Let'sgoflying!
Touchdown! Greaser!
Which ones can do it?
No other limitations.
No other limitations.
Which ones can do it?
No other limitations.
The only 35 series Bo's listed as approved on the Petersen website are the ones with the E-series Continentals. H35 with the O-470-G (pressure carb) and all the later injected V-tails are no-go.Bonanza with an 0-470....but a tad shy of 180.:wink2:
Cruise or Top Speed?
Off of Vans website.
RV-10 Top Speed is supposed to be 183 with IO-540.
RV-3 with 150hp
RV-4 with 180hp
RV-7 with 180hp
RV-8 with 180hp
I have heard of a few RVs running mogas, not sure if they had to do anything to the engines. http://www.vansairforce.com/community/showthread.php?t=110276
A 180 HP O-360 on MoGas basically won't detonate at all. A 200 HP Lycoming on MoGas will have parts of the envelope where it will detonate if you don't pay attention to your mixture setting, similar to a Navajo on 100LL.
I'm not 100% on this, but I seem to recall that the 180hp Lycoming that is recommended for the RV's has an STC available for Mogas in other aircraft.
Ted, are you referring to 93 octane ((R+M)/2) or does your statement extend to other octane ratings as well?
93 specifically.
Something to think about for a naturally aspirated engine is that, as you increase in altitude (and thus decrease max horsepower), your maximum required anti-knock rating decreases.
One engine I've considered building is a 12:1 engine, limited to manifold pressures in the low (maybe mid) 20s. Would have awesome efficiency in cruise, with a constant climb power from sea level to roughly 10k. Would be great for a plane like a Mooney, Lancair, etc. that loves altitude.
Thanks for the clarification. I didn't want anyone who recognizes you as an expert to use your initial (unqualified) statement as the rationale behind running 85 octane in their IO-540... ;-)
As to ideal methods for boosting efficiency, where does a small turbo-normalizer fit in that world? Let's say we limit it to 28" and set a critical altitude of something reasonable - say 8k'.
93 specifically.
Something to think about for a naturally aspirated engine is that, as you increase in altitude (and thus decrease max horsepower), your maximum required anti-knock rating decreases.
One engine I've considered building is a 12:1 engine, limited to manifold pressures in the low (maybe mid) 20s. Would have awesome efficiency in cruise, with a constant climb power from sea level to roughly 10k. Would be great for a plane like a Mooney, Lancair, etc. that loves altitude.
Are you talking about doing the 12:1 for MoGas or just for 100LL. (It's not clear what you mean.)
me too....higher compression ratio on lower octane wasn't making any sense for me.Got it. (I was sitting here wondering ... How?!)
I'm not 100% on this, but I seem to recall that the 180hp Lycoming that is recommended for the RV's has an STC available for Mogas in other aircraft. I believe the 200hp option is not considered Mogas-compatible. But, since it's an experimental, I suppose the user could (in theory) do whatever they want, and become the test pilot for their own "STC".
I'd just love to have an RV-7… those airplanes seem like they have an awesome amount of performance and value. But, I don't have time to build one right now, and in the EAB world I'm not sure I'd trust one that was built by someone I didn't know.
Got it. (I was sitting here wondering ... How?!)
me too....higher compression ratio on lower octane wasn't making any sense for me.
Sometimes I leave out details that seem obvious to me, but wouldn't be to others. My fault.
I just couldn't figure out when you became a fan of water injection.