Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #53798
From: <bktrub@aol.com>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Replaced Tension Bolt, Oil Seal, Thrust Bearing ... back ...
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 20:06:37 -0500
To: <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
And on to brighter news. I went out today, did some tuning on my plane, turns out it was running really rich on the factory EC2 settings. I went to auto tune and the injector settings went way down, all the way up and down the map table. Had to do a little fine tuning, and especially at the staging point, had to richen it up there, at bin # 84. I would have taken it up for a flight, but had other appointments. It was a glorious day for flying, but a test will have to wait for the next nice day here in Seattle.Previous flights went OK until just after takeoff, then the engine would surge and backfire, getting the attention of all witnesses within a mile or two. I can imagine that they were all mentally formulating what they were going to say to the FAA investigation team. I was starting to question my decision to go rotary, but now have a renewed sense of confidence in the installation.
 
Temperature today was around 50 degrees, even with extended running on the ground at full throttle, temps maxed out at  145 and148 for oil and coolant respectively. Throttling back to 16 inches of MP got the temps running around 125. Going to wait until summer to close up my cooling inlets a little.
 
Brian Trubee



-----Original Message-----
From: bktrub@aol.com
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Thu, Feb 10, 2011 4:50 pm
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Replaced Tension Bolt, Oil Seal, Thrust Bearing ... back ...

Hmm, send money overseas for their oil so that we can increase our trade deficit and fund all sorts of socially constipated cultures who might be hostile to our own, or keep the money here and employ americans? That's a real head scratcher there. I've got some of the mineral rights in the Bakken, due to some forward thinking ranch owning ancestors, so you can imagine what my feelings on this are.

 

