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David L wrote”
#4 caused only a reduction to normally aspirated power and a
skipped heart beat or two. No damage, no real need to land other than as
a precaution. No design flaw
or mechanical issue - just an underestimation on how tight to make the hose
clamp. (and believe me, they have to be very tight if there is no bead
under the hose.)
Actually, I would consider a hose
connection without a bead on any pressurized system; particularly if it gets hot,
as a design flaw.
Here’s another similar way to make
a bead. Clean the tube, wipe with acetone. Wrap a loop with .035 - .040 safety
wire. Make it tight and straight, then carefully cut, grind, whatever to
minimize any protrusion at the twist, just so it holds together. Carefully
cover the wire with JB weld. When cured, true up a bit with fine file if
needed.
When I did my cooling system (circa
2002?) I purchased an adjustable beading tool for a bit over $100. IIRC, it
worked on tubes about ½” to 1 ½”. I later sold it to someone on
this list for $100. Last year when I needed one I couldn’t anything like
it for anything near that price.
Al G
-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Ed Anderson
Sent: Monday, April
13, 2009 1:47 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Beading a
tube - sort of: [FlyRotary] Re: forced landings
Bill, here is something
you might try if you can not find, beg, or borrow a big expensive beading
machine.
Take some soft aluminum
rod of the size you want for a bead. Bend it around the tube and cut it
to a length where the ends of the rod meet around the tube. Position the
rod ring near the end of tube and clamp it in place. Then use some
of the HTS- 2000 aluminum brazing rod (other stuff may work, but this is the
only rod I’ve ever had any luck with) and a propane torch to braze
the rod on the tube. A bit of touch up with a fine file or sand paper and you
have your bead. A bit of work, but not that hard and if you don’t
have access to a beading machine one way to get the job done.
URL of site:
http://www.aluminumrepair.com/
Ed
From: Rotary
motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Bill Bradburry
Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 5:17
PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: forced
landings
Dave’s number 4
below brings up a question I have been pondering.
How do you put a bead on
the ends of aluminum tubing so the hose will not slip off???
My tubing is inch and a
quarter and probably 0.060 thick. Suggestions appreciated.
Thanks,
Bill B
From: Rotary
motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of David Leonard
Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 4:48
PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: forced
landings
Thanks for putting together this database. I
agree with you and Al G. that we should keep it to issues with the engine
and it's systems. But I also agree with John and Al W. that we should
somewhere include things that probably would have caused an in-flight failure,
especially when found on pre-flight, run-up or take off roll. That is
good stuff. Not the idiot-pilot-owner stuff like forgetting to attach the
return fuel line, but the alternator bracket and PSRU issues etc - that could
really help someone.
Similarly, just because it is in flight does not make
it newsworthy. Like the intake hose blow offs that John and I have both
experienced. Sure, something happened and you are damn sure going to
return to the airport and check it out even though you are pretty sure you know
what happened and it will not affect the safety of flight. OOps, didn't
tighten that hose tight enough.
In other words, I think Johns incident #1 is far more
significant than incident #4.
#1 caused actual damage to the engine AND he NEEDED to
land soon because of oil loss. Power produced was less than normally
aspirated power. This is an interesting mechanical possibility (that a
turbine blade somehow got BACK into the engine to bust the apex seal) and
something important to consider when designing a turbo install.
#4 caused only a reduction to normally aspirated
power and a skipped heart beat or two. No damage, no real need to land
other than as a precaution. No design flaw or mechanical issue - just an
underestimation on how tight to make the hose clamp. (and believe me, they have
to be very tight if there is no bead under the hose.)
--
David Leonard
Turbo Rotary RV-6 N4VY
http://N4VY.RotaryRoster.net
http://RotaryRoster.net
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 6:16 AM, Mark Steitle <msteitle@gmail.com> wrote:
I have decided to take Al's suggestion
and limit the criteria for the spreadsheet to basically include any
in-flight system failure which interrupts the planned flight and results in a
premature landing. Based on this, I will add #3 & #4 as well as the
one resulting from a ruptured coolant hose.
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 7:55 AM, David Leonard <wdleonard@gmail.com>
wrote:
Mark, And did you get these? Added by me and
John Slade under the wrong thread title:
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 5:15 PM, John Slade <jslade@canardaviation.com>
wrote:
Here's a few for the list, Mark,
1. Stock turbo bearings collapsed & took out apex seal. Flew home at
reduced power.
2. Fuel filer (sinstered bronze) looked clean but was restricting fuel flow.
Flew home on other tank.
