Am I correct in my assumption that the engine only
has an oil pressure sensor and not an oil temperature sensor? Is the
only engine temperature monitored by the coolant temperature
sensor???
Bill B
From:
Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Jeff Whaley
Sent: Friday, January 08, 2010 1:04
PM
To: Rotary motors in
aircraft
Subject:
[FlyRotary] Re: water temp probe
Ben, you’re
right in that any one probe does not tell the whole story, but specific to
the Rotary if only one probe is provided/available then the input oil
temperature is most important. The oil flow diagrams show return oil
from cooler is pumped through e-shaft and sprayed inside the rotors for
their cooling. Previous posts and literature state that the rotor oil
seals will be damaged by sustained oil temperature
>210F.
It is also
important to use similar instrumentation to other builders for direct
comparison from one installation to the next …
I only measure
return oil temperature myself; I’d be interested to know what delta T’s
(oil) other builders are seeing.
Jeff
From:
Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of ben haas
Sent: Friday, January 08, 2010 9:17
AM
To: Rotary motors in
aircraft
Subject:
[FlyRotary] Re: water temp probe
I respectivly disagree on the
oil temp sender location. One can have a very efficient oil cooler that
removes alot of heat from the oil. Oil 'in' temps are important
but,,,, You could possibly have a motor making alot of oil heat and slowing
cooking the motor over time and not really know it. Just like with the water
temp probe. One needs to know exactly what is happening in the motor in real
time... YMMV.
Ben Haas
www.haaspowerair.com
To: flyrotary@lancaironline.net
Date: Fri, 8 Jan 2010
06:18:39 -0600
From: msteitle@gmail.com
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: water temp
probe
I think you want
to measure the temp of the coolant as it exits the engine.
That way you know how close you are to your upper operating limit. If
you have a second input, you can measure the temps after the
radiator.
Oil temps are just the
opposite... measure temps after oil has been through the cooler and is
entering the engine.
On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 12:52
AM, kevin lane <n3773@comcast.net> wrote:
in looking for a place
to mount a water temp probe I realized my radiator has a drain plug fitting
on the bottom of one of the end tanks that could work. that portion of
the tank has cooled water about to return to the pump. does it
matter if I monitor the before or after radiator temps? the engine
sees both, right?
same question as to
the oil temp probe. the stock oil cooler has a large fitting
[plug?] underneath of one end tank, not sure of its usage. also have
an extra plug in the oil pan [out the side] which might work [?] told
that originally had a oil level sender unit in there.
kevin
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