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Bulent Aliev wrote:
FW: [c-a] Why are aircraft engines so high priced???????
Who wants to take on this guy :) I’m a very poor
typist
Buly
I'll give it a shot :o))
------ Forwarded Message
From: Scott Derrick <sderrick@starband.net>
Date: Sat, 19 Feb 2005 09:14:27 -0700
Cc: canard-aviators@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [c-a] Why are aircraft engines so high
priced???????
See embedded comments ...
Will,
No I can't point to a database of accident reports or something
similar.
I'm speaking from what I've heard and seen. Strictly a personal
opinion.
Sometimes we have to actually look for
stuff that might be less obvious :o)
I think the most damning evidence concerning automotive conversions is
the deafening silence of reports of success.
This would seem to imply your deafness to a LOT
of documentation - very little of which is allowed to get past
the censorship and appear on the c-a list.
I'm speaking of long
hours. Who has gone 2000 hours on a conversion?
If my information is correct, about a thousand
crop dusters flying behind big block Fords for years and years. They
take a lickin' and just keep tickin'.
But we're talking homebuilts aren't we.
Who has gone 2000 hours with a Lyc? What kind of hours? Am I correct
that you're implying trouble free hours? I've never met anyone who
owns a Lycusaurus or Continental who ever got to TBO without some
serious failure(s) or very expensive preventive maintenance. I don't know of a single example. But I'm sure
there must be one. I believe Ken Miller
(sorry for taking your name in vain, Ken :o) is one of the more
enthusiastic Lycoming fans around. Did he just do a top overhaul on
his engine? How many hours did he have on his EZ? What other
not-minor-maintenance has he done on that engine? Typically, there are
jugs failing, certainly a lot of mags, fuel system problems, etc. Of
course it would be nice to see more than one success story. I'm sure
there are some - they just haven't come to my attention. I know of a
guy with 1500 trouble free hours in a rotary, and another
working on 1000.
At this stage of the game, I'm not sure that anyone in the homebuilt
community has 2000 hours of any kind of operation with an
automotive engine in a homebuilt. Truth be told, I only know of a
handful of people with 2000 hours in ANY homebuilt, with WHATEVER kind
of engine. I would hazard a guess that in a couple of years, I will be
able to produce one hell of a lot more people with 1000 or 1500 or 2000
trouble free hours in auto conversions (based on portion of the
homebuilt population) than you will ever be able to produce with
trouble free time in certified engines.
And it would be nice to
see more than one.... :-) The longest I know of is Tracey Cook on a
Mazda conversion, 600 hours??? maybe more. How about a list of 10 or
more conversions that have gone 500 hours? Can't find it...
NOW we're getting somewhere! Actually, it's more
like 1600 - pretty much totally trouble free IIRC. Your information is
dated by several years, and in the auto conversion terms, sort of like
computers, that's currently several generations.
I was on the conversion bandwagon for quite some time. The lack of
success stories have dampened my enthusiasm.
Perhaps you could tell us a few success stories
around Lycoming powered homebuilts who logged a lot of time without
serious failures. If you are even a little bit interested in putting
your money where your mouth is, how about producing some documented
(like with engine logs) cases of Lycoming powered homebuilts with over
1000 trouble free hours. Then, try for 1500. Then try to find someone
who got good service all the way to TBO. That is, after all, what
you're asking of the conversion community. Fair is fair (at least so I
was brought up to believe :o)
I doubt you'll find many who have made it to 1000 hrs at all, much less
trouble free. But try to find A guy who has 1000 trouble free
Lyc hours in a homebuilt. Document the money they've spent so far on
maintenance. The Lyc/Cont population outnumbers the auto conversion
population maybe 800:1 to 1000:1. But if you sampled the entire
certified population, there's no way in the world you are going to find
800 to 1000 times more people who have gotten extended service
with no serious failures than I will be able to produce in the
auto conversion world.
Not mentioned (but I will bring it up all the same) is the cost of
ownership. A tricked out auto engine with a good PSRU will cost maybe
$10k firewall forward. Sort of like a Lyc. You can rebuild a rotary
for under $700. That wouldn't buy the freaking VALVES for a Lyc. A
Subaru overhauls for maybe $600 - $800, a V6 or V8 $1000 tops. But you
may never have to overhaul your auto conversion. So far, there is no
reason to believe that a rotary engine won't go 3000 or 4000 hours
before it needs that $700 overhaul. V6s are holding together pretty
well too. Which of us will live long enough to accumulate that kind of
flight time?
So basically, we have to agree how we're going to define reliability
and how we're going to score the results of the two camps. We need one
set of rules for everyone. So far, most of the Lyc fans can be relied
upon to:
A) Get really shrill whenever an auto conversion has a failure of any
kind (usually involving bolt-on accessories, rarely the engine itself)
and condemn the whole movement seven ways from Sunday as a deadly lost
cause
B) Ignore equivalent Lyc failures because "... everyone knows that
item is going to fail a lot ..." and the poor slob whose engine failed
is berated for not babying his engine enough or inspecting it enough or
not replacing the ??? in anticipation of the failure. Has all the
intellectual allure of blaming the rape victim for causing her own
misfortune by wearing a tight skirt.
Can you spell D -O-U-B-L-E S-T-A-N-D-A-R-D ??
It's nice to see this issue discussed at all, even if it gets a little
incoherent and hysterical at times. A couple of years ago I was 86'ed
off the c-a list for heresy. I had the temerity to suggest
that some people were not being quite fair in their condemnation of
auto engines, because condemnation was the only context allowed to be
expressed concerning conversions.
I'm much happier where I am ... here with the open minds ... Jim S.
Scott
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