69
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![]() "Highflyer" wrote in message ... "Richard Lamb" wrote in message ink.net... Big John wrote: ADK Look up Molt Taylor and his Aerocar system. He used a pusher arrangement and seemed to have most of the problems solved with long shaft back to prop. His bird may still be flying some place to exhibitions? Am sure someone will jump in here and give data on his bird and how he coupled shaft to engine with a "power glide" clutch or some such. It allowed a small amount of slippage at each power stroke to prevent the pulse being transmitted to drive shaft and prop as I recall. Best of luck with a difficult problem. Big John Ok, I think it's also used on the Imp and Mini-Imp. The "clutch" consists of two (wavy surfaced) plates with lead shot loaded between them. As the thing spun up, centrifugal force packed the shot solid, but there was enough "give" with the shot to absorb the "jerk" (4th derivative?). Richard no idea why that came out in past tense... It is indeed used on the Imp and the MiniImp. Molt used it on most of his designs and spent quite a few years getting the bugs worked out of it. It is NOT "two wavy surfaced plates" but just a little different. The driven part is a cylindrical case with a charge of shot in it. When the case is driven the "fluid" shop is packed tightly against the outer diameter of the spinning cylinder. The output shaft has a single "wavy" plate on the end of it. This plate is enclosed in the cylinder with the shot. As the shot gets packed into the rim of the case it grips the plate and transmits the power to the output shaft. If you try to drive it backwards all the plate does it turn in the loose shot and warm it up a bit. Like a "sprague clutch" from a helicopter, it only transmits power in one direction. By varying the load of shot in the cylinder you can vary the coupling coefficient and "set" the breakaway torque for the unit. It cannot transmit damaging torques from torsional vibration back through the coupling because the output shaft "breaks away" before a crippling torque is reached. You don't want it to break away at too low a torque either, or you will basically have a "slipping" clutch in your drive train. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) I can really only agree with part of that. I did not reread the entire brochure, but the clutch itself does not appear to be unidirectional, and it is not intended to be a torsional dampener. However, the soft start certainly would have eliminated resonance at srating motor speed, which proved to be the most vexing problem in the Contact! article regarding the BD-5. It could have made that other problems a lot easier to solve as well. I have never personally seem any of Molt Taylor's aircraft, and I don't know which specific parts he used, but a Dodge Flexidyne brochure is available at: http://www.dodge-pt.com/pdf/brochure...s/dmr_1513.pdf Peter |
#70
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JP wrote:
The P-39/P-63 examples can't probably be compared directly with this matter in question. These designs both have a large reduction gear casing in front of the plane. The support structure for this PSRU looks very firm. Perhaps the safety cage type center fuselage structure has something to do with the lack of severe resonance problems? Any known resonance problems with these aircrafts? JP I doubt any such information would be of value here since the those PSRU has a gun barrel through it. Assuming any contact between the gun and the PSRU any resonance solutions would be different. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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