Challenged
Pattern Altitude
Interesting airplane, along with the man behind it: http://www.eaa.org/news/2012/2012-10-11_ebneters-E-1-sets-another-record.asp
The most important note from the article is that it is a low-wing aircraft. Clearly.
I wonder what the specifics were; I'd heard of a guy who gets incredible range on his experimental by running at 300º LOP
The most important note from the article is that it is a low-wing aircraft. Clearly.
I wonder what the specifics were; I'd heard of a guy who gets incredible range on his experimental by running at 300º LOP
300 degrees below EGT or is that the CHT he is running? 100 degrees below peak EGT is about the most airplane engines will run at. I run about 50 LOP myself.
A buddy of mine in a motor glider flew for 3 hours hiring only a quart of fuel. Granted , in a glider you need to stay close to the airport, but still an amazing efficiency feat.
300 degrees below EGT or is that the CHT he is running? 100 degrees below peak EGT is about the most airplane engines will run at. I run about 50 LOP myself.
Why is there no way? I don't know if it was a mistake, but sometimes we need to think outside the box. He is obviously doing something different than others to get the great economy. I would like to know all the details of his mods, but i cant find them yet.I agree, no way an engine would run at -300F LOP. Maybe Apache misunderstood.
In any event, it is cool that this guy is really pushing the envelope on efficiency.
I don't think his airplane is most. And if he is just following what everyone else does then he would not be setting records.
Why is there no way? I don't know if it was a mistake, but sometimes we need to think outside the box. He is obviously doing something different than others to get the great economy. I would like to know all the details of his mods, but i cant find them yet.
It is definitely cool that he is doing it.
Obviously he is doing something right. I would think you would start losing volumetric efficiency if you get too lean of an A/F ratio, but maybe 300 LOP on his engine hasn't reached that point, I don't know. Certainly I like what he's doing.
(EDIT: Metering power by running extremely lean on a wide open throttle is far more efficient than throttling to control power at a richer setting, even if still lean of peak.)
Now in a wet rental, that's another story
What about Klaus Savier's 100mpg Vari EZ?
http://www.aopa.org/aircraft/articles/2008/081230100mpg.html
FWIW, the AOPA article states that Klaus runs 300 degrees LOP. It implies EGT although it isn't specifically stated (and engines need the kinds of precise fuel injection that allows his Continental to run an almost incomprehensible 300 degrees lean of peak).
I find it interesting that neither plane has a retractable gear. That tells me that a good, efficient design doesn't need RG, though that point has probably been clear for a long time.
What about Klaus Savier's 100mpg Vari EZ?
Obviously he is doing something right. I would think you would start losing volumetric efficiency if you get too lean of an A/F ratio, but maybe 300 LOP on his engine hasn't reached that point, I don't know. Certainly I like what he's doing.
(EDIT: Metering power by running extremely lean on a wide open throttle is far more efficient than throttling to control power at a richer setting, even if still lean of peak.)
Post #1 is talking about the guy getting 55 MPG.
Post #2 is talking about another guy that is getting 300f LOP.
I think.