X-Junk-Score: 0 [] X-Cloudmark-Score: 0 [] X-Cloudmark-Analysis: v=2.2 cv=No+TSIVJ c=1 sm=1 tr=0 a=mX+J7ikDS4dPfkq5Rxpi0w==:117 a=55z/sxGcUIPVrBMYBb4HRw==:17 a=x7bEGLp0ZPQA:10 a=_Z_nqdSeG58A:10 a=3JhidrIBZZsA:10 a=r77TgQKjGQsHNAKrUKIA:9 a=pGLkceISAAAA:8 a=HU2KUbKZAAAA:8 a=jJrOw3FHAAAA:8 a=7g1VtSJxAAAA:8 a=Ia-xEzejAAAA:8 a=DLebvQ5-NpFWvU5r6wsA:9 a=EVABSHIOLYbQlz6h:21 a=HnOy-GdJaYKFlxR2:21 a=QEXdDO2ut3YA:10 a=Qa1je4BO31QA:10 a=6RhrQSAS3YoA:10 a=-FEs8UIgK8oA:10 a=gvSQh4r-fQ0A:10 a=NWVoK91CQyQA:10 a=4PR2P7QzAAAA:8 a=PAxwyUrngrshUYTy23EA:9 a=GkG86Jj_XrUVNT1W:21 a=KIbLRbmqi1WZ-KKL:21 a=3znZGg720Hiu4oEN:21 a=_W_S_7VecoQA:10 a=4lT9Q-zyc7QnGRMTZYHH:22 a=lsIkP6lG2H4f0j7eDx0G:22 a=grOzbf7U_OpcSX4AJOnl:22 a=Urk15JJjZg1Xo0ryW_k8:22 a=4dqwQCo7Po2mVW515mGf:22 From: "Neil Unger 12348ung@gmail.com" Received: from mail-pl1-f175.google.com ([209.85.214.175] verified) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 6.2.10) with ESMTPS id 12075327 for flyrotary@lancaironline.net; Sun, 06 Jan 2019 15:09:39 -0500 Received-SPF: pass receiver=logan.com; client-ip=209.85.214.175; envelope-from=12348ung@gmail.com Received: by mail-pl1-f175.google.com with SMTP id t13so19823081ply.13 for ; Sun, 06 Jan 2019 12:09:40 -0800 (PST) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=20161025; h=subject:to:references:from:message-id:date:user-agent:mime-version :in-reply-to:content-language; bh=yP0/zT3VOdLY1nzrAodQHLb7Y7POcBfuRGt4uKzYi+g=; b=q218XvXaFtr+kz5ox5TSTnfMrLyJTwomuUa9y9ubfCtjIB2X7Adx+IbSumhB+tU3Vg 6awfadzGIuDsWZ/Zr45UcrPKY3yuK9ubsQCXi2q3z54xNL8VdPi69MoJjQSJdzIDUdLV /3yNqlQkkU4+C6xLystN+jlD+W2QwXZKT2BCnx+AyF8B3n75nINvAop/GFs+Q65M3CmB RdcMORQ+gP15JgOkBqEowLC96fXCB9X/FuL2qwGt96zyUhk7ed9WCB7AMF6XVh1ZCmHZ 1wtsC8m+2sB8Dq05B8+c6naVh8OY2VXxCxqy/E2QW3KxZWScJFi556TX8GL0uuAn8JZW TMkA== X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20161025; h=x-gm-message-state:subject:to:references:from:message-id:date :user-agent:mime-version:in-reply-to:content-language; bh=yP0/zT3VOdLY1nzrAodQHLb7Y7POcBfuRGt4uKzYi+g=; b=MLhdtR1xUO8CIeAqAFhkeHUZtIzP2zMu4s636OXDbMRAkmP3MoBYtzuwjT6/5qThWZ X5JMrN+vsjYBNVQry8Wwsmt//7TOeLcg66p26DO5UTpyQSRIjmphrsFnREaqj4hCln5B /8gHSco056WjztBEgonkDP82l96vjxQ8j4lpZSpYPoog6HKzPDcL/RPbFsJvyQo5ndJg /50Pkunxg+Usu2tGmElM5HcD9bjyiA/bR4w8YDxFpaQz5cXz/EcOun118uJJQtjHdWKP gNTByBwPoqhCAN2G8TJ8jGm1Mc56l1hA7o+zum4UiPRw/gGzuy/pzEOzk7XyB2e0BmCR qvNQ== X-Gm-Message-State: AJcUukfJbugJDEXcVgyIHJWVgeVQJXCWvWL2U8nplysjwJ0pjcLyF3+B 1irW2bD6iYWmTHM2FzS2hP6mr+sh X-Google-Smtp-Source: ALg8bN5nlQyWGRaJ32rFc0CflM52gutjQ+fYxlIH2NjfNOhi7vulzyL0W7CXwi4xCw5KoXkoidv8UQ== X-Received: by 2002:a17:902:714c:: with SMTP id u12mr58016253plm.234.1546805362752; Sun, 06 Jan 2019 12:09:22 -0800 (PST) Return-Path: <12348ung@gmail.com> Received: from [192.168.0.103] ([103.198.24.78]) by smtp.gmail.com with ESMTPSA id 125sm83050090pfg.39.2019.01.06.12.09.20 for (version=TLS1_2 cipher=ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 bits=128/128); Sun, 06 Jan 2019 12:09:21 -0800 (PST) Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] 3D printing - Oil inlet To: Rotary motors in aircraft References: Message-ID: <54e863e9-73f6-7859-f292-c3f4a5cbc7c5@gmail.com> Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2019 07:09:16 +1100 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.4.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="------------AE51244D64F8B9152E34AE3D" Content-Language: en-US This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------AE51244D64F8B9152E34AE3D Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Mat, the printer is impressive for sure.   I am not sure what you are trying to achieve with all this as I am getting the impression that like me you will lose years trying to get everything "right" . I  also have a shed full of flaps, adjustable inlets and outlets etc, all took many months to build.  At the end of the day you simply  want stable temps in the engine.  I have now gone back to a simple thermostat in the water line and the biggest  water and oil cooler I can fit.  All temp adjustments went away.  If the oil cooler is too big the water thermostat will correct that problem as well.  Just keep it simple (and cheap)  I recall Tracy'e wise words   " you are better to have a "good" (practical)  aircraft in the air, than the "perfect" plane still being modified and built". This is just some of my self imposed bitter experience! Neil. On 1/7/2019 5:24 AM, Matt Boiteau mattboiteau@gmail.com wrote: > > Buying a 3D printer has opened up this whole experimental plane game. > SO much easier to autocad a drawing, then trying to fiberglass out of > foam and bondo. Bonus is, easy to make changes for version 1, 2, 3, > ... 15. > > > I'm using an CX racing oil cooler. 30 Row, 11 x 9 X 2 > https://www.cxracing.com/oil-cooler-kit/OC-248-30-AN10 > > To create a Kays & London wedge shape for the inlet, I could of used a > flat stock and called it a day. But really it's an 'S' shape to > maximize equal amount of air to flow across the rad. Plus I had to > make the wedge shape, turn into an 2.75" pipe opening for the scat > hose. I wanted to keep the bends like a trumpet, to maximize the air > sticking and following the sides without disturbance. Could of sanded > and shaped the pieces out of foam for days and days.. Or punch them > into autocad. 3D print the parts, then fiberglass overtop of the molds. > > The last two pictures (oil4 & oil5) are how I had to make the outlet, > with foam and bondo. I couldn't get good measurements around all the > pipes and motormounts, so I couldn't 3D draw it. Was easier this way, > to build it in place. Took 10x longer to build. > > The outlet has a large 5" box to catch the expanded hot air. Then it > necks it back down to a 2.75" outlet pipe. The idea is the speed the > air back up before it exits. I also added a butterfly valve to the > outlet, to be able to control the temps. This should help fine tune my > system (inlet, outlet, exhaust, cowl air exit), by watching how much > the valve needs to more to keep temps stable at different flight speeds. > > https://youtu.be/giueLT-icjI > > - Matt Boiteau > > -- > Homepage: http://www.flyrotary.com/ > Archive and UnSub: http://mail.lancaironline.net:81/lists/flyrotary/List.html --------------AE51244D64F8B9152E34AE3D Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

