In a message dated 7/9/2010 4:15:14 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
eanderson@carolina.rr.com writes:
Don't
know the answer - however, my view is at 5500 rpm even with 100% Ve
the
engine is ingesting only so much air mass - Which means you can only
throw
in so much fuel before you are burning all the ox in the air. I don't
think that any WOT operation at/near full power is going to vary the BSFC
much from the 0.55 - but, ignore my response lets see what Lynn
says.
Ed
As so many quickly point out to us, the rotary uses more fuel than a piston
engine. So you need a snappy comeback to counter that attack. What could that
be?
Oh yeah, well I can run way lean of peak EGT and you can't. .........And so
you can.
Piston engines collect the fuel / air charge and mashes it into a tiny
space that contains the heat of compression and the hot exhaust valve face and
the hot spark plug tip. This provides a charge temperature not far from
detonation. This allows the piston engine to operate close to the edge of doom
for its whole life. The only way to get closer to doom would be to add a
turbo-charger, and they do that too. Detonation is charge temperature dependant.
But having that mixture in a small hot package allows for some very
complete burns with only small amounts of spark advance. The closer you get to
using all of the fuel in the burn the more efficient the engine will be. The
piston engine has a slight advantage in this area.
In the rotary the charge is squeezed gently into a large cold combustion
chamber that has no squish areas to drive mixture to the plugs. Near the apex
seals the rotor face and housing are close enough to stop the flame front. So
mixture in this area does not burn.
Much of the heat of compression is lost to the chamber before ignition. The
fuel is trying to condense into droplets for lack of heat. For the most part,
not a good show.
The problem seems less so when we see that the poor chamber heating makes
any fuel appear to have a higher octane rating than it does. The mixture
contains less energy, and the flame front speed is low. Pressure build up is
slow and constant. The better dwell holds the chamber closed for a long time,
and this improves the burn. The exhaust gas temperature
is high compared to a piston engine, until you remember the piston engine
is heating an exhaust valve to orange on each cycle, while the rotary is dumping
gas at the speed of sound right onto the EGT probe.
If you mix enough fuel to reduce the available oxygen in the chamber during
the burn, the unburned fuel cannot combust on top of the EGT probe. So as you
lean the rotary, less fuel burning in the chamber makes additional oxygen
available to burn escaping fuel on top of the probe, and we see the high
EGT. This is happening at just lean of peak power.
See Sky Ranch page 143.
So leaning to peak EGT is already past best power. Our concern here is the
apex seals passing over the peripheral exhaust port where it is exposed to the
exhaust gasses leaving the chamber. Renesis owners my leave the room now. Over
heating the apex seal is very bad Mojo. So we stay well rich of peak EGT until a
few minutes into cruise, and lean very quickly past Peak, and into lean of peak
EGT. (Or, switch to the "B" controller that you have set up for lean cruise. The
engine will smooth further. The burn rate slows, because the clumps of fuel and
air are further apart. (Acts like higher octane fuel) The EGT going down saves
the muffler. Reduces noise. Extends range. Reduces cooling load.
How so? Less fuel=less energy=Less heat. But also less power. (So the plane
slows down)
The BSFC in Pounds (Of fuel) per Horse Power Hour goes down. Could get
very close to piston engine numbers.
The difference is that BSFC is mostly a function of surface area exposed to
the flame. The piston engine has very little, and the rotary has a bunch. So the
piston engine looses less HP as you reduce BSFC. The rotary looses more HP as
you reduce BSFC.
So you compare BSFC at the RPM you plan to use. So if you have one built
you want a copy of the dyno sheet, or look at a sheet from a similar engine.
This will give you BSFC for best power at whatever RPM.
A number of gags are used to reduce the poor burn. Like a very high
energy multi strike ignition system. Using more ignition
advance. In the 16X dream engine you see fuel injected late, and directly into
the chamber. Unless a turbo is involved, high octane fuel is less effective than
low octane fuel. Plus low octane fuel generally has more BTUs per pound.
Leaning past best power (Rich of peak EGT) takes you to peak EGT, and if
you stay right there for a while, this is where the Lycoming swallows an orange
exhaust valve head, and blows a rod out through the case, and the rotary begins
to overheat the apex seals in non Renesis engines.
Power can be (and often is) controlled by leaning the mixture, with
the throttle left wide open.
In the olden days, all of the big radial engines were run well lean of peak
EGT. The only way to get to England from the Azores, was lean of peak. They
carried drums of engine oil in case of a problem. But never had extra fuel.
Lynn E. Hanover