New Drilling Method Opens Vast U.S. Oil Fields

Published February 10, 2011
| Associated Press
A new drilling technique is opening up vast fields of previously out-of-reach oil in the western United States, helping reverse a two-decade decline in domestic production of crude.
Companies are investing billions of dollars to get at oil deposits scattered across North Dakota, Colorado, Texas and California. By 2015, oil executives and analysts say, the new fields could yield as much as 2 million barrels of oil a day -- more than the entire Gulf of Mexico produces now.
This new drilling is expected to raise U.S. production by at least 20 percent over the next five years. And within 10 years, it could help reduce oil imports by more than half, advancing a goal that has long eluded policymakers.
"That's a significant contribution to energy security," says Ed Morse, head of commodities research at Credit Suisse.
Oil engineers are applying what critics say is an environmentally questionable method developed in recent years to tap natural gas trapped in underground shale. They drill down and horizontally into the rock, then pump water, sand and chemicals into the hole to crack the shale and allow gas to flow up.
Because oil molecules are sticky and larger than gas molecules, engineers thought the process wouldn't work to squeeze oil out fast enough to make it economical. But drillers learned how to increase the number of cracks in the rock and use different chemicals to free up oil at low cost. "We've completely transformed the natural gas industry, and I wouldn't be surprised if we transform the oil business in the next few years too," says Aubrey McClendon, chief executive of Chesapeake Energy, which is using the technique.
Petroleum engineers first used the method in 2007 to unlock oil from a 25,000-square-mile formation under North Dakota and Montana known as the Bakken. Production there rose 50 percent in just the past year, to 458,000 barrels a day, according to Bentek Energy, an energy analysis firm.
It was first thought that the Bakken was unique. Then drillers tapped oil in a shale formation under South Texas called the Eagle Ford. Drilling permits in the region grew 11-fold last year.
Now newer fields are showing promise, including the Niobrara, which stretches under Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas; the Leonard, in New Mexico and Texas; and the Monterey, in California.
"It's only been fleshed out over the last 12 months just how consequential this can be," says Mark Papa, chief executive of EOG Resources, the company that first used horizontal drilling to tap shale oil. "And there will be several additional plays that will come about in the next 12 to 18 months. We're not done yet."
Environmentalists fear that fluids or wastewater from the process, called hydraulic fracturing, could pollute drinking water supplies. The Environmental Protection Agency is now studying its safety in shale drilling. The agency studied use of the process in shallower drilling operations in 2004 and found that it was safe.
In the Bakken formation, production is rising so fast there is no space in pipelines to bring the oil to market. Instead, it is being transported to refineries by rail and truck. Drilling companies have had to erect camps to house workers.
Unemployment in North Dakota has fallen to the lowest level in the nation, 3.8 percent -- less than half the national rate of 9 percent. The influx of mostly male workers to the region has left local men lamenting a lack of women. Convenience stores are struggling to keep shelves stocked with food.
The Bakken and the Eagle Ford are each expected to ultimately produce 4 billion barrels of oil. That would make them the fifth- and sixth-biggest oil fields ever discovered in the United States. The top four are Prudhoe Bay in Alaska, Spraberry Trend in West Texas, the East Texas Oilfield and the Kuparuk Field in Alaska.
The fields are attracting billions of dollars of investment from foreign oil giants like Royal Dutch Shell, BP and Norway's Statoil, and also from the smaller U.S. drillers who developed the new techniques like Chesapeake, EOG Resources and Occidental Petroleum.
Last month China's state-owned oil company CNOOC agreed to pay Chesapeake $570 million for a one-third stake in a drilling project in the Niobrara. This followed a $1 billion deal in October between the two companies on a project in the Eagle Ford.
With oil prices high and natural-gas prices low, profit margins from producing oil from shale are much higher than for gas. Also, drilling for shale oil is not dependent on high oil prices. Papa says this oil is cheaper to tap than the oil in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico or in Canada's oil sands.
The country's shale oil resources aren't nearly as big as the country's shale gas resources. Drillers have unlocked decades' worth of natural gas, an abundance of supply that may keep prices low for years. U.S. shale oil on the other hand will only supply one to two percent of world consumption by 2015, not nearly enough to affect prices.
Still, a surge in production last year from the Bakken helped U.S. oil production grow for the second year in a row, after 23 years of decline. This during a year when drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, the nation's biggest oil-producing region, was halted after the BP oil spill.
U.S. oil production climbed steadily through most of the last century and reached a peak of 9.6 million barrels per day in 1970. The decline since was slowed by new production in Alaska in the 1980s and in the Gulf of Mexico more recently. But by 2008, production had fallen to 5 million barrels per day.
Within five years, analysts and executives predict, the newly unlocked fields are expected to produce 1 million to 2 million barrels of oil per day, enough to boost U.S. production 20 percent to 40 percent. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates production will grow a more modest 500,000 barrels per day.
By 2020, oil imports could be slashed by as much as 60 percent, according to Credit Suisse's Morse, who is counting on Gulf oil production to rise and on U.S. gasoline demand to fall.
At today's oil prices of roughly $90 per barrel, slashing imports that much would save the U.S. $175 billion a year. Last year, when oil averaged $78 per barrel, the U.S. sent $260 billion overseas for crude, accounting for nearly half the country's $500 billion trade deficit.
"We have redefined how to look for oil and gas," says Rehan Rashid, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets. "The implications are major for the nation."

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/02/10/new-drilling-method-opens-vast-oil-fields/#ixzz1DZa3M891




-----Original Message-----
From: hoursaway1@comcast.net
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Thu, Feb 10, 2011 4:26 pm
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Replaced Tension Bolt, Oil Seal, Thrust Bearing ... back ...

All this was said 40 years ago.   """We will be out of oil in twenty years"""  Coffee is bad for you""" now coffee is good for you & we have more oil than anyone ever dreamed available + being used many times more efficiently,  the """ones in the know ...do not know!!!!  But they can predict the weather 50 years from now.                        David R. Cook   RV6A  Rotary  -4 deg. F. Lansing MI.
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Staten" <david.staten@gmail.com>
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 2:15:02 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Replaced Tension Bolt, Oil Seal, Thrust Bearing ... back ...

