Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #15791
From: Jerry Hey <j-winddesigns@thegrid.net>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Dynos II (was Re: changed to Octane)
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2005 14:57:15 -0500
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Dave PowerSports site is up and running. I just checked it. The address is http://powersportaviation.com I have the photos and comments from ACRE. If you have not seen them, let me know. Jerry

P.S. Is there a size limit on each e-mail? If I want to send four or five jpegs is that possible?



On Saturday, January 22, 2005, at 02:38 PM, David Staten wrote:

The powersport website is offline (as mentioned in the other thread I started).. and I am not sure when that exactly happened. So, this truck axle dyno sounds somewhat attractive..
 
Rather than making this "flex plate" adapter, it seems workable to put the PSRU onto the airframe (Tracy's RD 1B) and mount a u-joint/flange on the axle shaft to couple to the PSRU flange.
 
I need to see what I can come up with parts wise (junkyard I guess) but the instrumentation end would be interesting.
 
Dave

Dale Rogers wrote:

Lynn Hanover < Lehanover@aol.com > wrote:



Paul Yaw cannot charge enough for dyno time. If he stops work on his engines
to rig up a customer built engine, it will take a bunch of time and then there
is the possibility that the outside engine is crap and disintigrates on the
dyno. Then what?
...
Plus the liability if your project dies on his dyno.



Lynn,

Those two parts, I understand. However ...



So there is no way a popular engine builder can take time out from what he's
up to and blow 8 hours of his and his dyno's time. Or at least you couldn't
afford it if he would.
...
You pay him at least for 8 hours to get less than one hour of data and tuning
if it doesn't blow up.



A year ago, when Paul gave me a quick tour of his newly
reconstituted shop (after moving from Tucson to Phoenix)
he actually quoted me a figure for dyno time - basically
describing, as you said, that a session would have to be
scheduled for at least six hours. I figured once I got
the engine built and run in, it would be worth $800 to get
confirmation that I was getting the ponies I was seeking.
Perhaps he thought I was going to buy an engine from him?
I don't think so - considering that I started out asking
about sources for some parts I needed, and talked about
the engine I was building for my "off-road" vehicle.

I'm assuming that this is a policy change due to his shop
being busy enough now, that he no longer needs the income
from taking in outside work.



A simple chassis dyno is ...



Thank you very much for the idea. It isn't directly
applicable to my situation, because I don't have a car
to use as a "chassis" test bed. However, it did give me an
idea - using a gang of disc brake assemblies, for creating
an engine dyno that might come in at under $1000.
(Actually, a direct coupling to the truck rear-end might
do the job - if the brakes are big enough and I can figure
a way to take the strain reading directly from the axel
housing.)

Dale R.
COZY MkIV #1254





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