Looks like that was gas cost alone compared against avgas, not mogas.I wish he'd broken out the details of his $20/hour figure.
Looks like that was gas cost alone compared against avgas, not mogas.
87 regular is $2.49 where I buy it right now
This surprised me, that gas would be so expensive in Nebraska, compared to here in OK where it's almost a dollar cheaper! I looked at the gas price map on gasbuddy.com, and sure enough, the metro areas in Nebraska are much higher than the rural areas.
Great article!
Kudos to this guy
Also, this part
"
After just a few calls, nothing had seemed to change except that the same 1970 vintage 172s were now renting out at $115-$125 per hour. Even more unbelievable was that the same engines were used and still required leaded gas—the EPA and FAA seemed hell-bent on eliminating lead’s poisonous emissions in the early 1980s. Somehow aviation became an inverted pricing model compared to all other industries, wherein the older and more worn a plane is, the more it cost to rent, and remained immune from any emissions rules that required all other engine industries to evolve.
"
..a man after my own heart
Pray? I'm not sure. To get an STC would be a financial disaster most likely, but it didn't seem like he was interested in that. I think he was just dissatisfied with what present GA offers for his mission so created his own solution for it.. which is pretty coolDid he have an answer for the coolant system being a single point of failure
Not in my experience... we road tripped across the state a back in August, and once last summer as well. Once we left Omaha, the gas prices were never that low again. Aside from the challenges of even finding 91 or better octane gas for the rocket sled, it was anywhere from a dime to 30 cents a gallon higher in rural areas than we paid at home.This surprised me, that gas would be so expensive in Nebraska, compared to here in OK where it's almost a dollar cheaper! I looked at the gas price map on gasbuddy.com, and sure enough, the metro areas in Nebraska are much higher than the rural areas.
Conversions like this one typically have gearbox failures. It is VERY difficult to create a gearbox that won't destroy itself, and it is not at all like the transmission in a car. The gears have to be much heavier, not only because the loads are high and constant, but because the propeller wants to turn at a nice steady rate while the crankshaft doesn't. That crank surges forward every time a cylinder fires and lags back on every compression stroke, and those gears have to take that. There are resonant RPMs where the thing can abrupty destroy itself, and many geared conversions have done just that. Propeller Speed Reduction Units, they're called, PSRUs, and they're a frequent topic of discussion on homebuiltairplanes.com. There have been far more failures than success stories.Pray? I'm not sure. To get an STC would be a financial disaster most likely, but it didn't seem like he was interested in that. I think he was just dissatisfied with what present GA offers for his mission so created his own solution for it.. which is pretty cool
I think that also speaks to why the EA world grows
I would be curious how likely one is to have an engine failure due to a coolant system issue. Biggest risks are what, broken pump, leak, and bad thermostat. The thermostat could fail safe open (a cold engine is better than a hot one), and I would think the plumping and pump aren't huge obstacles
Nothing perfect out there. I just thought it was funny that this guy was "surprised" that they're still using the same engines
Yes! Didn't the yellow flying wing demonstrator (the one that unfortunately crashed out here in California a few years ago, something like the "n1"), use automotive style torque converters to solve that issue going from the engines to the propellers?The gears have to be much heavier, not only because the loads are high and constant, but because the propeller wants to turn at a nice steady rate while the crankshaft doesn't.
Yes. He cited a lot of nice benefits. I'm still trying to decipher if efficiency is one of them. And I wonder how much investment money he needs to get to a general STC?
Did he have an answer for the coolant system being a single point of failure? He did for fuel delivery and ignition.
Pray? I'm not sure. To get an STC would be a financial disaster most likely, but it didn't seem like he was interested in that. I think he was just dissatisfied with what present GA offers for his mission so created his own solution for it.. which is pretty cool
I think that also speaks to why the EA world grows
I would be curious how likely one is to have an engine failure due to a coolant system issue. Biggest risks are what, broken pump, leak, and bad thermostat. The thermostat could fail safe open (a cold engine is better than a hot one), and I would think the plumping and pump aren't huge obstacles
Nothing perfect out there. I just thought it was funny that this guy was "surprised" that they're still using the same engines
Conversions like this one typically have gearbox failures. It is VERY difficult to create a gearbox that won't destroy itself, and it is not at all like the transmission in a car. The gears have to be much heavier, not only because the loads are high and constant, but because the propeller wants to turn at a nice steady rate while the crankshaft doesn't. That crank surges forward every time a cylinder fires and lags back on every compression stroke, and those gears have to take that. There are resonant RPMs where the thing can abrupty destroy itself, and many geared conversions have done just that. Propeller Speed Reduction Units, they're called, PSRUs, and they're a frequent topic of discussion on homebuiltairplanes.com. There have been far more failures than success stories.
