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On 5/6/2015 8:01 AM, Tom Mann wrote:
Mind you, my rotary is not flying yet and I have a Canard
design but I often wonder why the RV guys don’t relocate the
radiator and use a P-51 style scoop?
I’ve seen many that have the radiator almost
perpendicular to the direction of the inflow.
I would think that a radiator mounted just behind the
seats would give you the distance to properly expand the air
and recover the pressure more efficiently.
Just thinking out loud ......
T Mann
I agree, a perfect P-51 style setup would be better, but....
Ross Farnham in Canada has done it (sort of).
http://www.sdsefi.com/air9.html
http://www.sdsefi.com/rv17.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT8njoirTkU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPpWHvr1kJw
He won't publish hard numbers, but has vaguely hinted at a 6-8 knot
speed gain over his old cooling system, which was pretty convoluted
(multiple air inlets/outlets in random places for multiple random
heat exchangers), so it was probably a net 0 gain over a well done
under-cowl setup.
It's pretty complicated to run the plumbing, and since a complete
rotary installation that's built with careful attention to weight
can come in lighter than a Lyc (I put my entire FWF on a scale: 310
lbs, dry), moving the heat exchangers aft is likely to adversely
affect the CG. Ross got away with it because he's running a turbo
Subaru, which is pretty heavy. The P-51 rad is partially submerged
in the fuselage. Submerging the rad in the aft fuselage sounds
great, but even if you can deal with the CG issues, with a metal
fuselage you have to be very careful what & where you cut to get
the air in & out. And the scoop itself is extra weight (the cowl
is already there for the outside of the 'scoop').
Water cooled engines beg for an airframe designed around them, just
as air cooled engines have planes designed around them.
Charlie
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