Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #3146
From: Peter Cowan/Lexy Cameron <cowcam@pipcom.com>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Rotary Boats
Date: Sat, 20 Sep 2003 07:25:31 -0400
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Message
 

Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Whats good for Racing is necessarily good for aircraft was Re: Intake questions

This may be just side commentary and a useless data point, but for what it's worth here is another somewhat different comparison. Also I've copied Jon Lauter on this because he must have some more knowledgeable input. I have one of Jon's Rotary Power Marine  engines in a boat. (Cut that laughter right now). He rated it at 175hp and has a short manifold to a carb just above it on the intake side of the engine (also distributer ignition, turbo block and rotors).
My "dyno" comparison is with the previous engine a 150hp johnson outboard (Will you guys cut that out?)  The current installation must be well over 100lbs heavier due to the conversion from an outboard to a stern drive but turning only 4500 I'm the same speed as the 150 hp so I feel pretty comfortable that should I let this get up to 6500 I'd have that 175. Pretty scientific, I know.
Hopefully Jon will respond.
By the way, it is really nice cooling a boat engine!
Peter
 
Peter, just the guy I want to talk too.  I'm converting a 4.3L Chevy stern drive boat to rotary power so I'm curious about what you used to interface the 13B to the stern drive.  I figure I'll be droping about 150 pounds.  
 I have assumed that RPM is doing jet drive boats but maybe they have stern drive stuff too?  I seem to have lost Jon's email address so would appreciate it if you could pass that along. 
 
BTW, I used to fly a 135 HP Johnson outboard.   Now  *you* stop laughing : )
 
Tracy
 
Hello Tracy.
Jon is at:   RPMCinfo@aol.com
 
Phone is:   516-656-5685
 
When I bought this engine a couple of years ago, his standard bellhousing was designed to mate to a Morse transmission bolt pattern (this is a common marine transmission interface). My stern drive was Volvo. So that they could utilize existing marine engines, Volvo made a short adapter section which mated to their transom plate design (round rubber donut) at the back and an engine with a morse bell housing at the front and a suitable splined shaft inside. So for me to convert to the mazda was not very much more than unbolting the volvo and bolting in the adapter and the mazda.
The crazy part of my change over was that I was having difficulty locating the correct length adapter (they were made in different lengths) and also a used one was going to be 5 or $600.
One day I went out to my storage shed to look at the old Volvo/Chris Craft V8 I'd bought primarily to have a spare outdrive. Lo and behold there was the adapter I needed right on the engine. The only change I had to make was putting some spacer's under Jon's flex plate/damper to position it properly on the spline.
And, hey, I'm not laughing. I'd always thought that outboards should fly.
Peter
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