3. Bad / intermittent contact on ignition timing sensor made engine run rough.
Landed normally and repaired.
4. Turbo hose blew off on take-off. Returned to land at reduced power.
John
------
Been there, done that. (the blown-off intake hose)
Also:
I have burned out 2 turbos. The first caused
precautionary/urgent landing at an airport pending shutting off fuel flow to
the turbo. The second, I flipped a turbo oil shut off switch and flew
1000NM to get home.
Had a fuel pump die in flight, switched to the other
and kept flying.(soft failure)
I had a bad injector enable switch causing rough
running during some phase one flying (after major change)... landed
normally
Forgot to re-connect fuel return line in engine bay after doing some
work. dumped a couple gallons of fuel onto the running engine until I
smelled gas and shut down the engine.. (never left the parking space - but it
could have been really bad.
Cracked alternator mount bracket found on pre-flight during phase one
testing. Would have lost cooling and alternator if it happened now.
PSRU sun gear pin broke from a backfire during run-up. Was able to taxi
back but would not have been able to fly.
This is good - broke a coolant line in flight and smelled coolant...
landed at nearby airport and taxied up to restaurant with steam spewing out of
the cowl. Me and my buddy calmly walked into the restaurant and had
breakfast. Afterward, we borrowed some tools and fixed the coolant
line. Went back into the restaurant to ask for 2 pitchers of water to put
in our plane. Continued ski trip to Mammoth. The end.
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Mark Steitle <msteitle@gmail.com>
wrote:
Thanks Bill,
With the addition of Bill's exciting adventure, and one of my own, we're up to
18 incidents in the database. These last two, along with Ed's brake fire,
and an oil coolant rupture, totals four incidents involving fires during ground
operations. Hopefully, everyone carries at least one fire extinguisher in
their airplane.
Mark S.
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Bill Schertz <wschertz@comcast.net>
wrote:
One other thing to watch out for --
This occurred during ground testing, but if it had happened in the air it would
have been a forced landing.
Well, I haven't heard of this
happening before -- I was ground running my engine to tune it with the
EM-2 and EC-2. Ran for almost an hour, at various rpm's to change the
manifold pressure and tweak the settings. Cooling working well, I had the top
cowling off to allow good exit area since I was tied down. Coolant pressure
about 14 psi as reported on the EM-2.
Engine was running good, took it up
to ~6000 rpm swinging a 76x76 Catto prop, when suddenly there was steam and fluid
on my windshield. Shut it down by killing power to the EC-2. Coolant
everywhere.
Got out and looked to diagnose the
problem -- NOT my plumbing. A FREEZE PLUG in the iron housing had blown
out. Rapid coolant dump.
Secondary effect -- Since I shut down
suddenly from full tilt, either the proximity of the cowl to the exhaust, or
possibly some of the coolant on the exhaust started a small fire on my cowl.
Put it out with extinguisher, but corner is charred.
--------------------------
Update since this incident:
All freeze plugs (7) on the engine have been replaced by Bruce Turrentine, and
he has inspected the engine. I am currently reinstalling it and getting ready
for more tuning exercises.
Bill
Schertz
KIS Cruiser #4045
N343BS
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday,
April 12, 2009 1:51 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary]
Re: forced landings
Charlie,
That's a very good point. I'm trying to stay away from assigning a
"cause" for whatever happened because I don't have all the
facts. I have a field that says "Explanation of Failure".
Hopefully, we can make statements as you suggest. Sometimes, even the FAA
gets it wrong, like the time they attributed the engine failure to the builder
removing the oil injection pump. Also, I doubt that we could all agree on
a "single cause" for each failure. Maybe it is due to a poor
weld, or wrong choice of material, or improper strain relief, or lack of heat
shielding, or a little of each. What I hope to accomplish is to point out
areas where we need to be more careful on how we design a particular part or
system.
List is at 16 now. Anyone else want to add a "dark and stormy
night" story to the list?
Mark
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 11:46 AM, Charlie England <ceengland@bellsouth.net>
wrote:
I think that it's just as important to understand the
real cause of the failure. In the case of the plastic fuel flow sensor, it's
highly unlikely that use of the plastic sensor caused the failure; it was the
use of plastic in the wrong area without any protection. The homebuilder's
knee-jerk reaction is to say 'no plastic sensors because that one melted', even
though there are tens of thousands of the same sensor in use in boating, a much
more severe environment.
Kind of like the canard builder who tried to put fuel in a wing built with
fuel-soluble foam. Obviously, it failed, but only because of the wrong
application of products, not the products themselves.
