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#71
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Sorry Bill, but I don't see how the drive shaft would (or could)
reduce engine vibration. It _might_ reduce drive shaft harmonic responses. Or it might actually increase harmonic responses. Too many variables to call it without specifics. But, in general, heavier parts respond to higher frequencies. Lighter parts are more likely to respond to lower (closer to engine frequencies. Not much help today, am I... Richard |
#72
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![]() Richard Lamb wrote: Copy that, Corky. One thing that doesn't get discussed much is the idea of direct drive auto conversions. The VW is usually done that way, and I know of one V8 setup that runs direct drive. Direct drive eliminates the many advantages of properly geared installations, such as crank protection against prop impacts or stoppages, the offset in crank to propeller line which enables the engine to sit lower in the airframe, and the lower noise of slower turning propellers. In many installations it is possible to start and run the engine without a propeller attached, making maintenance and troubleshooting easier. |
#73
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#74
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On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 13:47:22 -0600, "Montblack"
wrote: Did so :-) "The engine must pass 600 cycles without any sign of failure. We typically run 1200 cycles and a probe test will run 1600 cycles. That's a (sic) excellent gasket killer test. Head gaskets are the first to fail because of the rapid expansion and contraction." When I transcribed the article originally, I put the (sic) in at that point to denote that "a" is incorrect grammar in that sentence. It should have been "an". Corky Scott |
#75
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On 16 Nov 2005 14:24:21 -0800, "Richard Lamb"
wrote: One thing that doesn't get discussed much is the idea of direct drive auto conversions. The VW is usually done that way, and I know of one V8 setup that runs direct drive. In my opinion, a direct drive setup for an auto conversion should have some kind of crank support bolted on to the engine block. Something that basically becomes the drive flange and is designed to withstand the kind of thrust loads that any propeller will apply to the end of the crank. If you look at direct drive engines built to turn props, the end that has the prop flange usually has a very long bearing surface so that the prop flange has support. Auto engines aren't designed to have props bolted to the drive end, they are designed to transmit power to a drive shaft that is supported so that no side loads are imposed on the crank. That being the case, the end bearing simply isn't adaquate to support a prop. In my opinion. I've seen bolt-on hubs that add this bearing support. At a minimum I'd want one if I was to attempt a direct drive auto engine. Replica fighters and pursuits are particulary good examples of airplanes that require a heavy engine in order to properly balance the center of gravity. WWI pursuits with liquid cooled engines had heavy engines and not that much power. But they swung enormous props compared to today's similar powered aircraft engines. They often were redlined at only 1500 to 1800 rpm. The prop had to have a large diameter and also have a wide cord in order to produce the necessary thrust at those rpms. In order to produce 180 hp at only 1800 rpm, given that they were very low compression and unsupercharged, they had a large displacement. Corky Scott |
#76
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"The engine must pass 600 cycles without any sign of failure. We
typically run 1200 cycles and a probe test will run 1600 cycles. That's a (sic) excellent gasket killer test. Head gaskets are the first to fail because of the rapid expansion and contraction." ("Charles K. Scott" wrote) When I transcribed the article originally, I put the (sic) in at that point to denote that "a" is incorrect grammar in that sentence. It should have been "an". Ok. Good grammar catch. Now, back to the probe test .....What is it? Just curious - How is it different from the 600 or 1200 cycle tests that it runs to 1600 cycles? Am I dense? (Here's the whole paragraph, again) Thermal cycle tests are run to define engine capability under cold weather condition. We run the engine at full throttle at 4000 RPM, bring it down to idle, stop it, switch the coolant valves to drain the hot coolant, pump the chilled coolant from the chiller until the metal temperature stabilizes at 0 degrees F. Frost forms on the outside of the block, as the cold coolant rushes into the engine. When it stabilizes at 0 F, we motor the engine, start it, come to full throttle at 4400 RPM, the valves switch and the coolant temperature starts to climb. It climbs back up to 260 degrees F. It takes 10 -11 minutes to complete one cycle. The engine must pass 600 cycles without any sign of failure. We typically run 1200 cycles and a probe test will run 1600 cycles. That's a (sic) excellent gasket killer test. Head gaskets are the first to fail because of the rapid expansion and contraction. Montblack Former '89 Probe owner |
#77
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![]() Richard Lamb wrote: snip Like it or not, (and FAA blessings aside) the aircraft engines we love to hate (or hate to love?) evolved to fill that particular niche - and do it pretty well - all things considered. That's just it. They have not evolved. They are like the coelecanth, which lives, but only in an isolated world. I have on my wall a picture of an early Bonanza with a woman standing in the door. Most people do not recognize her, even though she is perhaps the most famous woman in the world, even 43+ years after her death. The point is if you went to A&P school when that picture was taken, or when she died 15 years later, you could go out to the Beech plant and see a A36 Bonanza and be essentially qualified to work on every system. The engine would be almost identical except slightly bigger. The ignition system is the same heavy high tension magnetoes, as used on tractors and other farm equipment. The fuel injection replaces the carburetor, biut it's the same old Hilborn style if they are using Continentals. Lycs have the RSA system which was not invented in 1946 but pretty well known in '62 if I recall correctly. Can you imagine a young car mechanic of 1945 shown a 2005 automobile? The coelecanth, a good name for the museum piece free air cooled split case bolt-on-cylinder LyCon. |
#78
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coelecanth, huh? I had to look that one up.
(And then I thought you were talking about me - not the engines! :^) I'd be willing to bet that the reason this fish has remained unchanged for a gazillion years is that it fits the enviornment perfectly - AND the enviornment that it fits so well has not changed either. Your argument is, perhaps, that government regulation has created an unchangable enviornment - causing stagnated development? Can't argue much against that. I flew a Rotax 912 a while back. Tiny little thing that looks more like a toy than an aircraft engine. But it runs very smoothly, turns a whopping big prop, and - all in all - seems to be a very sucessful engine. If I could only afford one... Richard |
#79
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![]() "Charles K. Scott" wrote When I transcribed the article originally, I put the (sic) in at that point to denote that "a" is incorrect grammar in that sentence. What does the (sic) stand for? I have seen it, and understand what it is trying to do, but never have heard what the root of the meaning is. -- Jim in NC |
#80
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When I transcribed the article originally, I put the (sic) in at that
point to denote that "a" is incorrect grammar in that sentence. ("Morgans" wrote) What does the (sic) stand for? I have seen it, and understand what it is trying to do, but never have heard what the root of the meaning is. http://www.askoxford.com/asktheexperts/faq/usage/sic http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Writing/s.html From this link: Sic. Apart from necessary omissions and interpolations, your quotations should always be exact, and any departures from the original should be clearly indicated with ellipses or brackets. Sometimes, though, you may have to quote something that looks downright wrong. In these cases, it's traditional to signal to your readers that the oddities are really in the original, and not your mistake. The signal is "[sic]": square brackets for an interpolation, and the Latin word sic, "thus, this way." (Since it's a foreign word, it's always in italics; since it's a whole word and not an abbreviation, it gets no period.) It amounts to saying, "It really is this way, so don't blame me." George Eliot was a woman: if someone you quote gets it wrong, as in "George Eliot's late fiction shows major advances over his earlier works," you might signal it thus: "George Eliot's late fiction shows major advances over his [sic] earlier works." Old spellings were often variable: if your source spells the name Shakspear, you might point out with a [sic] that it really appears that way in the original. Don't use sic to show off with gotchas. Too many writers sic sics on the authors they quote just to show they spotted a trivial error. If your audience is unlikely to be confused, don't draw attention to minor booboos. [Entry added 3 November 2000.] Montblack |
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