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David,
We are incredibly proud to have had you there, representing not only
the rotary engine but auto conversions in general.
We are also very thankful that you and yours were not involved, and
are proud to know that you did all you could for those who you
assisted.
Pat
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 11:50 AM, David Leonard <wdleonard@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi All,
I just got back from the Reno Air races last night. I was having quite a
week until the Tragedy occurred on Friday.
I qualified for the race on Tuesday at 229.3 mph pulling up to 2.5-g's at
times around the course. I was pretty happy with that, because I was not
last... I beat a glassair 1 with a "250 hp" 4-cyl lyc, and I beat an RV-8
with a 6-cylinder "310 hp." IO-540 engine. The rockets were solidly ahead,
especially Mark Fredrick and his F1 Rocket with his new wings - that look
more like the wings on the fast glass.
At the end of the qualifying heat I found that my prop would barely turn,
and after some cooling, it would not turn at all. Inspection showed that
the RD-1B prop shaft had seized and some of the planets had overheated.
Fortunately, by some fluke of good luck, Larry Childs and "EJ" had a RD-1B
sitting on a work bench a couple hundred miles away that they would lend.
Long story short, everyone pitched in, including EJ who made 2 round trips
to Heilsburg airport from Santa Rosa and Steve Senagal (winner of the F1
class and also pilot of the super-8 that I edged out in quals) flew me in
his super-8 to Heilsburg and I had a replacement gear box back at the
airport by dark. I worked into the night to re-install it, and was ready to
race the next day.
The failure may have been partly my fault. The gear box was sharing an AN-4
oil line with the turbo so it is possible that it may not have been seeing
full engine oil pressure for most of its life (it had 600 hrs). Also, it
turns out that my oil temps have probably always been higher than I thought.
When replacing the gear box I gave it a dedicated oil line from a take-off
closer to the pump with a shorter AN-4 line. That process required me to
move my oil temp sensor from near the gear box into the line that goes to
the turbo. There is probably more flow going to the turbo as now the oil
temp seems to be much more responsive and climbs higher that it ever had. I
almost pulled out of my race on Wed because the oil temp climbed to 210.
That egged me to install a spray bar on the oil cooler before Friday's race
(which worked very well until I ran out of water on the last lap and
throttled way back). On the ride home, I again saw oil temp much higher
that I had previously noticed under similar conditions (hot, high, and doing
touch and go's), I was seeing up to 220 that would quickly cool upon
descent and reduction in power (consistent with what many others have
reported) were I used to see a max of 190 in similar conditions cooling that
occurred much more slowly on descent or transition to level flight.
Then of course there was the tragedy. The plane arched right over my head
as my step dad and I watched the unlimited race from a 1/4mi away from the
impact site. Being a physician, I went to help with the casualties. The
site was pretty bad. As bad as anything I saw in Iraq (less the burns -
thank goodness the fuel never caught fire). Besides the fatalities, there
are a number of very severe life-changing injuries. Very somber and surreal
atmosphere.
--
David Leonard
Turbo Rotary RV-6 N4VY
http://N4VY.RotaryRoster.net
http://RotaryRoster.net
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