Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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- Feb 23, 2005
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Tom-D
Tom....just get an experimental...and be done with it.
careful what you ask for.....they're getting that with drones by the thousands.Making the Private pilot easy & cheap would be a huge PITA for the FAA Thousands and thousands of small aircraft on ADS- will be a cluster F--- the ATC couldn't cope with.
agreed....the experimental market has history with these guys. Many love these engines.....I don't agree with the article that no one will buy an engine with a 1,000 hour TBO. The engine is a proven design and, if it's priced significantly less than Lycoming's version, then hell yes!
Except of course for those who must OH an engine at TBO.
Seriously, building engines isn't that difficult, it's not like we're talking any revolutionary engineering here, just a small step in evolution from a company that has been in the game for a long time.
you do know 98% of engine design is metallurgy?....and one can't tell by just "viewing" the parts.Seriously, building engines isn't that difficult, it's not like we're talking any revolutionary engineering here, just a small step in evolution from a company that has been in the game for a long time.
Isn't Titian a renaissance or maybe earlier painter?
you do know 98% of engine design is metallurgy?....and one can't tell by just "viewing" the parts.
Lots has changed in the last 40 years. The coatings, platings, and heat treatments are not what they started with. ECI cylinders are proof of that....and it's nearly impossible to tell by a visual inspection what one is dealing with. ....hence the comments that "not much has changed in the last 40 years".
....but, I'm sure you knew that too.
They do?.....Yes, quite aware, and ECI has been in the business since WWII, and no one else is doing it any better, they all have the same data.
you do know 98% of engine design is metallurgy?....and one can't tell by just "viewing" the parts.
Lots has changed in the last 40 years. The coatings, platings, and heat treatments are not what they started with. ECI cylinders are proof of that....
are you a metallurgist?About 2% of engine design is metallurgy... And the materials haven't changed much in the last 40 years. What has changed is what we know about fluid dynamics, how we use computer models to design engines, and lubricants.
Whoever would suggest a design like the usual Lycoming/Continental engines would get fired immediately today.
are you a metallurgist?
....and I do the failure analysis and testing for engines....and the metallurgist with his lab tech is my right hand guy.No I'm not. I design, test and calibrate engines for living
....and I do the failure analysis and testing for engines....and the metallurgist with his lab tech is my right hand guy.
nice.....does Henning work for you?
There are about 8 people in this organization with "Henning" surname, not sure if it's him. I guess working(well, I'm contracting) for a pretty major German company means we have plenty of German surnames in here...
They are all below me though
Henning is my first name Heinemann my last. Aviation wise, Ed Heinemann was some level of third cousin.
Sind Sie Deutsche?
Henning is my first name Heinemann my last. Aviation wise, Ed Heinemann was some level of third cousin.
What were your parents smokin'?
Never could get my mom to, even when she was doing chemo and dying. In N. Europe/Skandanavia it's a variant of Henry, and being born in Germany, it's on the authorized list of names for blonde boys.
Oh....how nice.There are about 8 people in this organization with "Henning" surname, not sure if it's him. I guess working(well, I'm contracting) for a pretty major German company means we have plenty of German surnames in here...
They are all below me though
Henning is a bit of an exception in Scandinavia, it is sort of "popular" around northern Denmark and southern Sweden. But it would not be a very common name north of Jönköping/in Norway.