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![]() I'm in Western Australia. locally our supplies of VW engines seem to have dried up. Even BMW motor cycle engines seem to have dried up. what other currently available engines have been successfully used in aircraft? the engine problem seems to provide the most unsolvable dilema when attempting to build a small aircraft. I'd hate to think that the prospect of engine conversions was passing. Stealth Pilot |
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On May 13, 12:40*am, Stealth Pilot
wrote: the engine problem seems to provide the most unsolvable dilema when attempting to build a small aircraft. I agree. It has been the main problem for the past 100 years.......... I'd hate to think that the prospect of engine conversions was passing. It's not passing, just evolving, but slowly. We just have to accept the fact that other than for small engines (~30 hp or less) all mass produced units will be water cooled, which complicates things for aircraft use. I happen to be in the camp that thinks that, over all, water cooling will prove to be an advantage. We as home builders still have more to learn before my assertion can be proven. In the mean time our options are somewhat limited. We either use existing aircraft motors, convert air cooled auto engines (a diminishing supply), or take Veedubers suggested path of converting water cooled lowers to air cooled units. Simple sand casting, increasing availability of CNC machining and off the shelf parts may provide another path for the budget minded? ========================= Leon McAtee |
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Dear Stealth (and the Group)
We may be looking it this the wrong 'way 'round. There are plenty of engines which offer excellent power-to-weight ratios. Unfortunately, they do so at rpm's which make them impractical for slinging a prop UNLESS a PSRU is used. A good case-in-point is the Rotax. The Rotax engine is only 1300cc but it is designed to operate near 6000 rpm. What makes the engine successful is the PSRU between the engine and the prop. There are two obvious conclusions we can draw from this. The first is that the engines themselves, despite any practical combination of cam & cooling, are simply too small to be used with the propeller mounted directed to the crankshaft. (This leads to another series of questions worthy of discussion but which I will leave untouched at this time.) The second point is that the PSRU, which does NOT enjoy the same TBO as the engine itself, has been designed specifically for this application, taking advantage of the engine's torque & power curves, and including mechanical features that make it suitable for the mounting of a propeller; mounting the engine to an airframe and so forth. It may then be argued that we are wasting our time by focusing on the ENGINE; that we should be devoting our energies to a suitable PSRU that may be attached to a WIDE VARIETY of engines. Having devoted most of my attention to the VW engine, I have little to offer the Group should the discussion turn to PSRU's but it would seem that the hand-maiden of these light-weight, powerful engines MUST be an automotive TRANSMISSION having similar features of light-weight and power-handling capacity. Here again, I lack the background and experience to do more than mutter; there are aspects of PSRU's, transmissions and torque converters about which I know nothing at all... other than the fact they must exist (since the engines exist). At the very least, I know the GEARS must exist. Were I in Western Australia, rather than curse the darkness (and wish for a Corvair to suddenly appear on my doorstep) I think I would light a single candle by diving into whatever came my way in the form of light-weight engines and trannies. I suppose there has to be a clutch in there somewhere, so that means I'm probably looking at a flywheel as well... fate stacking the weight against my urge to fly. But perhaps some of those powerful, light- weight engines ARE large enough to be able to drive a prop directly, even if I had to find someone to grind me a new cam. Liquid cooling need not be a road-block IF we begin by throwing out the stock radiator. With ram-air of 90mph or so available for everything other-than take-offs, a pair of heater cores may provide enough area to keep things in the green. Plus, there is a couple of quarts of oil that may also be pressed into service as an auxiliary coolant. The point of all this is that the lack of Volkswagens or other air- cooled engines should not be taken as an automatic out. If push comes to shove I could always convert a stray Holden, offering it up to something like a Pietenpohl. -R.S.Hoover |
