-----Original Message-----
From: Al Gietzen
[mailto:ALVentures@cox.net]
Sent: Monday,
September 08, 2003 6:05 AM
To: 'Rotary motors in aircraft'
Subject: RE: [FlyRotary] Re: water
flow restrictor
>
>
Putting flow restriction in an aircraft application where you want
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minimum radiator size and weight is a bad thing; in my opinion, of
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course. The more flow the better - gives a lower temperature drop
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across the radiator, therefore higher average radiator for the same
temp
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going back to the engine.
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The idea of a flow restrictor is to provide higher pressure in the
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block, therefore increasing the boiling point somewhat; and provides
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back pressure to the pump which may reduce the risk of cavitation at
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very high rpm (like over 6000). If you don't mind a larger radiator,
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OK.
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Size the radiator for about a 30F drop from inlet to outlet. Let the
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radiator provide the back pressure in the loop, maybe take advantage
of
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double pass.
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>
Al
Thanks
for the advise, Al. I understand about using the smallest rad
that
will work, but that still doesn't address the issue of increased
boiling
point (for micro bubbles I assume) or cavitatation. Are these
an
important issue???
These are important issues, but what are the gains?
Centrifugal pumps have a definite pressure limit. The restrictor is
going to gain you a few psi in the block with a penalty in the flow.
Higher flow also reduces the amount of nucleate boiling.
Use pressure caps to maintain higher system pressure;
something we need at altitude anyway. I'm using a 24# cap on the system,
which is connected to the inlet side
of the pump, with a 16 # cap on the overflow/expansion bottle. The idea
of the pressurized overflow bottle is to maintain pressure even when the
coolant temp may be dropping when you reduce power. I have a pressure
sender at the pump outlet, and it will be interesting to see what that is at
power – won’t surprise me to see 35 – 40 psi.
Al