At the risk of thread drift...
Isn’t the whole point of this community to provide a place for us to have conversations about aviation related topics? A place to express our opinions and have discussion?
so I am perusing the threads and see this one. My reaction to the conversation is “rotax engines are fine but nothing special. Nothing mysterious or amazing about them. So I say just that... rotax is nothing special. I throw in the idea that if we are going to discuss engine performance that torque needs to be part of the conversation.
the response to my OPINION has been so welcoming and warm. Some of you people straight up suck.
OK, I apologize if I came across as a dick in my last response. And, I may very well be guilty of conflating some of your responses with other peoples'.
To your point, though, my opinion is that right now -- Rotax actually kind of
is something special, at least in some ways, and in the context of their actual space in the market. That fact is borne out by the fact that essentially no new commercial designs in the past 10 years or so that could have used the only "old school airplane engine" competition that's still available as a new engine (unless I'm mistaken), the O-200. Certainly none that were successful. I think a major reason for the utter failure of the SkyCatcher was their selection of the O-200 instead of the lighter Rotax.
Rotax has been producing efficient, light weight engines for aircraft for about 35 years now, so it's not like they're something new and untested. They produce performance as good as an O-200 with less than half the displacement. They've managed to design and produce a solid, reliable gearbox that lets them use more modern methods of producing power than other manufacturers. There's no problem with carb ice, no need to fiddle around with mixture, no magnetos to wear out, no $40 apiece spark plugs, and they're perfectly happy running pump gas I can buy for less than $3 a gallon. The down side is -- they're really, really proud of those engines, and they cost a bundle. That fact is giving some other manufacturers an opening to start trying to compete. D-motor, Aero Momentum, and others are playing catch-up, but things are looking promising.
To compare them to larger piston engines and turbines -- well, there is no comparison, because they're completely different powerplants designed for completely different jobs. That would be like complaining that the engine in my pickup is a POS because it's not a diesel locomotive, and therefore can't pull a coal train through the Rockies.