Re: [FlyRotary] Rational for TES "O" Rings
About "the o-rings raising the oil temp" -
I've seen more than one post asking about that. The way I read that is,
"The TES o-rings can tolerate higher oil [or rotor or housing] temperatures" -
not that they "raise the oil temperature". I frequently "open mouth and
insert foot" in these forums, not quite getting the sense of some of the
conversations. Just trying to be helpful - sometimes my "helpfulness urge"
exceeds my "intelligence or understanding". Sorry if I've missed the
point.
David
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 9:25 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Rational for TES "O" Rings
I don't know how you figure the TES seals could raise the temp but I am
concerned at how stiff they are and in the application of the rotors I think the
seals need to be softer and more flexible but that's just an eyeball engineers
point of view, the Viton seals have worked just fine for me and in my early days
of sorting things out I was running very high oil temps and still had no
problems with the O-rings, if it works I don't fix
it.
I am however using the TES O-rings in
the rotor housing and like them and will stick with them but this is an
application where I don't think they need to be flexible as with the rotors but
then again I am just an eyeball engineer.
Ken
Welter
Ken,
When rebuilding my 20B,
I used TES o-rings on both water and oil. I have a little over 9 hours of
light running (ground runs only) on the engine with no apparent problems.
The one thing I think we need to realize with the oil o-rings is their proximity
to the very hot rotor surfaces. Lynn has stated that under heavy loads the
rotors can get to 450* or higher. Since the oil o-rings are in the sides
of the rotors, very near the hottest part of the rotors, I suspect they could
easily see temps higher than what we’re reading on the oil temp gauge. I
don’t recall seeing any temp figures that have actually been measured for the
oil o-rings. I don’t know how we could measure that, but if we had that
information it could answer the question of whether or not TES oil o-rings are
needed there. I figured it was cheap insurance, so I used the TES o-rings
for both the oil and water locations.
Mark
S.
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