A Lycoming 720? Yikes... What is that? Two 360's?
It's a motor that makes a Comanche sound like a Mustang. Any other questions?
but it sure was fune to sit between two of them in an excaliber conversionThe engine wasn't very popular overal
but it sure was fune to sit between two of them in an excaliber conversion
It guzzles fuel almost as bad as an R-985 radial
the engines are worth a fortune even in pieces
When I bought my piper brave (IO-720 powered) the box of papers that came with it had an invoice for a $60K-something overhaul done in the early 80's. Today lycoming will sell you a rebuilt exchange for ~82K or brand new for $133k
When my brave got a little scratch on it, I sold the salvageable engine parts for enough to mostly pay for a 6-cyl powered pawnee.
They were still in the lycoming price list in 2012 when I (briefly) considered another brave. Fortunately sanity took over. Actually that's a lie. Truth is my wife got wind of it.I didn't even know they'd still sell you one. I remember walking the halls and seeing a few 720 cases, but only a few. Never saw one fully assembled in person, other than on a plane.
They were still in the lycoming price list in 2012 when I (briefly) considered another brave. Fortunately sanity took over. Actually that's a lie. Truth is my wife got wind of it.
in that case you mean "mess" in the Picasso sense of the wordThere was a local 400 Commanche with twin Rajay Turbo's
And Robertson STOL. What a mess under that cowling.
Dave
I'd figure you could get a 720 burning 15-20 gph in cruise LOP.
We have a guy out at the airport with a 720 in a Glasair 1. He can't even run WOT because he'll overspeed. IIRC he had to put the battery and like another 60lbs of lead in the tail to make it balance.
Once he finally got it to full power it would climb almost straight up. That was a SLOW process though; the engine would roll the plane in flight if you added power too fast.