Would you care to offer up a drag
reduction prioritize list of improvements
you have made ?
Tough
question, Richard. I can not quantify a lot of the changes because I made
most of them during construction so no comparison testing was possible. And
I made LOT of changes.
I
believe that the biggest improvement is also the most difficult: a complete
re-engineering of the engine cooling air flow pathway from modified inlets to plenum
to patched air leaks, to adjustable cowl flaps that control the outlet area and
exit velocity. Total time invested with endless attention to detail
in this area: maybe 1000 hours. It is not recommended. Go flying instead.
But
I would recommend the following place to start: leakage of cooling air from the
high pressure area above the engine. When you start looking for leaks,
they are EVERYWHERE. Some are very small but numerous, some are large,
all are parasitic. You want the air to flow between all the fins, full
path length (no short cuts), and the oil cooler, and no where else.
Smiley's
NASA work in the 80's showed that the stock factory installation (a turbo Piper
Aztec with 250 HP Lycoming engines) of baffles, rubber and sheet metal
typically leaked 50% of the required cooling flow. That is, if you need
100% to cool the engine, 150% was going into the inlets and out the outlets,
pure waste in momentum drag.
Most
installations I have seen look OK on first blush, but with very close
inspection, virtually all leak like sieves. It takes extreme attention to
detail and a lot of patience to minimize the leakage. But the benefits of
fixing are substantial: reduced drag, and much cooler operating
temperatures.
When
racing with Brent Regan and in studying many other aircraft and collecting anecdotal
data from many, I concluded that a well built, smooth, tight fitting Lancair IV
had little room for improvement behind the firewall, so most of my work was in
front of it.
If
there is enough interest, I will develop a picture catalog of all the drag
reduction modifications I have made together with some descriptive words so
other builders can pick and choose what they want to use. Some changes
are easy. Some are very time consuming. And because I started with
many of the mods in place, I can not separate out the individual
benefits. But if enough people are interested, I will compile a catalog
and let Marv put it into the archives.
Fred
Moreno
-----Original Message-----
From: marv@lancair.net [mailto:marv@lancair.net]
Sent: Friday, 16 January 2009 3:34 AM
To: lml
Subject: Re: [LML] Lancair IV bragging rights
Posted
for "Richard T. Schaefer" <schaefer@rts-services.com>:
Sounds great .
Would you care to offer up a drag reduction prioritize list of improvements
you have made ?
>
Now that summer is well established Down Under, I was able to conduct some
>
more flight testing. The air is smooth, winds gentle, and the bugs have