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On Wed, 13 May 2009 06:40:13 GMT, Stealth Pilot
wrote: I'm in Western Australia. locally our supplies of VW engines seem to have dried up. Even BMW motor cycle engines seem to have dried up. what other currently available engines have been successfully used in aircraft? the engine problem seems to provide the most unsolvable dilema when attempting to build a small aircraft. I'd hate to think that the prospect of engine conversions was passing. Stealth Pilot Why do we always assume we have to reinvent the wheel? If you need 40 hp, here it is. Even altitude compensating EFI available soon. Designed for max continuous power. Rig a PSRU with a poly-v belt for more efficient prop speed/length. 40 not enough, stack 2 end to end. Have a steel crank made if the iron makes you nervous. Not every small gas engine is a Briggs. I've run 100s of these Kohlers for 40 years. Some 2000 hours in a year. Almost all the 30 and 40 year old garden tractors have Kohlers or Tecumsehs. Not many Briggs. Model Command PRO CH1000 Max Power @3600 RPM hp (kW) 40 (29.8) Displacement cu in (cc) 61 (999) Bore in (mm) 3.5 (90) Stroke in (mm) 3.1 (78.5) Peak Torque @ Maximum lbs ft (Nm) 61.5 (83.4) Compression Ratio 8.8:1 Dry Weight lbs (kg) 132 (59) Oil Capacity U.S. quarts (L) 2.9 (2.75) Lubrication Full pressure w/full-flow filter Dimensions L x W x H in 15.3 x 19.0 x 27.5 |
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On May 14, 2:38*pm, wrote:
On Wed, 13 May 2009 06:40:13 GMT, Stealth Pilot wrote: I'm in Western Australia. locally our supplies of VW engines seem to have dried up. Even BMW motor cycle engines seem to have dried up. what other currently available engines have been successfully used in aircraft? the engine problem seems to provide the most unsolvable dilema when attempting to build a small aircraft. I'd hate to think that the prospect of engine conversions was passing. Stealth Pilot Why do we always assume we have to reinvent the wheel? If you need 40 hp, here it is. Even altitude compensating EFI available soon. Designed for max continuous power. *Rig a PSRU with a poly-v belt for more efficient prop speed/length. 40 not enough, stack 2 end to end. Have a steel crank made if the iron makes you nervous. Neither of these ideas are exactly trivial. Not every small gas engine is a Briggs. I've run 100s of these Kohlers for 40 years. Some 2000 hours in a year. Almost all the 30 and 40 year old garden tractors have Kohlers or Tecumsehs. Not many Briggs. Model Command PRO CH1000 Max Power @3600 RPM hp (kW) 40 (29.8) Displacement cu in (cc) 61 (999) Bore in (mm) 3.5 (90) Stroke in (mm) 3.1 (78.5) Peak Torque @ Maximum lbs ft (Nm) 61.5 (83.4) Compression Ratio 8.8:1 Dry Weight lbs (kg) 132 (59) Oil Capacity U.S. quarts (L) 2.9 (2.75) Lubrication Full pressure w/full-flow filter Dimensions L x W x H in 15.3 x 19.0 x 27.5 For the benefit of our Western Australian friend, http://www.epgengines.com..au/ has a distributorship in WA. The Generac 990 is in the same class, and is the starting point for the Valley Engineering Big Twin Re-drive setup. http://www.brandnewengines.com/gener...391-1-1-2.aspx One of the problems is there seems to be whole in the market between 30 hp and 80-100. The two examples above are the biggest air-cooled gasoline industrial engines commonly. There are a (very) few liguid cooled engines in this range (Kubota and Daihatsu ), they tend to be substanially heavier. The other problem is the way the emissions and fuel efficiency have driven car engines to higher RPM and teeny cylinders. One idea is run an aluminum block car engine direct drive at low RPM. A Honda engine of about 1.8L should be able to meet this, say an F- Series: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_F_engine The later K series engines are more complex - V-TEC, etc, and probaby are not wanted. Engine weight should be in the mid-200 lb category. The smaller D series might be enough, although they are not that much lighter, say, low 200s for the bare engine. A Suzuki G- or J- Series might also fit the bill, and since they were fitted to Utes their torgue band might be lower, better driving a prop. Another is to direct drive a small truck/industrial engine. Kubota and Daihatsu make liquid cooled gas engines too small for you, and Ford and GM make iron block 1.6L engines that are too large. http://www.gm.com/experience/technol...Industrial.pdf http://www.fordpowerproducts.com/For...f/1.6LSpec.pdf Nissan also makes industrial engines in this range. Suzuki and Subaru engines have been converted, by Americans, Canadians, Germans and Poles. http://www.raven-rotor.com/html/specs.html http://www.airtrikes.net/engines.shtml http://www.aerotech-poland.com/ |
