With a pusher, a fan is pretty much a
necessity for cooling on the ground. On my Velocity I found that the
negative pressure from the prop did result in some airflow through the rad in
the cowl; which did OK on cool days, but fan made a significant difference, and
now taxing and waiting for takeoff clearance on not an issue even on hot days.
I have found that the fan makes no noticeable
difference on cooling when at flight speeds whether on or off; and the cooling in
flight is not reduced since installing the fan. I think if you had waited
a bit longer in flight the temp would have come down without the fan on; other
wise I would not expect it to stay stable at 180 without the fan.
Al
The new cooling
system also has a cooling fan which I was able to integrate into the plenum
holding the radiator. At 95 F degrees OAT, and turning the fan on at
about 190 F degrees coolant temperature, The fan maintained 180 F for 20
minutes of ground operation, including some high power testing.
This morning OAT
was about 78 F, which is very good for North Carolina in August, I wanted something less than 95 F for the first test
of the new cooling system. I did not use the cooling fan for taxi or
takeoff, as I wanted to see what the cooling was without the fan. I took
of and climbed up to about 1200’ AGL. The coolant was up to about
205, and oil at 185. I leveled off and reduced the throttle to normal
cruise power. I watched the coolant temperature for a little while (maybe
15-20 seconds), and it seemed to stay at the 205 F reading. I wish now
that I’d been a little more patient, but I kicked on the cooling fan, and
the temperature came down pretty quickly to slightly above 180 F. I
turned the fan off again and the temperature stayed right there. I did
power up and climb another 300 feet or so, but really didn’t push it too
hard on the first flight. The temperature didn’t really move too
much during the brief climb. All other systems ran perfectly and it was a
very nice flight. I did stay within gliding distance of the runway the
whole flight, but based on zero squawks on this flight, the next one will be
longer.
While I would like
to have seen a little better performance, I was happy with the improved cooling
over the old system. Climbing to pattern altitude old the old system at
today’s temperature would have been 215 – 220F. On the next
flight, I’ll take off using the cooling fan, and see what kind of numbers
I get with it. I hope to see something more in the 185-190 range, but
I’ll have to see what the real number are.
Steve Brooks
Cozy MKIV N75CZ
Turbo rotary