Kelly,
That’s my
assumption. The engine is running
very strong. Seems like a lot more
power, even at the same manifold pressure as before. More power = more heat.
Steve
-----Original
Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]On Behalf
Of Kelly Troyer
Sent: Monday, April 14, 2008 6:18
PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] New Radiator
Steve,
Hope the cooling is worse because you are developing a lot more power
with the new
turbo !!..........<:)
--
Kelly Troyer
"Dyke Delta"_13B ROTARY Engine
"RWS"_RD1C/EC2/EM2
"Mistral"_Backplate/Oil Manifold
--------------
Original message from "Steve Brooks" <cozy4pilot@gmail.com>:
--------------
I’ve made a few flights now
with the new turbo and finally have the engine re-tuned, so it is running
great. The down side of the new
turbo is, that my cooling, which was a bit marginal is worse with the new
turbo.
I did plan on making some
inlet adjustments, but finally decided to just go with a customer built
aluminum radiator. I found a
company here in NC that makes them to order, and it should arrive
tomorrow. It will also have the
aluminum shroud with it to mount a cooling fan, which I did not have before
either. With the pusher, anything
over about 10 minutes of ground operation would have temperatures over 180
before the takeoff run.
I also had ¼” NPT fittings
put right next to the AN16 inlet and outlet, Since I already have a sensor on the water pump outlet, I’ll
use the inlet fitting for a limit switch to operate the fan. I’ll also put in a switch on the
instrument panel to operate it manually as well.
In the next couple of
weeks, I’ll remove the old evaporator cores and plenum, build mounting brackets
for the new radiator, and build a new inlet plenum to the radiator. I had them put a ½” flange around the
perimeter of the core on the inlet side for easy attachment of the plenum to
the radiator.
Steve Brooks
Cozy MKIV N75CZ