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#41
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Go to the main page http://www.greatplainsas.com and just above the picture
of a KR1 there's "Download 2006 Catalog Here". Look page 7 (Reduction Drive & Rear Drive Engine Specifications) and you will find following information: Type 1 - Liquid Reduction 2180 Take off HP, RPM MAX 120 @ 4400 Continuous HP, RPM 84 @ 3200 Weight in Pounds 200 (The maximum allowed continuous power setting is 70%) JP "Lou" wrote in groups.com... Chris, Have you come across the total weight? I can't seem to find it. Lou |
#42
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JP wrote:
Go to the main page http://www.greatplainsas.com and just above the picture of a KR1 there's "Download 2006 Catalog Here". Look page 7 (Reduction Drive & Rear Drive Engine Specifications) and you will find following information: Type 1 - Liquid Reduction 2180 Take off HP, RPM MAX 120 @ 4400 Continuous HP, RPM 84 @ 3200 Weight in Pounds 200 Oh, Horse Feathers... If it's a VW core with liquid cooled heads - it AIN'T no type 1 VW. It is quite something else... More like a drag motor - fitted out with a prop reducer. At 120 HP, I'll lay odds it will not last long either. The VW head studs won't take that for long without pulling out of the case. And - just for the record - my electric start 2180 Air Cooled type 1 engine weighed 208 pounds. So, before was all get real excited.... |
#43
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Ok, Caveman, slow down before you lose another hair. I was very
interested in the total weight. If your 2180 is 208 and a corvair is around the same I can't see myself going the VW route. A corvair can get me 110 hp on 6 cyl. This has got to be a smoother engine for the same weight. Lou |
#44
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Lou wrote:
Ok, Caveman, slow down before you lose another hair. I was very interested in the total weight. If your 2180 is 208 and a corvair is around the same I can't see myself going the VW route. A corvair can get me 110 hp on 6 cyl. This has got to be a smoother engine for the same weight. Lou Yeah, Lou. For 110 I'd rather try a Corvair too. But I think it would last longer at 80-90. I can't see the Corvair weighing any 208 pounds installed, either... 220 - 250, depending on what's involved. (Not a Pietenpol!) Just my opinion. as usual, YMMV... Richard (this message composed of 100% recycled electrons) |
#45
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Enough of that, lets move on, I made my point. Does anyone know if there are any other 100 HP engines which will turn a 96 inch wooden prop?
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#46
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![]() "Christopher" wrote in message ... Jim, Why do you persist, is your opinion attached to your ego? GO find the information yourself, you don't want to listen to me. I have. I believe it is you who is not listening. The output of the engine is over-stated, and the durability will not prove to be what you would hope for. It is simply too much power to pull out of an engine of that displacement, to get aircraft durability. Other engine manufacturers are doing the same type of thing, most notably some of the soob engine converters. Other people have stated that they do not believe in the stated claims of HP. There is no ego involved. If you want to use this engine, go ahead. Honestly, good luck. I will not join you. Where is there any ego involved in that? This is the last I will post on this thread. Good luck. I hope that you get wise, and listen and believe what I and others are saying. -- Jim in NC |
#47
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![]() Christopher wrote: ... I would give you more credit on this issue as a mechanic who has worked on the original air cooled engine with different jugs but I have gone to two other individuals who have actually tested *this* highly refined and modified engine themselves who have also done thrust measurements which could never have been produced without the available HP. Can you ask them for hard numbers on the thrust they measured, the horsepower they inferred from it, and the engine weight? If the HP/weight ratio is similar to aircraft engines designed from scratch then we shouldn't be so quick to dismiss it. A much higher weight efficiency would seem improbable though. -- FF |
#48
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#49
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Correction to my earlier message:
Of course the more efficient combustion makes it possible to REDUCE the ignition timing setting if preferred and this gives more safety margin. Sorry about this lapse JP "JP" wrote in ... Such liquid cooled cylinder heads offer some noteworthy benefits. I am not still saying that they are perfect or that this is an optimum VW engine solutions. These liquid cooled heads are equipped with dual sparkplugs. That means, the combustion process is initiated more rapidly and evenly. The engine in question does have two separate electronic ignition systems. They are superior to any conventional magneto ignition systems and much better than a point ignition system. That is why the ignition spark is more powerful and the matter comes back to the more rapid ignition process activation. I would imagine the combustion pressure build-up to be smoother and the combustion pressure to be higher. If so, then the smoother combustion may produce less than average shock loads to the cylinder studs and to the cylinder block and rotating parts in general. The combustion inside the cylinder is more complete and that is why the exhaust gas temperatures most probably are lower than usually seen, because less burning is taking place while the exhaust gas is moving to the exhaust system. That is why the heat load to the cylinder head exhaust ports is reduced (less head distortion load). The liquid cooled cylinder head runs cooler compared to an air cooled version. That is why the head is capable to absorb more efficiently heat flow from the exhaust valves and the valve temperatures are reduced. This is the major reason, why higher compression ratios can be used. That is also the reason, why more power can be taken out of the engine compared to the air (oil) cooled standard version. The liquid cooled head also absorbs more efficiently heat from the spark plugs, thus reducing (together with those reduced exhaust valve temperatures) a risk of pre-ignition under high power settings. The risk of detonation is reduced thanks to the dual spark plugs. This gives a possibility to increase ignition timing in order to get more power reliably. A cooler cylinder head may even act as a heat sink taking heat energy out of a cylinder barrel top part. Possibly there's even more explanations but these are the ideas surfacing right now. JP "Jim Carriere" wrote in et... wrote: I think the major reasons for the improved output are 1) the liquid cooling allows a higher compression ratio 2) improved heat dissipation over the well known cooling fin limitation on VW heads |
#50
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Christopher wrote:
Enough of that, lets move on, I made my point. Does anyone know if there are any other 100 HP engines which will turn a 96 inch wooden prop? Rotax 912 Pricy, but a real contender. http://www.zenithair.com/kit-data/zac-rtx912.html |
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