Charlie
From: al wick
<alwick@juno.com>
Sent: Sunday,
April 12, 2009 10:13:00 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: forced
landings
Absolutely excellent Mark. I'd encourage you to get
the year the incident occured too. That will be your proof of reduced risk from
things like this newsgroup.
Avoid the black and white approach: forced landing or
not forced. Because all things are shades of grey. Instead rate the severity.
So it's a 10 if the guy had to glide, it's a 1 if he did precautionary
landing. If you also explain what happened, then a reader can easily tell you
were objective in your rating.
The final piece is about how many flight hours, first
flights there were. Each year there are more engines flying, so way more likely
you will hear of incident. A wild assed guess is ok, if you just base the guess
on some facts. For example, you could check faa database and find 100 planes registered
with rotary engine in 2005. You can guess that equals 70 hours each. Even
though it's a wild assed guess, it will still be excellent predictor of change
over time. Each year you have the same "error". So your numbers WILL
reflect improvement.
More important than anything. If you can force your
self to say: "That same failure will happen to me". Particularly if
you can look at "contributing factors". Then you can dramatically
reduce personal risk. Good example: We had that guy that installed plastic fuel
flow sensor in fuel line. It melted, he died. Tracy just reported hot exhaust
caused fuel to boil out of carb. These have the same root cause. You don't
want to say:" I have efi, can't happen to me". You want to say:"
I expect heat will cause a failure. I'll put a thin ss shield here, with a bit
of fibrefax glued to back. So if muffler fails, it won't affect....."
Every forced landing had 10 little incidents in the
past that preceded it. Your risk isn't some new cause. It's 1 of those 10
incidents that you rationalized away, instead of saying:" that will happen
to me too."
Good stuff.
-al wick
Cozy IV with 3.0 liter Subaru
230+ hrs tt from Portland, Oregon
---------- Original Message ----------
From: Mark Steitle <msteitle@gmail.com>
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Gary Casey was [FlyRotary] Re: Rotary Engines
Date: Sun, 12 Apr 2009 06:45:24 -0500
Mike,
Has anyone ever tried to document the rotary incidents resulting in a forced
landing?
Here's what I recall from memory, so it likely is missing a few;
3 forced landings due to ruptured oil coolers
1 forced landing due to apex seal coming out of its slot
(rotor out of spec)
1 forced landing due to improper assembly of engine (seal
wedged between rotor & side housing)
1 forced landing on highway due to catastrophic overheating
of engine
2 forced landings (one fatal) due to probable fuel system
design flaw
1 forced landing on highway due to ingestion of FOD.
There were a few others, such as turbo failures which allowed for continued
operation at reduced power, so we may or may not wish to include those
here.
While a number of these incidents date back quite a few years, and we have made
excellent progress, it says to me that we still have room for improvement in
the peripheral department. The good news is that out of all of the incidents
listed above, none of them were caused by a true engine failure. That's
where the rotary has really earned my respect as a viable a/c engine.
Pay attention to the details!
Mark S.
This has been an interesting thread.
In the end, it doesnt really matter how many "major" parts you have -
even a minor failure can bring you down. While I believe the basic rotary
engine itself is more fault tolerant than a recip, the peripherals used in the
typical rotary install are a lot more complex than a typical recip install.
Since we rotary fliers dont have the benefit of 70 years worth of experience
flying behind the typical LyCon farm implement I think overall our odds are
considerably worse. Comes down to how well an individual engineer's his
installation and there is a tremendous amount of variation here.
The dependence on electronics in the
typical rotary install is a good example. I may be a
little sensitive to this issue since I've been trying to find an
intermittent glitch (2 times in 22 hours of engine testing).
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday,
April 11, 2009 7:31 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary]
Gary Casey was [FlyRotary] Re: Rotary Engines
Good analysis and logic,
Gary.
You’d make a good
addition to the “rotary community”. I have noticed over the
10 years I have been flying my rotary powered RV-6A that the problems have
decreased considerably, the success rate and completion rate has gone up and
first flights are now occurring without significant problems – even
cooling is OK {:>). I believe most of this improvement can be
attributed to folks sharing their knowledge, problems and solutions with others
- such as on this list.
I know that fewer parts
count is often touted as one of the rotary benefit – and while it is true
that the part count is lower, the most significant thing (in my opinion) is not
only does the lower part count help reliability (if it is not there – it
can not break), but if you look a the design of the eccentric shaft (for
example) you notice the absence of the jogs in a typical crankshaft and their
stress points. The thing is over 3” in diameter at some points and
does not have the same inertia loads born by a piston crankshaft. The
parts that are there are of very robust design. Finally, the rotary is (I
believe) more tolerant of damage and tends to fail “gradually and
gracefully”, it can take a licking and keep on ticking as the old saying
goes. Only extended time and numbers will provide the true MTBF for the
rotary, but I believe it looks very promising.
