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#11
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Bruce,
Well, now that you know the answer, why not share it with us? On Tue, 19 Aug 2003 03:56:15 +0000, Bruce A. Frank wrote: Cy, We are all here to learn...well some of us are. Do you know have the energy to elaborate as to why? Or do you just enjoy being abrupt? I do know the answer now because Veeduber went to the trouble to privately email me and explain the differences between the engine designs. You had a chance to enlighten others here on RAH. I am sure there would have been one or two who would have appreciated a more complete answer. Cy Galley wrote: In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... The method that I have used on automotive engines is to take an old distributor shaft with no cam gear on it. Remove the distributor from the engine block, chuck the old shaft in a 1/2 drill, stick it down the shaft hole until it engages the oil pump and spin away. I have been able to develop full oil pressure on new engines that way. Would a similar concept work on a magneto shaft hole? -- Kevin Horton Ottawa |
#12
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Bruce that doesn't work because the oil pump on an aircraft engine is
separate from the magneto drive gear. You can't get the aircraft oil pump turning without turning the crankshaft. "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... Cy, We are all here to learn...well some of us are. Do you know have the energy to elaborate as to why? Or do you just enjoy being abrupt? I do know the answer now because Veeduber went to the trouble to privately email me and explain the differences between the engine designs. You had a chance to enlighten others here on RAH. I am sure there would have been one or two who would have appreciated a more complete answer. Cy Galley wrote: In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... The method that I have used on automotive engines is to take an old distributor shaft with no cam gear on it. Remove the distributor from the engine block, chuck the old shaft in a 1/2 drill, stick it down the shaft hole until it engages the oil pump and spin away. I have been able to develop full oil pressure on new engines that way. Would a similar concept work on a magneto shaft hole? Dave Hyde wrote: David O wrote: Lycoming's service instruction 1241c (still active) addresses the subject of pre-oiling after overhaul, Thanks to all - I have the service instruction, I was looking for other ideas on pressurizing the system. Bought a sprayer today, if it works I'll use it, if not I'll just cold-crank the engine. Acro/tailwheel refresher starts tomorrow. Dave 'one-armed paperhanger' Hyde -- Bruce A. Frank, Editor "Ford 3.8/4.2L Engine and V-6 STOL Homebuilt Aircraft Newsletter" | Publishing interesting material| | on all aspects of alternative | | engines and homebuilt aircraft.| |
#13
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In the automotive engine the same gear on the cam drives the distributor and
the oil pump. It is so designed that the oil pump is driven by a tang off the distributor shaft but the gear is on the distributor end. Removing the distributor, removes the gear drive and also disconnects the oil pump drive. The oil pump can then be driven by a shaft independently of the cam. On the other hand the mag is driven by a gear train off the cam and the oil pump is driven by its own dedicated gear. Removing the mag does not remove or disconnect the oil pump drive so that it can be driven by a mechanical source outside the engine. The configuration for driving the oil pump is completely different. Yes, I have lost the oil pump drive in an automotive setup and still had proper ignition. If you lose the distributor drive, then you would also lose your oil pump. Since the aircraft engine is designed differently with a different drive of the oil pump, this cannot happen. You can lose the ignition and still have oil pressure. But you cannot prime the oil system in an aircraft engine via the mag drive unless you turn the entire engine. Much easier to turn the prop or starter. In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... Cy, We are all here to learn...well some of us are. Do you know have the energy to elaborate as to why? Or do you just enjoy being abrupt? I do know the answer now because Veeduber went to the trouble to privately email me and explain the differences between the engine designs. You had a chance to enlighten others here on RAH. I am sure there would have been one or two who would have appreciated a more complete answer. Cy Galley wrote: In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... The method that I have used on automotive engines is to take an old distributor shaft with no cam gear on it. Remove the distributor from the engine block, chuck the old shaft in a 1/2 drill, stick it down the shaft hole until it engages the oil pump and spin away. I have been able to develop full oil pressure on new engines that way. Would a similar concept work on a magneto shaft hole? Dave Hyde wrote: David O wrote: Lycoming's service instruction 1241c (still active) addresses the subject of pre-oiling after overhaul, Thanks to all - I have the service instruction, I was looking for other ideas on pressurizing the system. Bought a sprayer today, if it works I'll use it, if not I'll just cold-crank the engine. Acro/tailwheel refresher starts tomorrow. Dave 'one-armed paperhanger' Hyde -- Bruce A. Frank, Editor "Ford 3.8/4.2L Engine and V-6 STOL Homebuilt Aircraft Newsletter" | Publishing interesting material| | on all aspects of alternative | | engines and homebuilt aircraft.| |
