Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #32868
From: Ben Baltrusaitis <ben@gmpexpress.net>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Inconel
Date: Wed, 26 Jul 2006 18:45:20 -0400
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Al,
That strobe is a great idea!
I'm going to do that. I appreciate all the knowledge you share.
I'd like to see a pic of your slip fit exhaust. It seems to me I could use a heavy piece of header pipe that goes all the way into the muffler and a smaller walled piece for the slip fit with maybe a three inch overlap.
How do you stop the gases from leaking past the slip fit?
Thanks!
Ben
Acroduster Too (still building)
20B
----- Original Message -----
From: al p wick
Sent: 07/26/2006 5:56 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Inconel

I have a lot of experience with failure analysis. Used to do it with GM, Ford, other warranty returns. One of my favorite experiences was solving a million $ warranty issue on a tubing product. Although I'm not expert in this area, I'd sure encourage considering other factors, other solutions.
In particular I'd encourage use of strobe lamp. Take cowl off, fire up engine, use strobe. (yes, it's dangerous with prop on) You will suddenly have appreciation for the forces involved. You should be able to predict failure points with this test. Tack together the broken one to see what I mean.
The exhaust will turn into a sine shape at certain rpm. You will see huge amount of movement on the busted one. Make a new design, compare movement to predict how long it will last. A very minor design change can greatly improve how much movement occurs.
I'm not sure this is applicable to you guys, but my exhaust design has slip fit of two pipes instead of welding. It works phenomenal. I've had conversation with other guys who welded instead and had failures. Same exact application. So my exhaust floats in relation to the header. I just attach a small bracket to the floating portion to prevent if from blowing off. Truthfully, I never expected it to work, but it has quite well. I might have pic if verbal description not adequate.
 

-al wick
Artificial intelligence in cockpit, Cozy IV powered by stock Subaru 2.5
N9032U 200+ hours on engine/airframe from Portland, Oregon
Prop construct, Subaru install, Risk assessment, Glass panel design info:
http://www.maddyhome.com/canardpages/pages/alwick/index.html
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