Failure of rotary engines
are extremely rare, but unfortunately, as with many alternative engine
installations, auxiliary subsystems such as fuel and ignition frequently being
one-off designs have been the cause of most failures – with probably fuel
the prime culprit. The good news is that for some platforms (such as the
RVs) we have pretty much established what will make an installation
successful. The Canard crowd is fast approaching that status with their
somewhat more challenging cooling requirements being over come.
Having lost a
rotor during flight due to putting in high compression rotors with worn apex
seal slots worn beyond specs (found this out later – my fault for not
being aware of this spec limit and checking it) which led to apex seal failure
and consequence lost of most of the power from one rotor, I was still able to
maintain 6500 MSL at WOT and fuel mixture knob to full rich – flowing
14.5 GPH – a lot of it undoubtedly being blown through the disabled
rotor. Flew it back 60 miles to a suitable runway and made a non-eventful
landing. There was a small increase in vibration due to the power strokes
no longer being balanced, but nothing bad and you could still read the needles
on the gauges. Other folks have had FOD damage to a rotor and also make
it to a safe landing. Two folks lost cooling (one loss of coolant fluid ,
one lost of water pump) and while they did cook the engines, both made it back
to a safe landing. So all things considered, I think the rotary continues
to show that if the installation is designed properly, it makes a very viable
and reliable aircraft power plant.
Failure of rotary engines
in aircraft are extremely rare, but unfortunately, as with many alternative
engine installations, auxiliary subsystems such as fuel and ignition frequently
being one-off designs - have been the cause of most failures. The good
news is that for some platforms (such as the RVs) we have pretty much
established what will make an installation successful. The Canard crowd
is fast approaching that status with their somewhat more challenging cooling
requirements being over come.
My rotary installation
cost me $6500 back in 1996, the primary cost being a rebuilt engine $2000 and
the PSRU $2900. I have since purchased a 1991 turbo block engine from
Japan for $900 and rebuilt it myself for another $2200. My radiators (GM
evaporator cores) cost $5.00 from the junk yard and another $50.00 each for
having the bungs welded on. So depending on how much you buy and how much
you build the price can vary considerably. Today, I would say it would
take a minimum of around $8000 and more nominally around $10000 for a complete
rotary installation in an RV – some folks could do it for less, some for
more.
But, regardless of the
technical merit (or not) in someone’s mind, the crucial thing (in my
opinion) is you need to address two personal factors:
1. What is your
risk tolerance? It doesn’t really matter how sexy some
“exotic” engine installation may seem – if you are not
comfortable flying behind (or in front) of it, then it certainly does not
makes sense to go that route. After all, this is supposed to have
an element of fun and enjoyment to it.
2. What is your
knowledge, experience and background (and you don’t have to be an
engineer) and do you feel comfortable with the level of involvement needed.
So hope you continue to
contribute to expanding our knowledge and understanding of the rotary in its
application to power plant for aircraft.
Best Regards
Ed
From: Rotary
motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Gary Casey
Sent: Saturday, April 11, 2009
8:36 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Rotary
Engines
Just to add a few more comments and answers to the
several excellent comments posted:
How many parts does it take to make a rotary rotate?
Well, "parts aren't parts" in this case. Mark was right
in that there are maybe 4 "major" components, but you have to define
major. A piston engine certainly has far more major parts. Is a
valve a "major" part? I think so. Is a rotor corner
button a major part? Not sure, but probably not. Is each planet
gear in the PSRU a major part? I say yes, and the PSRU is an integral
part of the rotary engine. As someone correctly pointed out, it's not how
many parts, but the reliability of the total system that counts. Just
looking at the history of the rotary (which, from the implication of another
post) it's not that good, but I don't think it has anything to do with
reliability of the concept. It's more to do with the experimental nature
of the builds and installations. My original point, perhaps not well
expressed is that to say there are just 4 parts is an oversimplification.
But let's face it, to put in an engine that has had many thousands of
identical predecessors is less "experimental" than one that hasn't..
Are we ES drivers more conservative? Probably
so, since the ES is probably one of the experimentals most similar to
production aircraft, and not just because the Columbia (can't force myself to
say Cezzna :-) was a derivative. Therefore, it tends to attract
conservative builders and owners. Not surprising then that almost all
ES's have traditional powerplants, with the most excellent exception of Mark.