Mat, the printer is impressive for sure.   I am not sure what you are trying to achieve with all this as I am getting the impression that like me you will lose years trying to get everything "right" . I  also have a shed full of flaps, adjustable inlets and outlets etc, all took many months to build.  At the end of the day you simply  want stable temps in the engine.  I have now gone back to a simple thermostat in the water line and the biggest  water and oil cooler I can fit.  All temp adjustments went away.  If the oil cooler is too big the water thermostat will correct that problem as well.  Just keep it simple (and cheap)  I recall Tracy'e wise words   " you are better to have a "good" (practical)  aircraft in the air, than the "perfect" plane still being modified and built". 

This is just some of my self imposed bitter experience! 

Neil.

On 1/7/2019 5:24 AM, Matt Boiteau mattboiteau@gmail.com wrote:

Buying a 3D printer has opened up this whole experimental plane game. SO much easier to autocad a drawing, then trying to fiberglass out of foam and bondo. Bonus is, easy to make changes for version 1, 2, 3, ... 15.


I'm using an CX racing oil cooler. 30 Row, 11 x 9 X 2

To create a Kays & London wedge shape for the inlet, I could of used a flat stock and called it a day. But really it's an 'S' shape to maximize equal amount of air to flow across the rad. Plus I had to make the wedge shape, turn into an 2.75" pipe opening for the scat hose. I wanted to keep the bends like a trumpet, to maximize the air sticking and following the sides without disturbance. Could of sanded and shaped the pieces out of foam for days and days.. Or punch them into autocad. 3D print the parts, then fiberglass overtop of the molds.

The last two pictures (oil4 & oil5) are how I had to make the outlet, with foam and bondo. I couldn't get good measurements around all the pipes and motormounts, so I couldn't 3D draw it. Was easier this way, to build it in place. Took 10x longer to build.

The outlet has a large 5" box to catch the expanded hot air. Then it necks it back down to a 2.75" outlet pipe. The idea is the speed the air back up before it exits. I also added a butterfly valve to the outlet, to be able to control the temps. This should help fine tune my system (inlet, outlet, exhaust, cowl air exit), by watching how much the valve needs to more to keep temps stable at different flight speeds.

- Matt Boiteau

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