Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #15212
From: Dean <dvanwinkle@royell.net>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: water cooled matrix in the oil pan
Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2005 10:15:39 -0600
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Message
Rusty
 
The turboprop engines that I was associated with in the past (mostly PT-6) had a fuel/oil heat exchanger that was referred to as a fuel heater.  The prime purpose was to preclude any ice particles in the fuel from reaching the fuel control and shutting the engine down.
 
Dean   RV-9A  Fus/Finish   13B
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, January 14, 2005 9:15 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: water cooled matrix in the oil pan

Tracy once used a copper line running coolant through his oil pan, but this was on an early version of his 13B adventures.

 
Wasn't he running his fuel return through the pan on the way back to the wing tanks?  
 
I've thought about trying to use the fuel loop for oil/fuel heat exchange, but I don't think you could do this full time.  The problem would be when you only have a few gallons of fuel in the tanks.  I think the fuel temp could rise faster than the skin of the tanks could cool it.  It would make an interesting experiment. 
 
Another application of this fuel/oil cooling that comes to mind is for aux cooling when needed.  Say I install that small Fluidyne oil/air cooler, and it won't allow me to use full throttle for an unlimited climb.  I could augment that with the fuel/oil exchanger for climb only.  You'd have to monitor the fuel temp and shut it down if they got too high.  Of course it also means extra hoses, and valves of some sort to divert the return fuel.  Probably more trouble than it's worth unless you could use it full time.   
 
Interestingly, a Navy helicopter instructor was telling me that the turbine engines use an oil/fuel exchanger.  I guess turbines need the fuel to be warm, and also need a way to cool the oil.  Apparently, this does both.   
 
Cheers,
Rusty (don't get me started on wacky ideas)



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