Dear FlyRotary Group
My name is Brock and I've recently
joined this group. I am working on a original design Rotary
Powered
WIG (Wing In Ground-Effect) vehicle that flies in the cushion
of air
between then wing and water. Eventually I would like to build
a plane
(LSA like) I can take up in the air but for now want to focus
on
this. I'm still in the research phase (for the last 15 years!)
but
hope to start building shortly. I'm presently reading through
RWS
literature: Magazine articles, the Aviator's Guide to Mazda
Rotary
Conversion and the Mazda Papers and have learned a bunch.
I've recently obtain a running
1986
RX-7 13B rotary engine. For simplicity I'm considering
converting to
carbs and aftermarket ignition since I'm worried about getting
the
wiring sorted out for the stock ECU since it seems complicated
and
RWS says it is not suitable for airplane use. I've gotten the
impression that a properly adjusted carbs will perform similar
to EFI
(that doesn't use direct injection) for spinning a propeller
and RWS
reports only 10% worse mileage. I had a look at the RWS
website but
didn't see the ignition system that uses the stock crank angle
indicator and coils so I'm wondering if it is still available
or a
suitable replacement?
I was planning to use separate
carbs
and fuel pumps for each rotor for redundancy so I can shut
down one
rotor and limp home in an emergency like an ignition or fuel
system
failure. I know this type of redundancy increases the number
of parts
that could potentially fail but it still seems like a good
idea to
me. The engine has a 6 port intake with the two center ports
feeding
both rotors while the outer ports each feed one rotor. I was
planning
to seal the 2 center ports and just use the outer ports but
that was
before I read that they are "boost" port and close much
later than the center ports. Like the name suggests I assume
that the
boost ports are for high power output but I'm worried about
fuel
efficiency just using the boost ports. I've read in the
"Aviator's
Guide to Mazda Rotary Conversion" the author used a 3 carb
setup
and 2 fuel pump and in normal operation all three carbs are
used and
for an emergency the engine can run on either the outer two
carbs or
the center carb. Based on this example the center ports should
be
used but the engine does run (in an emergency) on just the
outer
boost ports. I suspect the center ports are important or Mazda
wouldn't have made the engine that way, but perhaps just for
low
power levels or emissions?
Brock