#14
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Gee, BOb, I don't "KNOW" I have just received a simple explanation. Some
of the guys here are intimately involved with assembly of aviation engines. I am not Barnyard BOb -- wrote: "Bruce A. Frank" wrote: The method that I have used on automotive engines is to take an old distributor shaft with no cam gear on it. Remove the distributor from the engine block, chuck the old shaft in a 1/2 drill, stick it down the shaft hole until it engages the oil pump and spin away. I have been able to develop full oil pressure on new engines that way. Would a similar concept work on a magneto shaft hole? Cy Galley wrote: In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" hypocritically? whines: Cy, We are all here to learn...well some of us are. Do you know have the .................................................. ...................................^^^^^ energy to elaborate as to why? Or do you just enjoy being abrupt? I do know the answer now because Veeduber went to the trouble to privately email me and explain the differences between the engine designs. You had a chance to enlighten others here on RAH. I am sure there would have been one or two who would have appreciated a more complete answer. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Sheesh. And now, you just fumbled the knowledge ball, too, for those who awaited a more complete answer. Where is YOUR concern for the anxious masses, yearning to be 'enlightened' and free of ignorance?. FWIW.... I would have done the same as Cy with a simple NO, but that is expected of me... but, not YOU. sniff I guess the world really is going to hell in a handbasket. P.S. No need to tell me why the answer is 'NO'. I already know. But, you know that.... NO? Barnyard BOb -- now, what part of no doesn't anyone understand? -- Bruce A. Frank, Editor "Ford 3.8/4.2L Engine and V-6 STOL Homebuilt Aircraft Newsletter" | Publishing interesting material| | on all aspects of alternative | | engines and homebuilt aircraft.| *------------------------------**----* \(-o-)/ AIRCRAFT PROJECTS CO. \___/ Manufacturing parts & pieces / \ for homebuilt aircraft, 0 0 TIG welding While trying to find the time to finish mine. |
#15
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Thank you. That was more in-depth than I could have conveyed trying to
restate what Veeduber had told me. Cy Galley wrote: In the automotive engine the same gear on the cam drives the distributor and the oil pump. It is so designed that the oil pump is driven by a tang off the distributor shaft but the gear is on the distributor end. Removing the distributor, removes the gear drive and also disconnects the oil pump drive. The oil pump can then be driven by a shaft independently of the cam. On the other hand the mag is driven by a gear train off the cam and the oil pump is driven by its own dedicated gear. Removing the mag does not remove or disconnect the oil pump drive so that it can be driven by a mechanical source outside the engine. The configuration for driving the oil pump is completely different. Yes, I have lost the oil pump drive in an automotive setup and still had proper ignition. If you lose the distributor drive, then you would also lose your oil pump. Since the aircraft engine is designed differently with a different drive of the oil pump, this cannot happen. You can lose the ignition and still have oil pressure. But you cannot prime the oil system in an aircraft engine via the mag drive unless you turn the entire engine. Much easier to turn the prop or starter. In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... Cy, We are all here to learn...well some of us are. Do you know have the energy to elaborate as to why? Or do you just enjoy being abrupt? I do know the answer now because Veeduber went to the trouble to privately email me and explain the differences between the engine designs. You had a chance to enlighten others here on RAH. I am sure there would have been one or two who would have appreciated a more complete answer. Cy Galley wrote: In a word NO! "Bruce A. Frank" wrote in message ... The method that I have used on automotive engines is to take an old distributor shaft with no cam gear on it. Remove the distributor from the engine block, chuck the old shaft in a 1/2 drill, stick it down the shaft hole until it engages the oil pump and spin away. I have been able to develop full oil pressure on new engines that way. Would a similar concept work on a magneto shaft hole? Dave Hyde wrote: David O wrote: Lycoming's service instruction 1241c (still active) addresses the subject of pre-oiling after overhaul, Thanks to all - I have the service instruction, I was looking for other ideas on pressurizing the system. Bought a sprayer today, if it works I'll use it, if not I'll just cold-crank the engine. Acro/tailwheel refresher starts tomorrow. Dave 'one-armed paperhanger' Hyde -- Bruce A. Frank |
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