Well, I can agree with Lynn for one thing.. Carter was 2nd worst president ever.... (After Bush 43)...  :P
 
Ethanol in fuel was never about efficiency. NEVER. It was about replacing a very toxic oxygenate (MTBE) with something cleaner burning and less toxic. Lead in aviation fuel will go the same way.. its inevitable. One plant makes the lead that goes in it. They go tits up and the 25 percent of the aviation fleet that burns 75 percent of the leaded avgas will be knee-capped brutally.
 
Biofuel is not exclusively ethanol. Its also HYDROCARBONS synthesized or processed from living matter, as opposed to fossil fuels naturally developed from long dead matter. Its bacteria in a digester/reactor with a feedstock and a product stream. Ethanol is in cars to reduce smog.. nothing more. Biofuels in aircraft do not necessarily have to include ethanol (but it could).
 
Ifwe dont start doing more than paying lip service to preserving our environment, we will have the worlds best military protecting the worlds largest ecological wasteland.
 
As long as we are overly dependent on fossil fuels, we will be subject to the foreign policy of others. Biofuels, Nuclear, Solar, Wind, Hydroelectric... all things that need to be developed further. And if we wait until its too late to transition, our worlds best military will be reduced to throwing rocks and writing nasty letters, because our turbine powered planes and tanks dont run on good intentions.

Personally... if we have to burn oil... Why burn mine (ours) when I can burn yours (theirs)..
 
I'm not hardly a hairy, stoned, tree hugging hippie, but I do recognize their point..
 
Dave
 
 
On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 7:24 PM, <hoursaway1@comcast.net> wrote:
Lynn for President,,,,,,,,,,( might be in central FL this winter, will contact, stop & say hi )   David R. Cook  RV6A   Rotary.
----- Original Message -----
From: Lehanover@aol.com
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Wednesday, February 9, 2011 1:39:57 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Replaced Tension Bolt, Oil Seal, Thrust Bearing ... back ...

In a message dated 2/9/2011 12:02:39 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, jwhaley@datacast.com writes:
Interesting enough, though the scary part is there’s no mention in the text of AVGAS or GAS … only the subject uses the term AVGAS.
The text body uses the terms “unleaded, sustainable general aviation fuel, credible renewable, unleaded fuel, 'green' fuel and the exclusive use of biofuel in air show performances."  I fear this is another attempt to push ETHANOL or heavy ethanol-blended fuel.
Jeff
If you take away government subsidies from the green fuel tree hugger play. Gasohol would be gone in a month. It takes almost a gallon of fuel to produce a gallon of gasohol. You have to boil it. It is made just like Jack Danials.
 
It is the biggest victory of form over function ever imagined by mankind.
 
The farmers love it because they save money as the kernel quality is lower, and the water content is higher, and they get government money. The government pays the oil companies to use it. The oil companies get to displace actual gasoline with the crap for even more profits, and the user pays all of them extra in taxes so you can get 30% less mileage and performance. But wait...........there's more.........Plus the better corn not now being grown for feed stock plastics and human consumption has boosted the price of that corn. So the farmer profits again. The beef man looses his a__, and you pay even higher beef, pork and poultry prices in addition the taxes that support this house of cards. When beef prices get high enough, dairy herds are thinned at higher rates (younger) and milk production drops. Milk prices go up.
 
What to do? 
 
Send the entire energy department home. Established in 75 to eliminate our dependence on offshore oil.
 
Eliminate all farm subsidies. Phase out oil imports to zero over the next 7 years. Drill here. Drill now.
 
We can be cut off at the knees and turned into a 3rd world country by the towel heads who hate us. If you don't remember the oil crisis of 74 under the (Now) second worst president in this country's history, Jimmy Carter, Look it up. Long lines on odd license number days, or even license number days for 10 gallons of fuel.
 
The worlds strongest military reduced to writing nasty letters????? 
 
If the tree huggers want to live in mud huts, smoke dope, and use gasohol let them pay for it with their money not mine.
 
Look up Bakken oil formation.
 
Lynn E. Hanover 

Subscribe (FEED) Subscribe (DIGEST) Subscribe (INDEX) Unsubscribe Mail to Listmaster