While there may be more, I know of only two off-airport landings caused
by engine failures in the ES in almost 20 years of experience. One was
caused by fuel starvation right after takeoff (fatal) and one was caused by a
PSRU failure in an auto engine conversion. So our old-fashioned
conservative nature has served us pretty well.
Yes, I was assuming that the rotary had electronic
fuel injection and ignition, but that by itself doesn't change the inherent
fuel efficiency of the engine. Direct injection does have a potential to
improve BSFC because the fuel charge can be stratified. It will probably
decrease available power, though. I think the best rotary will be 5% less
efficient than the "best" piston engine(same refinements added to
each). But I stated that as a simple disadvantage - as Mark pointed out,
it isn't that simple. The rotary already comes configured to run on auto
gas. The piston engine can also be so configured, but the compression
ratio reduction would reduce its BSFC and maybe durability advantage. The
total operating cost is certainly significantly less if auto gas can always be
used to refuel. I assumed in my assessment that it will only be available
50% of the time. The real disadvantage, which I failed to state, is that
the extra fuel required for a given mission might be 5 or 10% higher and that
negated the weight advantage, if only for long-range flights.
Is the engine less expensive? I did a thorough
analysis of a direct-drive recip auto engine installation and my conclusion was
that if the auto engine were equivalent in reliability to the aircraft engine
it would likely cost just as much. Is the same true of the rotary?
I'm not sure, but you have to consider the total cost, including
engineering of all the parts in the system, not just the core engine. I
would love to do a rotary installation, but I don't think I could justify it by
cost reduction.
It wasn't mentioned in the posts, but some have
claimed the rotary is "smoother" than a recip. I at first
resisted that notion. Sure, any rotary given sufficient counterbalancing,
is perfectly balanced. A 4-cylinder opposed recip is not - there is a
significant secondary couple. The 6-cylinder opposed engine is perfectly
balanced, but only for PRIMARY and SECONDARY forces and couples - higher order
forces have never really been analyzed, although they would be very small.
And then consider the forces within the engine that have to be resisted
by that long, heavy, but flexible crankshaft. So it isn't the mechanical
balance that gives the rotary an advantage. Let's take a look at the the
torsional pulsations, comparing the 3-rotor against the 6-cylinder: A
6-cylinder engine has 3 power impulses per rotation, as does the 3-rotor, so
they are the same, right? Wrong. They both incorporate 4
"stroke" cycles, meaning that there separate and sequential intake,
compression, power and exhaust events so that is the same for both. The
power event, which is the source of the torque impulse, takes 1/2 of a
crank rotation for the recip. In the rotary the power event requires 1/4
of a ROTOR rotation, but the rotor rotates at 1/3 crank rotation - the result
is that the power impulse lasts 3/4 of a CRANK rotation, 50% longer than in a
recip. Therefore, the torsional excitation delivered to the propeller,
PSRU and to the airframe is significantly less than for a recip. And if
you analyze the actual forces imparted, they go down by the square of the rpm.
The torsional vibration amplitude goes down by a factor of 4 just because
the rpm of the rotary turns about twice as fast. If you've skipped to the
bottom of the paragraph, as you probably should have :-), yes the rotary is
"smoother" - a LOT smoother.. (my apologies to rotary purists, for
simplicity I used the word "crankshaft" for both engines)
But just because you can burn auto gas should you?
The biggest problems with auto gas in recip aircraft have nothing to do
with the engine, but with the high vapor pressure of the fuel - it is more
prone to vapor lock. The fuel systems of certified aircraft are not
particularly well designed with regard to vapor lock.
"Fortunately", rotary engines typically have no mechanical fuel
pump and are forced to rely on electric pumps. Fortunately because the
pumps can be located at the very bottom of the aircraft and close to the fuel
tanks, making vapor lock much less likely. I would caution any builders
to consider vapor lock possibilities very seriously, much more so if you intend
to run auto gas. when I was going to do this I planned to put one
electric pump in the wing root of each wing, feeding the engine directly(the
check valve in the non-running pump prevents back-feeding). Redundancy
was by a "crossfeed" line that could connect the tanks together.
And thanks, Mark for - probably incorrectly -
referring to me as a "good engineer". I'll have to put that in
my resume!
(do you allow us outsiders in your events? I'll
park well away :-)
__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature
database 3267 (20080714) __________
The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.
http://www.eset.com/
--
David Leonard
Turbo Rotary RV-6 N4VY
http://N4VY.RotaryRoster.net
http://RotaryRoster.net
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