SPAJC
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- May 15, 2014
- Messages
- 395
- Location
- Spartanburg, South Carolina
- Display Name
Display name:
Jeff
As someone who builds engines for a living, I'd say you nailed it for commercial service. The variable is private owners who let their Lyco 4 bangers sit and rust.Nope, but since my perception is my reality, 6 bangers fail more than 4 bangers, Continentals fail more than Lycoming, and turbos fail more than NA. As such, I fly behind a Lyco four banger. Since nobody can quantify otherwise anyways, my religion is as good as my science.
As someone who builds engines for a living, I'd say you nailed it for commercial service. The variable is private owners who let their Lyco 4 bangers sit and rust.
"Three engine failures where the engine ceased to drive the big fan due to faults in things attached to the engine."
Were these engine accessories; like oil pump or were they outside the engine compartment?
Failed muffler Internals blocking the outlet, Mud dauber nest blocking the carb. throat intermittently after coming in via the carb heat check, fuel vapor lock after a short stop for fuel on a hot ssummer day.
Lycoming O-320H2AD - 70hrs SMOH, sucked an intake valve, apparently the A&P had used the wrong valve keeper.
Lycoming O-320H2AD - 70hrs SMOH, sucked an intake valve, apparently the A&P had used the wrong valve keeper.
Once every couple of weeks or so for an hour. Which works out, coincidentally, to 100 hours/year.So, in your opinion, what would be the maximum time that you would allow the airplane to sit between actual flights, not short ground runs, which I don't do by the way....
Once every couple of weeks or so for an hour. Which works out, coincidentally, to 100 hours/year.
Thats sort of the data Im interested int.
No, there isnt an accessible database where I could pull out the failure data.
This would be a Poll of the POA members.
IF you had a failure, just post the make, model and the hours on the engine when it happened.
Ill collate the data an prepare a report.
thanks.
Once every couple of weeks or so for an hour. Which works out, coincidentally, to 100 hours/year.
It works out to 26 hours per year. I think you meant twice a week for an hour?
"say we know that, among engines that failed, they failed after 433 hours on average?"
Thats the point. We dont know that.
Dr. Ulrich analyzed five years’ worth of NTSB accident data for the period 2001-2005 inclusive, examining all accidents involving small piston-powered airplanes (under 12,500 lbs. gross weight) for which the NTSB identified “engine failure” as either the probable cause or a contributing factor. From this population of accidents, Dr. Ulrich eliminated those involving air-race and agricultural-application aircraft. Then he analyzed the relationship between the frequency of engine-failure accidents and the number of hours on the engine since it was last built, rebuilt or overhauled.
So, what's going to be different about your data compared to the data mined from the NTSB reports?Like any good science or engineering, every experiment, every engineering report needs to be able to be reproduced. If its not reproducible, then it cannot hold as much value.
While we "know", intuitively, that infant mortality of engines is real, and while we 'know' that TBO is a somewhat arbitrary number recommended by manufacturers that may have a stake in having engines overhauled; These things we "KNOW" need to be proven.
Mr. Busch as published several articles and mention Dr. Ulrich's work in each of them. There has also been a USCG white paper discussing the cost/benefits of Reliability Centered Maintenance instead of TBO centered maintenance. Each article refers back to a previous article and the work told to Mr. Busch by Dr. Ulrich. (references on request)
None of these 'publications' cites the data or provides any data to support their assertions.
Those that have worked in Manufacturing, Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) "know" that it is impossible to support a conclusion (such as TBO), if you dont have the data. Design Engineering cannot be done without supporting data that shows the design will work. Theoretical calculations alone are not enough, especially if real world data exists. (which is why they keep such data).
Those POA members that have actually done reliability engineering work, know that making assertions without the data is tantamount to having the sales department make engineering decisions.
The goal should be to collect data from as many sources as possible and to determine if the assertions made previously can be verified.
Manufacturers have managed to have the engine data stripped from NTSB and FAA databases. [http://app.ntsb.gov/avdata/]
For this reason alone, previous reports tend to massage the ACCIDENT data and infer that this reflects ENGINE data when may not.
The ONLY Best Data on engine reliability are the reports on engines that fail or not... not airframes, or aircraft accidents.
NTSB reports would be a very incomplete source of engine failure info. The majority of engine failures don't result in NTSB investigations. Most are addressed at the home field after a serious vibration led to finding metal in the filter, an RPM deviation led to the discovery of a broken crank, a funny smell led to the discovery of a separated cylinder, etc. In my earlier example of a broken rod that beat holes in the case? The NTSB had no reason to become involved. If you're interested in crashes attributed to power loss? That data may interest you. If you're interested in overall engine failures? I doubt there's any good way to compile a good data set to make any summary that's useful.
If you're lucky someone would cough that up....but, it's doubtful.
A large school, like Riddle, would have the data....but, it isn't going to be representative of the average GA owner....who's plane sits for long periods and flys a couple hours here and there and the colder regions have different wear due cold starts.
But, if you should get flight school data....I'd expect it to be more optimistic than your average GA owner.
"The best intrinsic data might come from well maintained flight school aircraft fleets."
That will give us data on well maintained aircraft. Do you think it would be statistically different than just general aircraft?
Thanks.