Georges, Ed and all interested,
The following excerpt from Bill Jepson adds more info about the stock
waterpump and
would seem to show the wisdom of reducing pump RPM for those of us
using Tracy's
RD1C 2.85 redrive.......I will be ordering the 5 " diameter pump
pulley today and when
received will report on quality, fit, etc as necessary for our
needs......
--
Kelly Troyer
Dyke Delta/13B/RD1C/EC2
(Copied and pasted from eariler post)
Jim, I agree that 12-34 GPM is a big window. One of the items that always
drove my skecptisim over the EWP is that in almost every thermodynamic text
I've read turbulent flow is cited as helpful to heat transfer. This would be
short of cavitation of course. Volume is always the second item, or
sometimes interchangeable. I'm sure this is what drives the "other list's"
refusal to believe the EWP will work. I AM willing to accept a actual test.
Thanks Todd Leon and whoever has tried. Somewhere there is an incorrect
assumption being made. I'd like to know where, so I'd be more comfortable, but
I am always willing to believe my eyes, and my temperature guage! As a side
item, when I spoke with Steve Wienzerl the designer of the newer PowerSport
reduction drive, he said they tested the EDWP to max flow. The claimed volume
was 55 GPM somewhere between 6500 and 7000 RPM. He was sure this was on the
ragged edge of caviitation. He wasn't a EWP believer, in fact he wanted even
more flow than they were getting!
Bill Jepson
--------------
Original message from "Ed Anderson" <eanderson@carolina.rr.com>:
--------------
Hi Georges,
Not Tracy, but my alternator is
underdriven by approx 40%. I have two Racing beat pulleys each 20%
underdriven, one the main pulley on the eshaft and the other on the
alternator. Kelly is looking into a underdriven pulley for the water
pump. Running continuos at above 5000, even 6000 rpm make me decide to
reduce the alternator speed and I would like to do the same for the water
pump especially with engine rpms approaching 7000 rpm with the 2.85
redrive. I also use the best V belts I can find (Gates) which I change
every two years and they have never shown any signs of stress such as
cracks or grazing. Can not say the say of some cheaper belts I used in
the past, including one which after 5 flights had the rubber "clogs" falling
off the belt.
Ed Anderson
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