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#61
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![]() "Ken Finney" wrote And the O-200 model "D" should have "at least a 25 pound weight reduction" over previous models. Really? What do you think they are planning to do, to lighten it up that much? (or any) -- Jim in NC |
#62
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Morgans wrote:
"Jim Stewart" wrote It can run at 5800 rpm, but it depends on your prop pitch. My CTSW never exceeds 5100-5200 on full throttle climbout and cruises just wonderfully at 90-95 knots and 4200 rpm or so. It just sounds wrong to me, to hear an engine running a sustained 5800 RPM. I do want to go 120 knots though, so if that means it has to run 5800 RPM, it is a big turn-off for me. Just to clarify, the 912 is rated for 5800 rpm for 5 minutes, 5500 continuous. You know how sometimes people have a hang-up, for no good reason, but there is a reason? That is me and Rotax. We had a SeaDoo that had a rotax (I forgot now) I think around 600 cc engine. It was a piece of crap, from start to end. You fix one thing, and there was another problem. Lots of money flushed down into that hole in the water. Ended up getting a new short block. Ran it for about a year, with some improvement in reliability, but not much. I got it running fairly good and sold it. I told the new buyers about its questionable reliability (so I could sleep nights), but they still wanted it. It was a deal. All I can add is that 2 strokes are 2 strokes and 4 strokes are 4 strokes. I'd never be comfortable being pulled through the air with a 2 stroke unless I had a chute and a place to make an emergency landing. Now, I KNOW that the 912 is a completely different beast than that 586 (or whatever) 2 stroke, but I can never imagine getting into a plane with an engine that is made by the same company. Not logical, but just the same, my mind is over ruling my brain! or something like that Well, your attitude is justified. I like the 912. Behaves like a big electric motor for me. |
#63
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Update: 416 orders as of the end of the day on Tuesday the 24th.
I talked to the sales folks today, and learned that the yoke is in fact a Stick, and works as one would expect - it just happens to be mounted under the panel instead of on the floor. The twist movement evident in the demonstrator will probably be gone in the real thing. BTW the flight controls are not connected in the demonstrator and are fixed in position (the stick moves but does nothing). I tried it on for size again and found it comfortable (plenty of headroom and elbow room), but no easier to get into or out of. According to the salesman, if I ordered one today I would probably take delivery in 2010. That's a long wait. David Johnson |
#64
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![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote Is the prop RPM in cruise really any lower than a Conti? Most reduction units are simply to get the prop RPM low enough to decent efficiency and seldom get much lower than a direct drive airplane engine. The reduction gear ratio on the 912S is 1:2.43. This means a prop RPM of 2386 rpm at max power and around 2000-2100 rpm in cruise. Very sweet and efficient. |
#65
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![]() "buttman" wrote Well I've never flown any of those planes. All the high wings I've ever flown have always had electrical flaps, and the only mechanical flapped plane I've flown was a low wing. I didn't think it was possible to have a cable or a shaft go through the floor, up the sides of the door, then across the roof. Well, high wing airplanes do have ailerons, and somehow the designers manage that control linkage. Flaps control linkages are in principle no different, in fact they may be easier to implement. |
#66
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![]() "Morgans" wrote It just sounds wrong to me, to hear an engine running a sustained 5800 RPM. I do want to go 120 knots though, so if that means it has to run 5800 RPM, it is a big turn-off for me. Well, if you want to compare apples to apples, remember the Conti has to run at 2750 rpm in that situation. |
#67
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Dave,
Update: 416 orders as of the end of the day on Tuesday the 24th. Millions of flies... -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#68
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Snowbird wrote:
"Matt Whiting" wrote Is the prop RPM in cruise really any lower than a Conti? Most reduction units are simply to get the prop RPM low enough to decent efficiency and seldom get much lower than a direct drive airplane engine. The reduction gear ratio on the 912S is 1:2.43. This means a prop RPM of 2386 rpm at max power and around 2000-2100 rpm in cruise. Very sweet and efficient. I don't have the efficiency curves handy. That sounds pretty slow for a small diameter prop. Matt |
#69
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![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote Makes a lot of sense to me. You need two bottles for the input fluids and two more for the output fluids. 2 + 2 = 4 so I'd say Cessna was just planning ahead! :-) Is anyone else having a problem of posts repeating themselves a few days after the original post? I suspect that it is on my end, but I don't even know where to start looking. This post came on the 22nd, and it reappeared again today. I am getting this type of thing 20 or 30 times per day. I just switched computers, while mine is on loan. Anyone have any ideas? Using OE on a XP machine. Charter Cable is my service provider. -- Jim in NC |
#70
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message ... "Matt Whiting" wrote Makes a lot of sense to me. You need two bottles for the input fluids and two more for the output fluids. 2 + 2 = 4 so I'd say Cessna was just planning ahead! :-) Is anyone else having a problem of posts repeating themselves a few days after the original post? I suspect that it is on my end, but I don't even know where to start looking. This post came on the 22nd, and it reappeared again today. I am getting this type of thing 20 or 30 times per day. I just switched computers, while mine is on loan. Anyone have any ideas? Using OE on a XP machine. Charter Cable is my service provider. -- Jim in NC I'm getting it too. nntp.charter.net Al G |
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