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Inside the Cowling Fire / Heat Detector?



 
 
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Old May 29th 04, 10:35 PM
George Sconyers
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I have done some work on this problem and was hoping to get some feedback
from the group.

Anyone have any idea what an acceptable price would be to an aircraft owner
for a cowling fire detection / prevention aid described as follows:

Aircraft Cowling Fire Detection / Prevention Aid:

- battery powered temperature sensor / transmitter module for placement in
the cowling.

- battery powered temperature receiver / digital display module for
monitoring in the cockpit.

- very small transmitter in cowling with a remote 400 degree F temperature
sensor that has a short braided wire cord and a 6" thin aluminum rod so it
can be easily positioned in the air stream exiting the cowling towards the
back of the engine somewhere along the bottom of the firewall.

- small receiver in cockpit (like little kitchen timers used for IFR
approach timing) displays cowling air temperature at the sensor and can be
set to alarm (blinks / sounds tones) when pilot selectable temperature is
reached.

- placed in the airplane by the owner, not connected to aircraft power
supply or other wiring, no permanent mounting bracket, just "stuck",
"clamped", or "wire tied" on just like a portable VFR GPS, portable VHF
radio, IFR approach (kitchen) timer, or a CD player not requiring a Form
337.

- sensor / transmitter, receiver / digital display / alarm, 4 AAA batteries,
combined weight less than 1 pound

- change AAA batteries at oil change / annual etc.

Any feedback on functionality or acceptable pricing appreciated.

George

"George Sconyers" wrote in message
y.com...
Does anyone know of detector available for small aircraft (not transport
aircraft / Part 135, 121) that can be installed in the cowling(s) to

detect
the presence of some condition (excessive heat, IR, etc.) that would lead

to
an in-flight fire? Examples of those conditions might include a failed
exhaust header gasket, loose exhaust component / fastener, growing hole in
the muffler or an exhaust pipe, or even a cracked cylinder.

A lot of real dangerous things can happen BETWEEN oil changes where they
could be easily spotted and it seems that such a detector could give a

pilot
a much better chance of getting an airplane on the ground before a fire

got
started by giving them some time to reduce power (which might prevent a

fire
altogether) and head for the nearest airport to check things out. It sure
seems it might be several minutes that failures like those above could be
detected, and detected before they begin to catch things in the cowling on
fire around them.

I have done some checking and transport aircraft, some helicopters, and

even
larger power boats have systems that detect excessive heat in their engine
compartments. Some discharge halon bottles, and some of those in boats

even
shutdown engines (clearly not advisable on single engine aircraft).

Anyone know of an "affordable" and light weight detector for small

aircraft
that might monitor the airflow near the bottom of the engine before it

exits
the cowling or perform some other monitoring function to detect a

condition
that could lead to an in-flight fire?

George





 




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