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#1
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I have an experimental Bushcaddy with a Lyc O-235. I also have the
standard ACS nosebowl for a lyc: http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/appages/mc3a.php My exhaust is a slightly modified Powerflow system. I have just discovered I can't use my nosebowl because it is too rounded on the bottom. The top is fine but the bottom is basically a crescent shape from side to side. To accomodate the exhaust pipes and collector box from the powerflow sytem I need something with a more rectangular or boxy shape on the bottom. As an example a powerflow system will fit in a Glastar Sportsman but their colw costs $1200. Any thoughts or ideas??? Any kits you can think of that have such a shape to the noebowl where perhaps I could buy that component?? Thanks. Don... |
#2
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On Feb 4, 11:37*am, DonMorrisey wrote:
I have just discovered I can't use my nosebowl because it is too rounded on the bottom... Does that mean you can't use the nosebowl, or does it just mean you can't use it without modifying it? I'd suggest considering just cutting away the offending portions and installing one or more blister fairings as necessary to clear the revised exhaust system. |
#3
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On Feb 4, 12:56*pm, Bob Kuykendall wrote:
On Feb 4, 11:37*am, DonMorrisey wrote: I have just discovered I can't use my nosebowl because it is too rounded on the bottom... Does that mean you can't use the nosebowl, or does it just mean you can't use it without modifying it? I'd suggest considering just cutting away the offending portions and installing one or more blister fairings as necessary to clear the revised exhaust system. I agree with this idea.. For sure the cheapest way and you will get exactly what you need. IMHO. |
#4
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I'd suggest considering just cutting away the offending portions and
installing one or more blister fairings as necessary to clear the revised exhaust system. I agree with this idea.. Howdy, Where would I find these "blister fairings"?? Although I have a feeling the interference is too significant to cure with those. Just giving it the eyeball test both lower left and right sides would have to be cut from the nosebowl and somehow a boxier shape created. I have never worked with fiberglass so really don't want to undertake that unless absoluely necessary. Thre must be some boxy type nosebowls out there...although I've been searching and haven't found one so far. Thanks |
#5
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On Feb 4, 12:30*pm, DonMorrisey wrote:
Howdy, Where would I find these "blister fairings"??... You make them, using any of a wide variety of tools, materials, and methods. My favorite method for small blisters is to constrain a nylon or Visqueen membrane using double-sided tape and whatever else is handy, inflate it with a few PSI of air, and lay up a few plies of fiberglass over the resulting bulge. Fill to shape, file to fit, sand smooth, and paint to hide. ...Although I have a feeling the interference is too significant to cure with those. *Just giving it the eyeball test both lower left and right sides would have to be cut from the nosebowl and somehow a boxier shape created... Are we just talking about just the fiberglass MC-3 nosebowl here, or are we talking about the nosebowl and lower cowl? I am hard-pressed to see how any exhaust on an O-235 would get very far outside the envelope of just the MC-3 bowl. I suspect that what you might mean is that the exhaust system gets outside the envelope of a lower cowl that would be formed by a ruled surface extended between the lower half of the MC-3 nosebowl and the firewall. Is that it, or am I off-base on that guess? Looking at this picture of your engine, I can see that the PowerFlow system is indeed a pretty tall exhaust system: http://www.donsbushcaddy.com/sitebui...ingO235L2C.jpg That's one of the reasons I was never a particular fan of the PowerFlow. Their installations seems sort of clunky, and they have that huge muffler hanging way out in the breeze. I'm far more partial to the Vetterman systems common on the RV-series airplanes: http://vettermanexhaust.com/ Thanks, Bob K. |
#6
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DonMorrisey wrote:
I'd suggest considering just cutting away the offending portions and installing one or more blister fairings as necessary to clear the revised exhaust system. I agree with this idea.. Howdy, Where would I find these "blister fairings"?? Although I have a feeling the interference is too significant to cure with those. Just giving it the eyeball test both lower left and right sides would have to be cut from the nosebowl and somehow a boxier shape created. I have never worked with fiberglass so really don't want to undertake that unless absoluely necessary. Thre must be some boxy type nosebowls out there...although I've been searching and haven't found one so far. Thanks Well, the front part of the blister might be from a 2 or 3 liter Coke bottle. I use Dr. Pepper bottles myself. The after part can be anything that makes the shape you want. Wood, metal, plastic, bondo, plaster of paris, etc. What's I'm recommending here is a male mold that the parts can be made on. -- Richard Lamb http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/ "The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop, at late or early hour... Now is the only time you own. Live, love, toil with a will. Place no faith in time. For the clock may soon be still." |
#7
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DonMorrisey wrote:
I'd suggest considering just cutting away the offending portions and installing one or more blister fairings as necessary to clear the revised exhaust system. I agree with this idea.. Howdy, Where would I find these "blister fairings"?? Although I have a feeling the interference is too significant to cure with those. Just giving it the eyeball test both lower left and right sides would have to be cut from the nosebowl and somehow a boxier shape created. I have never worked with fiberglass so really don't want to undertake that unless absoluely necessary. Thre must be some boxy type nosebowls out there...although I've been searching and haven't found one so far. Thanks Fiberglass work isn't terribly tough. It might be a bit itchy at times, but it isn't THAT bad ![]() |
#8
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![]() I suspect that what you might mean is that the exhaust system gets outside the envelope of a lower cowl that would be formed by a ruled surface extended between the lower half of the MC-3 nosebowl and the firewall. Is that it, or am I off-base on that guess? Bob, The quote above is exactly the problem, hence the need for a more rectangular nosebowl. So what I'm really after is direction on where I may find a nosebowl that isn't crescent shaped on the bottom??? Thanks. Don... |
#9
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On Feb 4, 5:02*pm, DonMorrisey wrote:
So what I'm really after is direction on where I may find a nosebowl that isn't crescent shaped on the bottom??? Ah, right. I'd start by looking at other airplanes that use that particular model of exhaust system, and see what they use for a cowling. It might be that the nose bowl of a PA-28 would fit, I seem to recall it as pretty tall. If something like that doesn't work, you will probably end up making an entire cowling, including nosebowl, from scratch or nearly so. Well, that's not actually what I'd do. I'd probably flog that exhaust system on eBay and go with a different system that fits into a tighter cowl. I just don't see the point in adding so extra frontal area and volume to the cowling for an exhaust system with little if any benefit over other systems available for experimental airplanes. But that's just me. Thanks again, Bob K. |
#10
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On Feb 5, 5:30*pm, DonMorrisey wrote:
Well that's the great thing about experimental aviation, we can agree to disagree. *Powerflow Exhaust systems are proven to add considerable power... I'd like to see a credible cite for that rather sweeping assertion. The way I understand the situation, the PowerFlow exhaust restores power detracted by the distinctly suboptimal exhaust installations used in a variety of certificated airplanes such as PA-28, AA5B, and C-172. Further, the system is STC'd so the installation paperwork is minimal. However, I don't think that there is any data to suggest that the PowerFlow holds any measurable advantage over a Vetterman or similar crossover system as found on a typical experimental airplane. Thanks again, Bob K. |
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