Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
Why are airplane engine TBO hours so low?
Because Mr. Cessna wanted it that way.??
Why are airplane engine TBO hours so low?
Well, for a "failed" engine they're still marketing it. https://www.smaengines.com/our-product/sr305-230erWasn’t SMA engine a failure?
That wiki page also says that it WILL go into 182 in 2013. Given that this its only application and Cessna chose not to use it, I’d say it’s a failureWell, for a "failed" engine they're still marketing it. https://www.smaengines.com/our-product/sr305-230er
Wiki's page on it was last edited on February 26, 2020. It ain't dead yet. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMA_SR305-230
It's a conspiracy.
Because Mr. Cessna wanted it that way.??
The SMA is STC'd for the 182Q and there and numerous examples of those flying. SMA sold or licensed the technology to Continental, and the Continental version was the one Cessna was going to use in the JT182. Cessna cancelled or paused that project since 182 sales, along with the 172 aNnd206, were too low to justify it.That wiki page also says that it WILL go into 182 in 2013. Given that this its only application and Cessna chose not to use it, I’d say it’s a failure
Astro that is going to DA50 seems like a better choice. I suspect cirrus will probably wait to seee how diamond is doing with it first.
The SMA is STC'd for the 182Q and there and numerous examples of those flying. SMA sold or licensed the technology to Continental, and the Continental version was the one Cessna was going to use in the JT182. Cessna cancelled or paused that project since 182 sales, along with the 172 aNnd206, were too low to justify it.
Austro was the result of the Thielert failure and there are examples flying. The two engines (SMA and Austro) are completely different philosophies. The Austro is a converted Mercedes engine with a PSRU. The SMA is a clean-sheet design, direct-drive. Both are plenty expensive compared to a Lycoming or Continental, and both must be replaced, not overhauled, at TBO. There are few service centers for them, and even there the amount of repair permitted is limited.
Probably the majority of them.Idle thought: Why complain about a 2000 hour TBO for an engine in the airplane that flies less than 30 hours per month? How many of the small GA engines reach calendar TBO before operating hour TBO?
Probably the majority of them.
What I read, many of the trainers well exceed 2,000 hrs. One article had a retraining fleet that topped them at 2,000 hrs then overhauled at 4,000 hrs. Regularly, not flukes.
Those that fly 50 hrs a year don't seem to make TBO. Fly them 300 hrs a year or more and exceeding TBO is more common.
Wayne
There have been a few engines successfuly converted, but mostly one-offs where the builder got everything almost all right. Even then, some of them have required endless tinkering to try to work out bugs. The engine itself, if it's a robust engine and as long as it has adequate cooling (which can be difficult without causing a whole lot of extra drag) will operate at high power levels for extended periods, though 2000 hours might be a fantasy.If Car engines did a good job in planes, we would see car engines in planes. They don’t work, they don’t hold up, they can’t handle the stresses. Perhaps the closest is the Austro diesels, heavily modified, but they are heavy, while still being puny.
You're adding a LOT of weight, and weight is the enemy, to say nothing of a lot more failure points. Works good in vehicles that don't fly.
Words like could and might and likely just don't get anything done. They're just signs of wishful thinking, not based on any real facts and numbers or knowledge of the issues. Real facts and numbers gave us the engines and airplanes we have now. Real facts and numbers are currently seriously hampering useful and practical electric flight.
Petrol (Mogas, as we know it) might be cheaper than avgas, and there are many aircraft engines that can be legally run on it. You also have to figure in the battery cost and life and add that to the operating costs.Back-of-the-napkin check:
Continental IO-520 weight: 184kg
Rotax 300 HP 1630 86kg, Tesla 10kWh - 62kg, Tesla 362 HP electric motor: 31kg = 179kg
The math checks out - just needs a bit of engineering. Unlike with pure electric, which isn't supported by current science.
Note, this isn't the general: "Hybrid is more efficient" argument. It's not and won't ever be. There is no regen to be had in the air that can make it more efficient. This is a "hybrid-electric can be cheaper and equally as safe as avgas piston" argument.
You may or may not lose range due to the gasoline-electric conversion factor. (There's about a 15% cost of conversion, but OTOH you're comparing 2020 fuel injected engines against 1940 carburetor engines). But even if the conversion loss is 15%, petrol is more than 15% cheaper than avgas.
Wasn’t SMA engine a failure?
I assume the reason they went defunct was that they were skimping on maintenance on both the engine and airframe. Not the first operation to have that problem - I know of a former school that lost 100% of their aircraft to mechanical issues with their Lycomings.