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On May 13, 1:40*am, Stealth Pilot
wrote: I'm in Western Australia. locally our supplies of VW engines seem to have dried up. Even BMW motor cycle engines seem to have dried up. what other currently available engines have been successfully used in aircraft? the engine problem seems to provide the most unsolvable dilema when attempting to build a small aircraft. I'd hate to think that the prospect of engine conversions was passing. Stealth Pilot A very active group of fellows in Poland are using Moto Guzzi M/C engines as well as BMW's. Honda marketed a similar type of engine that has been tinkered around with a bit but most likely needs a different crank or cam. I have read of one person using a small Honda auto engine that he replaced the crankshaft in order to get more thrust at lower rpm's. He didn't use a PSRU. Couldn't on of the three cylinder Geo engines be modified with a custom crank or cam to do this with the right prop? Water cooling has advanced a lot in the last few year's with very light weight radiator's. |
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#9
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On May 15, 1:37*am, Stealth Pilot
wrote: this is a subject pregnant with information shall we say but in looking at the converted aero engine, or more specifically the dismantled VW engine on my workbench, a weighup shows that the chankshaft is the heaviest part in the engine. making it lighter isnt an option by which I mean making the existing crankshaft less substantial. so one weight reduction option is to make it shorter ---------------------------------------------------------- Ummm....(picking lint from my bolly-holy) actually you CAN lighten the VW crank by a fair amount. Take a look at the crankshaft of a real aircraft engine. (No, closer than that...) Look at the con-rod journals. On most engines, they are hollow. A couple of after-market crankshaft makers here in Southern California offered such cranks. Most of them suffered from cracks but boy would they spin! Which was the goal. As in drag racing. Another option is to make the con-rod journals SMALLER, as in 50mm vs 55. I know it tain't much but when every little bit helps... Of course, the real question is WHY do you want to make it lighter? (No, don't tell me. I'd probably just break down and cry.) Because if you are sooper-serious about reducing the weight of the VW engine there are a few options you apparently have not yet explored, such as using steel tubing for the barrels. And drilling-out the rocker-arm shafts. And the cam shaft. And throwing away that steel sump plate... (Make a new drain by drilling & tapping an M8 hole in the outer corner next to the hole in the sump... the one for the Type III dip-stick & filler. Now there is no reason NOT to use an aluminum panel for your sump plate. Indeed, you can rivet brackets to it; help support the carb-heat box and whatever) Your rods can stand a bit of dieting. Some guys turn them into carefully balanced Swiss cheese, replace them every couple of races (or risk having one snap in two). But probably the biggest weight reduction is to put the prop on the clutch-end of the engine, reducing your prop hub to a flange and a spool-type spacer, the combination of which typically weighs less than a long/thick prop-hub for the other end of the crankshaft. Ditto for MOUNTING the engine. With the prop on the proper end of the crankshaft you may use the existing threaded bosses on either side of the pump opening and build yourself a space-frame type mount. No 'accessory housing'. Mount the dynamo directly to the crankcase.. itty-bitty flanged driver for the magnets. All-aluminum intake manifolding. Single-port heads. Trick here, another there, bottom line is on the order of 140 pounds. Which you gotta admit is pretty light for a veedub. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- , which leads to looking again at the pobjoy geared radial made back in 1934. I've always believed that a modern technology revisit to this design would pay dividends. at 23inches diameter and delivering 90hp it has to be a winner. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- As for the shorter crankshaft weighing LESS... I think I'd have to see it. Typical radial crank calls for a massive master-rod, bolted- on counter weights, etc. And three jugs wouldn't get you very much. I think you'd need five or seven before you'd start to see any improvement in the pwr vs weight department. