Jeff;
Congrats on first flight!
The flow measurements I did on the dyno indicated
about a 25% increase in flow rate by removing the thermostat. Increasing the
flow rate decreases the delta T around the loop, which will increase the
rejection temp a bit; which will help. However, if you are have that
degree of deficit at 32F OAT, increasing the flow rate isn’t going to
resolve it. Look for reasons for insufficient air flow through the rad.
Radiator cap ratings have at least a 10%
tolerance, so the pressure could have been 22 and pegged your reading –
or it could be some other issue, like restriction of the overflow as Steve mentioned.
Are you confident of the gauge calibration? Are you running pure water,
and was there any indication of boiling (which would certainly peg the guage)?
If there is no air in the system, the pressure should drop as soon as the temp
starts to decrease.
I wouldn’t think there is an issue
with your oil temp measurement – the flow to the re-drive would be
representative.
Oh; and definitely match the
belts. As you know; throwing one belt could easily take out the other.
Best of luck,
Al G
-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On
Behalf Of Jeff Whaley
Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2008
7:03 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] : First
Flight, short and hot
I
was in the right seat (flight engineer) when my homebuilt 2+2 made its first
flight yesterday with the 13B Mazda engine, but not without problems. The
coolant temperature reached 230F by circuit altitude; after throttle back and
approach it had only dropped to about 225F; the oil temperature was indicating
only 160F (this could be a mounting-point issue or real I’m not sure …
oil temp measure point is from a small manifold bolted to the PSRU mounting
plate, with oil flowing from engine to PSRU) outside air temperature was about
32-33F. The coolant pressure pegged the gauge beyond 20 psi, which was a
surprise as the pressure cap is rated for 20 psi … I expected the engine
to burp itself out and maintain 20 psi.
I
tightened up the cowling around the radiator and removed the thermostat in an
attempt to make a second flight but while removing the thermostat I noticed one
of the alternator V-belts was broken … got another belt only to find it
didn’t match the other … these belts really need to be a
matched-pair. Prior to flight, I noticed the outside belt (which broke) did not
have the same tension as the inside belt; it must have climbed out of the
pulley groove and got sliced by the pulley. Previously I bought a double
alternator pulley from Racing Beat but never installed it, due to difficulty
with removing the nut … thought it best to leave well enough alone …
I will now put on that new pulley.
Hope
to make another flight next weekend if the test pilot is in agreement.
Any
comments/experience on thermostat Vs no thermostat?
Why
would the pressure cap hold beyond its rating?
Jeff
Whaley
C-FJWW
From: Rotary
motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Tracy Crook
Sent: Saturday, November 29, 2008
3:10 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Renesis
fuel burn
If you
haven't calibrated the EM2 fuel flow yet, the GPH reading does not mean
anything. Don't make any decisions based on that reading.
Calibrating the fuel flow is the most difficult and time consuming parts of EM2
setup. That's the down side of doing it with such an inexpensive
flow sensor ($0.00) since it has none. The other option is to use a
Floscan flow sensor with the EM2 but they are pricy.
At 30" of manifold pressure and best power mixture setting and 6400
RPM you should get a fuel burn somewhere around 15 - 18 GPH. The exact
amount will depend on other factors like exact mixture setting, your intake
manifold, exhaust system, air temp, etc.
Tracy Crook
On Thu, Nov 27, 2008 at 6:32 PM, Rino <lacombr@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote:
Where can I get information on fuel
burn and power for the renesis?
The maximum fuel burn I can get on
takeoff is 11.7 gph (reading on the EM2) at 64 00 rpm. The EM2 is
not fully calibrated yet! I think I should be able to get a higher
fuel burn than that.
The other part of the problem.
What should be the intake manifold runner length on the Renesis. Best
power has to be between 6000 and 6500 rpm limited by the propeller
and redrive configuration. I cannot use more than 65" dia.
prop.
The present runner length is
17" and I think it is not enough.
Renesis
powered Glass Goose