Isnt it better to compare aviation engines to motorcycle engines? My truck rarely turns more than 1700rpm compared to my Harley which likes to be above 2500rpm. I know if I get 100,000 miles on the Harley engine without maintenance then I was a good owner(or lucky). Even Honda motorcycle engines seem to become problematic around the 100k area. So the motorcycle engine seems to be more like a plane engine than a car engine.
I was part of a few private Cirrus clubs plus a dry lease arrangements. The engines in these planes all needed work prematurely. One needed work just 800 hrs in. This was especially true in the club we had with eight members.. but I think part of this, as much as I hate our old engines, is because of poor engine management. It got to the point where the club head would do public shaming emails of flights that were poorly leaned. Somehow I managed to keep that engine always under 380 and usually in the 350-360 range.. some people though would cruise for hours with thing in the 400-420 range due to poor leaning and management technique. (Lots of people have no idea whot LOP is and incorrectly think that lean=hot). Which kind of goes back to the earlier point about FADEC. Even if the engine itself "must" be the way it is (large displacement, low RPM, etc.) we could at least utilize FADEC to mitigate operator error. Most pilots aren't engineers, especially people buying Cirrus.. they're used to a catered world. Give them a throttle and let a computer (or 3 or four of them for redundancy) figure out what the pilot is asking for and provide that.but they usually eat a few cylinders in that period
No, but you will care when you can't fly your plane 30% of the time because there consistently seems to be some issue with the engine. Your million dollar toy is in the shop, AGAIN, and you have to fly commercial to Vegas like some kind of proletariat.If I were buying new 200mph plane, I wouldn’t really care much about tbo
Rotax 912 TBO has been 2,000 hrs. since 2009.Rotax engines (912) are built using new technology. It has a TBO of 1500 hours, similar to the death trap Continentals mentioned above. This tells me it is more of the demand placed on the engine for the weight and size than simply bad engineering and bad construction.
I was part of a few private Cirrus clubs plus a dry lease arrangements. The engines in these planes all needed work prematurely. One needed work just 800 hrs in. This was especially true in the club we had with eight members.. but I think part of this, as much as I hate our old engines, is because of poor engine management. It got to the point where the club head would do public shaming emails of flights that were poorly leaned. Somehow I managed to keep that engine always under 380 and usually in the 350-360 range.. some people though would cruise for hours with thing in the 400-420 range due to poor leaning and management technique. (Lots of people have no idea whot LOP is and incorrectly think that lean=hot). Which kind of goes back to the earlier point about FADEC. Even if the engine itself "must" be the way it is (large displacement, low RPM, etc.) we could at least utilize FADEC to mitigate operator error. Most pilots aren't engineers, especially people buying Cirrus.. they're used to a catered world. Give them a throttle and let a computer (or 3 or four of them for redundancy) figure out what the pilot is asking for and provide that.
No, but you will care when you can't fly your plane 30% of the time because there consistently seems to be some issue with the engine. Your million dollar toy is in the shop, AGAIN, and you have to fly commercial to Vegas like some kind of proletariat.
I think my critique of the 172 was 13 fuel sumps and no way (on several models) to sump the gascolator without polluting or actually testing the sample. I never spoke ill of the PA28's system172 fuel system being too simple
I never had any trouble getting the sample cup under the 172's fuel strainer while pulling the drain cable. On a 185 or 206 it's a much bigger hassle. There are STC'd fuel strainers that get away from the Cessna type, parts for which are horribly expensive, and the new ones are much easier to service, too.They use the simple push-to-drain Curtis valve, same idea as the wing sump drains. But then you have to bend down, don't you? Something else to complain about.I think my critique of the 172 was 13 fuel sumps and no way (on several models) to sump the gascolator without polluting or actually testing the sample. I never spoke ill of the PA28's system
I think my critique of the 172 was 13 fuel sumps and no way (on several models) to sump the gascolator without polluting or actually testing the sample. I never spoke ill of the PA28's system
fine. But the reason behind that is the typical plane people will be stepping up to ultimately are far more complex and challenging than what a 172 gives them. It's like learning to drive stick on an old Tacoma then buying a brand new sports car and not understanding why you can't do a hill start. If all planes were fadec with easy fuel systems to manage I might not have this critique of the Cessna, as I find it leaves one ill prepared for the planes they'll some day fly"(13) BOTH fuel..
(a) this teaches very poor fuel management and discipline, resulting in threads where people ask "why it is so hard to manage fuel?""
