Chris,
I have seen my temps at 220 several times in the summer on climb
before I got my cooling issues resolved. I am surprised that a couple of
seconds would cause the TES O rings to fail. I certainly have abused mine
in the past, and they have held up fine.
Perhaps the coolant is getting in somewhere else. A crack
maybe. I was a novice at rebuilding a rotary when I did mine, but with
Bruce’s tape, and the manual, I had no problem, and it has been running
for about 3 years now.
Steve Brooks
Cozy MKIV N75CZ
From: Rotary motors in
aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Christopher
Barber
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 1:41 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Frying pan into the fire....Arrgh
Perhaps
one day I will post with good news. However, today is not the day. I have
really been having some fun as I move my project from "proof of concept
mode" to "flight prep mode". The engine and wires have
been my focus since I had to rebuild the strakes in my Velocity following my
Jeffco failure. (BTW, I may have discovered the reason for my Jeffco
failure...more on that later).
Since
I have seemingly gotten most my electrical gremlins tamed as in the engine
running, the alternators charging and lights working properly, I was gonna
start to actually hook up my Dynon D-100, radios, GPS's and audio panel
today. I was also gonna take out my EC2 and EM2 to send to Tracy to check
out one last time (my EM2 backlight stopped working so I figured I would send
it all in now while I tied up loose ends).
Since
I was about to send my computers in and would not be able to run the engine for
a while I couldn't resist pushing the plane out of the hangar and crank her
up. She started up as expected. I taxied around a bit making my
"airplane" into a loud and expensive "go-kart". I
shut down after a few minutes as the temps started to rise.
I
let the bird sit for a bit and wanted to restart it. Hmmm, not
starting. Hmmmm. Let is sit a bit more. Try again. Still no
joy. I sat there for a minute and remembered it was a bit difficult to
start a second time the last couple of times I ran the engine.
UHOH! When I had to build this engine it was premised by the old engine
not wanting to start after an initial run. The first engine got too hot
and was leaking coolant into the rotor housings.
I
took a big breath and went back to the exhaust.....there was a bit of dirty
liquid at the exhaust tip. Damn. Ok, take a deeper breath and be a
man (no offense Chrissi...I am a man<g>) and go remove a sparkplug and
take a look. Sure enough I removed the leading plug of rotor two and it
had a bit of liquid. I hand turned the prop and steamy liquid blew out
the hole. Damn-it, damn-it damn-it! Coolant in the housing. Checked
the front rotor and same thing, but less liquid. Damn.
Ok,
when this happened to my rebuilt first engine I blamed myself as I was in a
serious learning curve. I ran it hot without a prop, too hot with a
prop and without proper sensors. I really should have been surprised
if I didn't fry it. So, when it failed it gave me an excuse to buy new
housings, end and center plates etc and build what was/is essentially a new
engine. I TOOK EXTREME care as to not to ever let it get too hot. I
would shut it down if it got between 210 and 220. ONE TIME it got to
about 225 degrees before I shut it down and that was only for a matter of
couple of seconds. None the less something has happened to cause coolant
to enter the rotor housings again. I used what were advertised as
"beefed up" O rings purchased from Pineapple racing (kinda as
a thanks to their rotaryengine illustrated website). It is my
understanding if that if the engine gets too hot these "O" rings fail
and let coolant seep through. Oh, I sooooooo hope it is just the
"O" rings and the hardware was spared. All the hardware is new
and professionally ported by Mazdatrix to a medium street port...I really was
developing some power.....
I
spoke with my engineer friend, Blaine, who owns a couple of aviation business
with R&D as a major factor as well as building a Soob/Eggenfielder
RV-7 and he and I are gonna look into what I missed. Verify that my
sensors are working properly, check the cooling system for proper flow again
among other things. Very frustrating though. I am,
however, getting very good at removing my engine from the plane. I
had it off and sitting on the work table in only about an hour. I am not
gonna crack the engine open yet until I can get Blaine over for some joint
brain duty. On a positive note, there are a number of things at the
"firewall aft" that I need to address, this is giving me the perfect
opportunity to do so. They will be much easier to improve with the engine
off.
Now
to resign myself to yet another engine build as we determine the why.
And,
as to another "why". I may have determined why my Jeffco failed
in my fuel strakes. As loyal fans may remember I had to remove all the
old epoxy/Jeffco from my strakes and redo them completely a couple of months
ago due to the Jeffco peeling away. Well, as I was poking around the
hangar looking for something I had placed as to be able to find it easy
later......yeah, right, I came across my old Jeffco bottles. Hmmmm, the
Hardener is labeled 3191 and the Resin is labeled 9700. Now, I remember
that when I ordered it a few years ago it was 9700. I remember
specifically as when I first ordered from AS&S they sent the wrong stuff
and I returned it for the 9700. THIS time I ordered new Jeffco, but choose
not to use it and just use straight EZpoxy for my strakes, however, in the new
order BOTH the Hardener AND the Resin were labeled 9700. My current
thought is that I used the Hardener that AS&S supplied with the kit
assuming (yeah, bad Chris for assuming) that it was the correct one to use with
the 9700 Resin....which is what I knew to be the proper number. It was
not until the new order arrived a few months ago and I saw both the hardener
and resin are both 9700 and finding the original bottles from a few years ago
that I would have ever discovered a problem.
I
intend to send a email to the company that bought Jeffco and see if they can
verify this conclusion.
As
always y'all's insight, commentary, Wild ass guesses and demeaning remarks are
anticipated and relished. Please though, no gee Chris, you sure seem to
be having a lot of problems. Yes and No...I just like to share more
<g>. In the tradition of John Slade, share it all, it can only
help. Heck, this is the time to break things. Much easier to deal with
now in my own hangar and not on some deserted strip or worse yet, in the
air....even if my wallet is screaming.
So,
the fun starts when???????? :-)