Cooling was one of the problems I was anticipating. I'll have to talk to N801BH about how he has solved this issue.
The belt drive system that N801BH uses looks simple and reliable to me. The longevity of the engine is another issue I'm looking to solve.
I thing building confidence in an auto engine conversion is key. If you can prove it to be reliable, more people will buy it. The more people that but it, the cheaper it will become.
If this can finally be done, it will ive power to the (airplane) people!!
My Zenith 801 STOL was a CHALLANGE to cool. Most planes fly at fairly high airspeeds and the pressure from that incoming air is better managed to route through various coolers for shedding heat. Try that with an airframe that cruises at less then 100 mph, stalls at less then 35 mph, and for difficult tuning, it is able to climb at 3000FPM@ 45 mph while the motor is making 300+ HP. Just try to cool that scenerio.
Longevity of the motor is my least worry.. I will go through my usual rant I preach about once a year.
Auto engines in a car do live a conservative life, I will admit to that.
A V-8 in a U-haul, Ryder or any other rental truck lives a hellish life.
1-They are typically undersized for the application.
2-The receive practically NO maintainance.
3-99% of the time they are run wide open, all day long, up hill and down, by people who will go out in the morning, start them up. They don't allow for proper warm up, overload the truck and hit the interstate highway while floorboarding the throttle all day and night, never check the oil level, water level or for that matter tire pressures.
That sir is a hellish existance in my mind... And for some strange reason these same motors are able to go 100's of thousands of miles..
Why??
Now you really want a rough life, look at marine motors. Same engine as in cars, V-8 Fords and Chevy's.
1-Usually run by complete idiots with more money then sense.
2-They sit on the trailer all winter, not properly winterized. Taken to the lake, ocean, river, etc on the first nice day of the year. Dumped off the trailer, fired up and run wide open all day.
3- On days when the water is rough the boat will leap in the air allowing the motor to rev way beyond its designed goal, then slam back into the water loading the motor to an unbelievable strain. Minute after minute, hour after hour, day after day, month after month, year after year.
4- Put away at the end of the season with little to no maintainance.
And surprisingly they last,, year after year.
I am all ears for someone to explain how they can survive that ....
Ps. I am already biased on using auto engines so your reasoning and facts will be highly debated.
Fire away guys and gals.
As a side note... crash and burn. Look at my website and on the second page it gives a link to 2 videos. One is 30 seconds long and altho the video sucks the sound of the V-8 is KOOL !!!!
.
The other video is 25 minutes and will explain how the whole plane works, including my cooling system.
Ben
www.haaspowerair.com