Congrats Al;
Very
satisfying to watch your own creation take flight. Send pics.
S. Todd Bartrim
C-FSTB
Turbo13B RV9
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#C-FSTB
http://www3.telus.net/haywire/RV-9/C-FSTB.htm
From: Rotary motors in
aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Al Gietzen
Sent: Saturday, August 05, 2006 7:45 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] It's officially an airplane
A
high speed nose lift; a high speed crow hop; and finally off and away around
the pattern; the 20B powered Velocity, N755V maid its maiden flight yesterday,
8/04/06. What an exciting milestone – even though in this case I
was watching from the ground as the test pilot did his thing.
The
engine performed well, and the pilot reported that all handling characteristics
were good. The flight was short, however; because the oil temp was 10-15F
higher than the limit I had set, and the pilot did the right thing in
abbreviating the flight so that can be evaluated and changes made as necessary.
All in all, with that as the only issue of note at this point; it was a good
day.
It’s
such a common thing, isn’t it – these cooling issues. The oil
temp (downstream from the cooler) peaked at 230F, somewhat after the end of the
climb (OAT about 80F); I guess it takes a little while for the hot oil to get
to the bottom of the 8 qt sump and back through the cooler. The main
concern was that the temp didn’t drop more that 3-4 degrees as he went
around the pattern, and after landing and rolling out it was still 225F.
Coolant temps peaked about 190F.
I
had a video camera mounted reading the engine monitor display which is great
for review later. Unfortunately, even though I have all sorts of
instrumentation for doing diagnostics, in his focusing on flight
characteristics, and the concern about the high oil temp the pilot forgot to
push the ‘page up’ button; so the only data I have is page 1.
Regardless of further data, it seems clear that there is insufficient air flow
through the wing root oil cooler – a condition that was not entirely
unexpected.
Another
major step in an on-going process.
Al