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#41
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In article .com,
" wrote: On-Condition wrote: wrote: I'd be interested in reading anything on the practice of using diesel and biodiesel in turbines your refering too. Did you read this somewhere, or is that from experience? Have you actually heard of Biodiesel being used in jets? Or is your reference to biodiesel gelling related to cars? The first time I heard of biodiesel was in a documentary about some Halifax buses. They use fisheries byproducts. They have had to deal with gelling, though Halifax winters are not all that cold. To get a little OT, there is a lot of neat stuff being done right now with biomass hydrocarbons. (veggie oil, fish oil etc.) The bugaboo seems to be injector coking in direct injection engines, though actual experienced rate of coking from one motor to the next is a point of huge debate in the alternative fuel crowd these days. Indirect piston-pump injected engines will apparently run on straight veggie oil reasonably well with few ill effects or modifications. These guys are heating the oil and running straight to the motor. Apparently the added energy causes the long stranded molecules to burn cleaner which is what averts the coking. I'd be highly interested in seeing somebody do that with an allison 250 and what the results were. No knowledge or experience involving biodiesel in turbines, but winter diesel is/was being used by DHC6's in the artic about half of the time since turbine fuel is only available at the main bases. Their PT6's are in fact derated to 600 shp as suggested for another airplane type. I never saw any technical documentation on this, it being common practice. Regarding Hydraulic lock I was thinking more preventatively. Like going to the hanger once a week and walking through a few blades regardless of whether you were actually going flying. Though I would figure at 15/1 it would require much less oil to frag the engine than at 7.5/1. No doubt, but I think either ratio will suffice as soon as you start, especially with one of the inertial starters that just won't stop once engaged. Walking the props used to be mandatory in the military where even a desk gets a walkaround twice a day ;-) My point was that diesels start at 15/1 and gas engines are around 7/1 or 8/1 So oil leakage in a diesel should increase cylinder pressure way faster than it would in a gas engine. For example: an ounce of excess oil in a gas engine my increase the cylinder pressure by 10% or so, the same ounce in a diesel of the same displacement would increase the pressure by much more than 10%. At a higher pressure the mass of the air displaced by a constant uncompressable volume (the oil) increases. Obviously you don't have to fill the cylinder completely with oil to do a lot of damage. Just increase the pressure in the jug to the point were rings crack or bolts become fatigued. With the four strokes you walk the blades, the valves open and the oil that leaked past the lower rings dribbles into the exhaust stack. With the Zoche there is no valve, so once oil dribbles into the cylinders past the rings, how do you get it out? I would guess the only way to clear a lock or to prevent an over-pressure from a partial hydraulic lock would be to remove the injector and cycle the engine. Or perhaps the porting design prevents it? I don't know. Zoche is a 2-cycle engine, so there is no oil in the crankcase to leak into the cylinder. Actually, there is no airplane that has ever flown a Zoche, either, for that matter. He has been around since at least 1980 and has never flown the engine! I saw that there is a diesel CH701 flying with the engine out of a Mercedes Smart. I'd love to read more about that bird but haven't been able to find any good info. -Matt |
#42
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![]() wrote With the Zoche there is no valve, so once oil dribbles into the cylinders past the rings, how do you get it out? I would guess the only way to clear a lock or to prevent an over-pressure from a partial hydraulic lock would be to remove the injector and cycle the engine. You don't have to walk a prop through, that's for sure. First it will have to have a prop, and on an airplane. That has not happened yet, nor will it likely ever. Start looking at other engines, because if you wait for this one, you will grow old waiting. Legal disclaimer: Just my opinion, of course. g -- Jim in NC |
#43
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![]() Orval Fairbairn wrote: In article .com, " wrote: On-Condition wrote: wrote: SNIP Obviously you don't have to fill the cylinder completely with oil to do a lot of damage. Just increase the pressure in the jug to the point were rings crack or bolts become fatigued. With the four strokes you walk the blades, the valves open and the oil that leaked past the lower rings dribbles into the exhaust stack. With the Zoche there is no valve, so once oil dribbles into the cylinders past the rings, how do you get it out? I would guess the only way to clear a lock or to prevent an over-pressure from a partial hydraulic lock would be to remove the injector and cycle the engine. Or perhaps the porting design prevents it? I don't know. Zoche is a 2-cycle engine, so there is no oil in the crankcase to leak into the cylinder. Actually, there is no airplane that has ever flown a Zoche, either, for that matter. He has been around since at least 1980 and has never flown the engine! Err. You sure about that? It is a 2 stroke DIESEL. The fuel is directly injected into the cylinder, not passed through the crank case like gas 2 stroke designs. So if there is no oil or fuel in the crankcase, how is it lubricated? Ditto on the engine being vapor-ware. I started another thread on small diesels accordingly. I'm interested in Fords TDCi engine and the Mercedes smart diesel. I found 2 light aircraft in germany using the smart engine, but I haven't found any specs on it as a crate engine yet. -Matt SNIP |
#44
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![]() "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() In article .com, " wrote: Zoche is a 2-cycle engine, so there is no oil in the crankcase to leak into the cylinder. Actually, there is no airplane that has ever flown a Zoche, either, for that matter. He has been around since at least 1980 and has never flown the engine! The Zoche does have oil in the crankcase. All the 2-stroke diesels currently under development use supercharger/turbochargers to force air into the cylinders and not crankcase pumping so the crankcase contains oil just like a 4-stroke. I suspect that a problem with the Zoche is that it uses 'slipper rods', 4 of which connect with a single crank journal instead of the 'master/slave' rod system. This leaves only a small contact area at the rod big end. Diesel bottom ends need to be very robust and this doesn't sound like it is. Bill Daniels |
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#46
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#47
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On Mon, 26 Sep 2005 18:51:32 GMT, "Michael Pilla"
wrote: wrote in message .. . On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 21:01:34 GMT, (me) wrote: Just what is an "inertial starter"? SNIP Lots of early engines used inertial starters because very few had They had a very distinctive sound. Sorta like a dual pitch whine that dropped abrupty when the engine clutched in. Many of the old movies used that sound for aircraft engines starting that didn't even have inertial starters. I think they thought all airplane engines back then were supposed to sound that way. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#48
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Not all engines with inertial starters were hand cranked. Some used an
electric motor to operate the inertial flywheel i.e T6/SNJ, TBF/TBM, and I believe even some DC3/C47. Skip Schipper |
#49
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This goes way back to the early 50's, but I seem to remember the R985 on a
BT-13 with an inertia starter. You turned the switch to "energize" and listened to the nice music, then to "engage" and listened to even nicer music. Finally you had the agallon---agallon--agallon---idle of the R985 Paul N1431A " Not all engines with inertial starters were hand cranked. Some used an electric motor to operate the inertial flywheel i.e T6/SNJ, TBF/TBM, and I believe even some DC3/C47. Skip Schipper |
#50
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Tri-Pacer wrote:
This goes way back to the early 50's, but I seem to remember the R985 on a BT-13 with an inertia starter. You turned the switch to "energize" and listened to the nice music, then to "engage" and listened to even nicer music. Finally you had the agallon---agallon--agallon---idle of the R985 Paul N1431A That is the best description of that sound I have ever come across. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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