So that's why we're still using the same engines. The technology to change, and the certification costs, are very high. And those costs are spread over a tiny market, so it mostly doesn't get done. Add liability to the headache.
Then cooling can be an issue, and fuel systems are another problem area. It takes a capable cooling system to take the waste heat away at extended full power, and it has to do it without causing a lot of drag. Most engines now don't have anywhere to put a mechanical fuel pump, so you end up with at least two electric pumps, along with electric ignition of some sort, so you have to have a robust generating system and some form of backup if you don't want a simple alternator failure to bring you down.
I speak from experience. I did the design and installation work of a PSRU'd Subaru into a Glastar over 20 years ago. It's not easy or cheap. By the time it was done we could have had a nice new Lycoming in it, and the resale value of the airplane would have been approximately double.
Not in my experience... we road tripped across the state a back in August, and once last summer as well. Once we left Omaha, the gas prices were never that low again. Aside from the challenges of even finding 91 or better octane gas for the rocket sled, it was anywhere from a dime to 30 cents a gallon higher in rural areas than we paid at home.
OK is a lot closer to the refineries... lower transportation costs.
First off, I'm admitting my ignorance on this; I'm genuinely curious:Conversions like this one typically have gearbox failures. It is VERY difficult to create a gearbox that won't destroy itself, and it is not at all like the transmission in a car. The gears have to be much heavier, not only because the loads are high and constant, but because the propeller wants to turn at a nice steady rate while the crankshaft doesn't. That crank surges forward every time a cylinder fires and lags back on every compression stroke, and those gears have to take that. There are resonant RPMs where the thing can abrupty destroy itself, and many geared conversions have done just that. Propeller Speed Reduction Units, they're called, PSRUs, and they're a frequent topic of discussion on homebuiltairplanes.com. There have been far more failures than success stories.
Pray? I'm not sure. To get an STC would be a financial disaster most likely, but it didn't seem like he was interested in that.[snip]
When I'm flying at 65% power in my PA-28-161, I'm burning about 7 gph LOP, so let's try to figure that out:I wish he'd broken out the details of his $20/hour figure.
You are able to run LOP on a carbureted engine?I'm burning about 7 gph LOP
Yes. It's hit or miss with carbureted engines (especially six-cylinder ones), but four-cylinder the O-320 does pretty well. Without an engine monitor, the best technique is to leave the throttle wide open and lean to your target RPM at cruise — that means you're as lean as physically possible (at that power setting and density altitude), and if the engine runs reasonably smoothly, that means there's not too wide a spread among cylinders (the power curve drops off very steeply on the lean side, so any significant spread will cause very noticeable roughness). Here's what Piper recommends in the PA-28-161 POH (1982 edition, section 4.7):You are able to run LOP on a carbureted engine?
For Best Economy cruise, a simplified leaning procedure which consistently allows accurate achievement of best engine efficiency has been developed. Best Economy Cruise performance is obtained with the throttle fully open. To obtain a desired cruise power setting, set the throttle and mixture control full forward, taking care not to exceed the engine speed limitation, then begin leaning the mixture. The RPM will increase slightly
but will then begin to decrease. Continue leaning until the desired cruise engine RPM is reached. This will provide best fuel economy and maximum miles per gallon for a given power setting. See following CAUTION when using this procedure.
CAUTIONProlonged operation at powers above 75% with a leaned mixture can result in engine damage. While establishing Best Economy Cruise Mixture, below 6,000 feet, care must be taken not to remain in the range above 75% power more than 15 seconds while leaning. Above 6,000 feet the engine is incapable of generating more than 75%
Induction System - Lycoming O-320 series engines are equipped with a float type carburetor. Particularly good distribution of the fuel-air mixture to each cylinder is obtained through the center zone induction system, which is integral with the oil sump and is submerged in oil, insuring a more uniform vaporization of fuel and aiding in cooling the oil in the sump.
I'm managing to fly about 50 hours/year these days (life and all that), so switching to mogas would give me a saving of USD 825/year — at best, 10% of my flying cost. I don't mind paying that 10% for the convenience of just taxiing up to a fuel pump on the field (or calling over the truck) instead of hauling up to 10 5-gallon cans of mogas onto the field every time I need to fuel up.
In my example, it was 82% more to buy the blue gas, but since fuel is such a small part of the overall cost of flying (at least unless you own a turbine or thirsty twin), the net impact on flying cost is tiny.Here it would be pretty close to 78% more to buy blue gas. Depending on which FBO you use it may be 100% more.
Good luck with that. When the cooling system fails in your car, you're not running at 75% or 65% or 55% or even 45%. You're running at maybe 20 or 25%. In an airplane a coolant system failure means imminent seizure. You're not cruising to the nearest airport at 25% power unless the airport is very close and you have plenty of altitude.Even if all the coolant drains out, the engine will continue running at a significantly reduced power setting long enough to get to an airport. It may very well destroy the engine, but you'd be able to make a landing.