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- the great bugbear of the radial of course is the increased drag of the flat round radial engine when compared to the flat four engine or inline engine or even v12 layout. ...so history tells us. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dig deeper. Search seed: NACA cowling. Magic! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I read this today in Bill Gunstons book "Development of Piston Aero Engines"... "Nowhere was the process [of drag reduction] more effective than in the case of radial engines, where instead of offering an ungainly shape - called by aerodynamicists a "bluff body"- they were enclosed in a tight cowling in such a way that overall drag was often zero, thrust from the heated cooling air more than countering drag from other causes." I was gobsmacked. NO cooling drag from a tightly cowled radial engine! (The Hawker Fury was offered as an example) Cooling drag in a Wittman W8 Tailwind was measured by Raspet to be 10% of total drag at speeds over 120mph (104 and a bit knots) I've never ever heard of a flat 4 having no cooling drag. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Me neither... if the thing is air-cooled. But zero-D IS a possibiity with liquid cooling. Tank fulla Prestone lets you move the cooling drag to some area where it ain't. Drag. Get the input/output ratios right you get NEGATIVE drag... which is called Thrust. (More Magic, as per F-51) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ far from being a hackneyed subject the challenge of locating or designing and building a 40hp aero engine presents some amazingly fertile challenges. one of the real plusses in this quest is that your approach is totally different from mine and yet both are totally valid paths to follow. Remember George Graham using a mazda rotary in second gear? That was another path. he proved the concept but the gearbox failing just pointed to a more substantial gearbox being needed. I suppose the real challenge is not to be enthused by the possibilities but to get machining and put examples in the air. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Yeah, something like that. Except you need someone to run the numbers on the GEAR TEETH or you get these horrible screechy noises ------------------------------------------------------------------------- we arent done yet bob. ------------------------------------------------------------ Heaven's no! (Swapping his scones recipe for biscuits... and finding out they're the same thing!) Maybe mixing up some Secret Sauce for the exhaust stack & ports that moves the heat farther down the pipe before it begins to cool. That maintains the VELOCITY of the exhaust gases and other noxious fumes, allows you to move the same amount of gas in less time through a smaller pipe, creates a deep area of low pressure in the combustion chamber just when the poppet valve pops it... SUCKS the fuel/air charge into the cylinder doing all sorts of nice things to the Volumetric Efficiency along the way. Super charging without that little turbine ...less weight, even when plumbing 1 into 3 and 2 into 4. Not a big improvement but some. Add all the somes (sums?) and while you can't point your finger at any single one of them an say 'Ah ha!' you get to wave your arms at the whole engine and the DOZENS of incremental improvements -- all those 'unimportant' details the Experts are always telling us we can ignore. Add them up and while any single ONE may be 'unimportant' their total adds up in a remarkable fashion. Impossible, the experts say. Like the NACA ring-cowling. (Put one on the NYP and Charlie could have made it to Moscow with fuel to spare.) |
#10
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In article ,
Stealth Pilot wrote: (snip) so one weight reduction option is to make it shorter, which leads to looking again at the pobjoy geared radial made back in 1934. I've always believed that a modern technology revisit to this design would pay dividends. at 23inches diameter and delivering 90hp it has to be a winner. From what I have heard, the Pobjoy was NO joy to fly! Apparently it was highly unreliable and would quit at the least desirable times. The Pobjoy factory was destroyed during a WW-II bombing raid (perhaps by disgruntled RAF pilots who had flown one?). (snip) -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
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