I get what you were saying, just couldn't resist. I was contemplating buying a Cherokee 160 or 180 to train in rather than my dad's Cherokee Six. I'm not a fan of renting. He was fine with me putting hours on it and I'm fine with the extra 30 bucks an hour in fuel. I was concerned with having to manage the constant speed prop but it hasn't been a big deal.fine. But the reason behind that is the typical plane people will be stepping up to ultimately are far more complex and challenging than what a 172 gives them. It's like learning to drive stick on an old Tacoma then buying a brand new sports car and not understanding why you can't do a hill start. If all planes were fadec with easy fuel systems to manage I might not have this critique of the Cessna, as I find it leaves one ill prepared for the planes they'll some day fly
And then nobody could afford the training.If all planes were fadec with easy fuel systems to manage I might not have this critique of the Cessna, as I find it leaves one ill prepared for the planes they'll some day fly
That's a fantastic deal! The Cherokee Six is a veritable beast. Big comfortable airplane. I don't mind CS, I almost feel like you have better power management control.. set the RPM and just manage MP for power.I get what you were saying, just couldn't resist. I was contemplating buying a Cherokee 160 or 180 to train in rather than my dad's Cherokee Six. I'm not a fan of renting. He was fine with me putting hours on it and I'm fine with the extra 30 bucks an hour in fuel. I was concerned with having to manage the constant speed prop but it hasn't been a big deal.
Well that part's a catch-22, but I suppose most of flying is with regards to cost, volume, tech. etc.And then nobody could afford the training.
..through the advancement of tech we've made something easier? That same tech that has made the sports car easier to drive is not there in the GA fleet. The point was learning to drive on something with a large, dumpy, and forgiving clutch really doesn't prepare someone to drive something with a tight and short clutch. I think many of our accidents, hard landings, bent metal, are the result of someone jumping from a 172 into a Mooney, Bonanza, Cirrus, etc. withouth the proper transition. Just about anyone can drive a Tacoma, pathfinder, what have you. Put someone in a late 90s BMW, Celica, Miata, whatever and they'll be stalling that thing left and rightModern sports cars are way easier to hill start than an old Tacoma.
Took a bit to get used to. Was worried it was going to be too much to manage but that hump went away pretty quickly. Shoulder room is so under rated. Sure it's not fast. But it will haul pretty much anything.That's a fantastic deal! The Cherokee Six is a veritable beast. Big comfortable airplane. I don't mind CS, I almost feel like you have better power management control.. set the RPM and just manage MP for power.
It goes the other way too, remember that idiot who learned to fly in a Cirrus and loaded up a rental 172 and took off with full flaps? IIRC he had no 172 time and still took passengers. RIP. You have to know the plane you're flying.
Every manufacturer knows of the gaping hole in demand for new airplanes, the cheapskates won't pay 200k for a plane and the big spenders have no problem spending 500k-1m+ on a plane. Cirrus shipped 53 SR20s, 131 SR22s and 200 SR22Ts last year. It's really hard to roll out affordable innovation when a home run would be selling 500 150k planes a year.
Glas does make you complacent. I saw it in the flight school. If we simulated a nav failure, the pilot had no idea where he was. He wasn't thinking. This can be fatal in an airplane, mot so much in a car.Glass is less safe, it will make you complacent, yada yada yada. When my school in Boston got their first PA-28-161 with a 430 I was basically told not to use it, that it will make me less situationally aware and to use the maps and steam VOR needles for navigation. But ultimately just about everyone today is putting something glass in their plane, whether it's an Aspen, G5.. heck even a 650 (imho) is a form of glass. Even many of our club beater rentals have dual G5s, now, etc.
Diesel retrofits have been a marketing failure, because no one who can do basic arithmetic wants to pay $50K to retrofit a diesel into a $40K used Cessna or Piper to save $500/year in gas.Wasn’t SMA engine a failure?
Preach!Shoulder room is so under rated.
Forgot to add they weigh more and produce less horsepower.Diesel retrofits have been a marketing failure, because no one who can do basic arithmetic wants to pay $50K to retrofit a diesel into a $40K used Cessna or Piper to save $500/year in gas.
But that's a fault of instruction then. If you're tracking a VOR and it fails or dies then (a) you might not know the thing has died until you're way off course and (b) someone may be just as caught off guard "where am I-deer in headlights" if they're just mindlessly droning along following the CDI. VFR you should be able to find yourself easily. IFR.. you're just as screwed without your nav as you are without the magenta line. Time to grab the compass and the stopwatch and bust out the navlog!!
SMA's engine, supposedly 230 HP is actually 227, but it pulls a 182 well because it does it at 2200 RPM. At lower propeller speeds there is less drag on the prop, so more power goes into thrust instead of drag.Forgot to add they weigh more and produce less horsepower.