I think back on what cooling system failures I've experienced over my now nearly 50 years of driving. They were either caused by poor maintenance (clogged core, should have been replaced), or poor selection of material by the manufacturer (crummy plastic cooling system parts). I've never had one fail bad enough to stop me in my tracks. It would be important to know immediately if something were going wrong, I'd want some sort of annunciator for that.
First off, I'm admitting my ignorance on this; I'm genuinely curious:
I see that the track record for speed reducers had been abysmal, but Rotax doesn't seem to have trouble. Do they have some magic, or is that the reason they haven't gone beyond the 130hp level?
Also it seems like belt drives are pretty reliable? I assume one big enough to reliably transfer 200hp would be too big to be practical? The junkyard guys who put a jacobs r755 in a pickup used a belt drive, but with no cooling they couldn't run the engine long, so the reliability of the belt drive was probably the last thing they worried about.
Good luck with that. When the cooling system fails in your car, you're not running at 75% or 65% or 55% or even 45%. You're running at maybe 20 or 25%. In an airplane a coolant system failure means imminent seizure. You're not cruising to the nearest airport at 25% power unless the airport is very close and you have plenty of altitude.
It's not torsional resonance at all. It's just the compression pushing the prop back as it stops. Torsional vibration in direct-drive applications is pretty much absent. The prop is the flywheel and is connected directly and solidy to the crankshaft. With gearing, the prop is still the flywheel, and at certain RPMs the gears are going to suffer unless there's some means of damping the vibrations. With geared aircraft engines (both Lyc and Continental built them) there are torsion shafts that absorb the worst of the resonance by twisting. Rotax uses a clutch. On airboats, where weight isn't much of a factor, the heavy cast iron flywheel can be left on the crank to damp out the vibration. Even in cars there are springs on the clutch plate to absorb the bad stuff. Torque converters do it, too, but a heavy thing like that isn't welcome in any airplane.Torsional vibrations occur even in direct drive applications. When a LycSaur is winding down, the propeller sometimes kicks back. That’s not a backfire but torsional resonance.
25% power in a 172 will be around 1600-1700 RPM at most. It takes 1900 or so to maintain altitude when running light. Like I said, you're going down.An engine failure mode where I have 25% continuous power and 100% short power would be pretty dreamy actually. Opens up a lot more options and possibility of correcting an error on landing. I’ll take it.
25% power in a 172 will be around 1600-1700 RPM at most. It takes 1900 or so to maintain altitude when running light. Like I said, you're going down.
But again, you are going down with a failed legacy engine as well, but the comparison is going down with 0 power or with 20% power. 20% power is plenty to make an approach to landing in a field 10x easier than a true dead stick landing. Plus, as stated, if you need 100% power last minute to clear a power line or fence, you have it, regardless of if it seizes after that burst.25% power in a 172 will be around 1600-1700 RPM at most. It takes 1900 or so to maintain altitude when running light. Like I said, you're going down.
Good luck with that. When the cooling system fails in your car, you're not running at 75% or 65% or 55% or even 45%. You're running at maybe 20 or 25%. In an airplane a coolant system failure means imminent seizure. You're not cruising to the nearest airport at 25% power unless the airport is very close and you have plenty of altitude.
Reserves for what? Even leaving out engine overhaul (since that would be a different cost with for him), if you're paying $1,500/year insurance, $3,000/year maintainance, and $1,000/year tie-down (all improbably optimistic low-end estimates) that's $110/hour at 50 hours/year (most owner-pilots don't even manage that), or $55/hour at 100 hours/year before we even get into variable hourly costs. So unless fuel, oil, and engine reserve are between negative $35/hour and negative $90/hour — again, in an unrealistically-optimistic case — it's hard to see how you could land at $20/hour.The airfacts article says the $20/hour is operating cost with fuel, oil and reserves..... not just the fuel. Big savings over a O-360 at about $60/hr. There are plenty of experimentals flying with car engines safely now and seems logical to apply to old certified aircraft. But didn’t Porsche make and certify an engine for Cessnas and Pipers back in the 80’s?
In the article, he compares the cost of renting a C172 to the his claimed $20/hour cost. That's apples to oranges, because the cost of renting (or owning) is mostly not fuel, oil, or engine reserve.Reserves typically refer to engine overhaul. Not sure I see your point. Cost of flying is absurd, seems something like such new thinking in this ancient industry is a huge step in the right direction. If cost can drop to $20/hr, or even $50, for something like a C172, there would be less aircraft being parted out and returned to rental fleets and flying clubs which can really make a difference in allowing more to fly.
my flying club rents a C172 out for $110/hr which is about the lowest around. If something like putting a new engine design on the same old airframe and drop the cost to about $50/hr, it would be huge. It may not cure the other cost factors, it’s a good step in right direction.