In January, 2008, a fellow popped up on Usenet touting the glories of a another of those 100 horsepower VW conversions that have filled the skies with airplanes, which lead to the following exchange:
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> "...the great little VW > conversion with a 2.0:1
reduction producing 103 HP."
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To All:
In the context of an engine converted for flight the figures above are wildly fallacious. At best, they represent a 'dyno blip,' at worst they may be an out-right lie. Here's why:
The maximum sustainable power available from any air-cooled engine is determined by the engine's ability to cool itself -- to couple its waste-heat to the atmosphere. And with a carburetted, spark-ignited, gasoline-fueled engine there is a lot of waste heat to be managed since such engines are no more than 25% efficient when it comes to converting the heat of combustion into torque at the crankshaft. That means that for every horsepower measured at the crank you must generate at least four horsepower's-worth of heat in combustion. These basic rules of thermodynamics are made even worse by two additional factors, the first being 'Economy of Scale' in that smaller engines are less thermally efficient than larger engines, and the basic definition of Standard Day conditions -- 59.9 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale and an atmospheric pressure of 29.92 inches of mercury -- a fairly cool day.
With those laws of physics as preamble the next factor worthy of note is the physical dimensions of the Volkswagen cylinder head and the fact that all VW heads have the same exterior dimensions. This is because they must fit under the stock VW engine shrouding. No manufacturer of VW heads, either stock or after-market, offers a head having more fin area. Indeed, most after-market heads have less, due either to thickening of the combustion chamber wall or even eliminating one of the eight fins -- and in a few cases they have done both.
All -- ALL -- Volkswagen heads in common use today are derived from the heads developed for the 1300cc engine; their external physical dimensions remained exactly the same for the later 1500 and 1600 engines. The output of the 1300 engine was approximately 40hp and could sustain that level of output indefinitely under Standard Day conditions. This engine was bored-out to 83mm to produce the 1500 engine, then over-bored to 85.5mm to create the 1600 (actual displacement 1584cc), the maximum output of which was 57bhp for carburetted models, achieved in the 1971 model year. But that level of output could only be sustained for a bit less than four minutes, until the cylinder head temperature exceeded safe levels, again under Standard Day conditions.
So what's this 'safe level' of CHT? About 450 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. This reflects the fact that VW heads are made of cast aluminum (as opposed to a forging) and the fact aluminum is a 'white short' metal, meaning it becomes frangible when its temperature enters the 'plastic' range. A characteristic of white-short metals is that when heated they fracture like a cube of sugar when subjected to stress. The floor of the frangible range is a bit higher for a forging -- about 550F according to Pratt-Whitney -- but can be as low as 400F in a casting, depending upon the alloy.
A common thread used to impress technologically naive buyers is tales of driving a Volkswagen bug or bus for hours on end with the throttle wide open. The fact the engine was was probably producing less than twenty horsepower goes unsaid. This involves the Horsepower Myth and generally leaves a large black question mark hanging over the heads of those without an engineering background but it needs to be touched upon since ignorance can be as deadly as a machine gun when it comes to aviation.
The Horsepower Myth was create by James Watt in order to sell his modified Newcommen steam engine to mine owners. To do so he added the element of time to the equation and from that day to this the general public has been comfortable with the idea that 'horsepower' represents a given quanta of energy... which it does... but only within a defined unit of time. From that day to this, that arithmetical loophole has been used by those eager to prey upon technologically naive consumers.
Indeed, in the early days of aviation those predations cost so many lives that government agencies had to step in, requiring the manufacturers of aircraft engines to justify their claims of power and durability.
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All of which tends to leave the average homebuilder with more questions than answers. Fortunately, the engines themselves are incapable of lying, especially when it comes to fuel consumption.
The Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC) of all -- ALL -- air-cooled, gasoline-fueled, normally aspirated Otto-cycle engines is clumped near the 0.5 mark, meaning it takes about 0.5 pounds of 'gasoline' (*) per hour to produce one horsepower's-worth of torque at the crankshaft. For aviation gasoline that works out to about 12bhp per gallon per hour. For a 103hp engine that works out to 8.58 gph.
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(*) -- Thanks to additives and dilutants (such as alcohol) gasoline intended for automobiles has less potential energy.
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So when someone tries to sell you their Whiz-Bang 103hp VW engine, simply ask about its fuel consumption. If they give you an honest answer, such as 'nine gallons per hour' your next question should be 'For what TBO?' (And if they try to feed you the usual '3gph' bullshit, simply walk away.)
The truth is, by simply spinning an engine faster you can claim an impressive amount of 'horsepower' -- up to 1500bhp for some 'VW' powered dragsters (but with a TBO measured in minutes). Some years ago turbosupercharged VW engines were all the rage... until people learned they needed a valve job about every ten hours, no big deal if you're only selling such engines -- but of some importance to the folks who actually fly them :-)
-R.S.Hoover
Flying, homebuilt airplanes, working with wood, riveted aluminum, welded steel tubing, fabric, dope and common sense. Gunsmithing, amateur radio, astronomy and auto mechanics at the practical level. Roaming the west in an old VW bus. Prospecting, ghost towns and abandoned air fields. Cooking, fishing, camping and raising kids.
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Aircraft Fabric
If you have small children about the place you probably have one of these (pointing toward the first picture). A few bricks were laid down, some 2x8's were given several coats of paint then assembled into a square frame. Laid atop the bricks and filled with plaster sand, you have the Basic Sandbox.
Of course, about ten seconds after you toss-in the last shovelful of sand, your newly constructed sandbox will vanish under a layer of cats, even if you don't own one and even if the sandbox is located a long rifle-shot from the nearest neighbors who do.
Every sandbox needs a lid. The one shown here is made from 1x2" 'white-wood' furring strips bought at the local Borg for about 4x what they would have cost at a real lumberyard, all of which have now vanished. The lid was fabricated using urethane glue and pneumatically-driven 1-1/2" brads. The lower frame was made to match the sandbox and in fact, built on top of it, using the sandbox as a kind of out-sized pattern. The peaked roof is simple 90 degree angles.
The whole thing, sandbox & cover, were made in an afternoon.
To cover the lid I used a couple of yards of Dacron 'suit-lining' material - - the same stuff I've used on airplanes (and written about in other places). It cost about a dollar a yard and is 44" wide. One square yard of the stuff weighs about an ounce and a half. This resulted in a cover that weighs about twelve pounds, light enough to be tipped-up and removed by a child.
Contact cement was used to attach the Dacron to the frame. The Dacron was then shrunk with a hot iron and the whole thing given a coat of the same Rustoleum oil-based enamel used on the wood. The paint was from the 'Oops!' rack at the local Borg; $30 worth of incorrectly colored paint for $5.
The sandbox & cover is now seven years old and starting to look a bit tatty. Had I given the fabric two coats of paint instead of one it would probably look a bit better. The fabric itself is still sound, despite its seven-year exposure to the weather. Thump it, it sounds like a bass drum.
There are two lessons in this message, the most obvious of which is that there are a lot more uses for fabric than knickers & table cloths. The other message is that even inexpensive Dacron is pretty durable stuff.
-R.S.Hoover
Friday, February 1, 2008
Center Main Bearing Web
Left-hand case-half, facing the pulley end of the crankcase. The offset hole in the middle of the saddle is for the dowel pin that locates the bearing shell. The hole at the 4 o'clock position is the oil hole, which connects to the main oil gallery.
Quite often when the crankcase is opened up for larger jugs the larger spigot bore is cut with a tool having a sharp point. This creates a stress riser and often leads to cracks in this area, which may extend across the main oil gallery.
The second photo is of the right-hand case-half, looking TOWARD the pulley end. Notice the lack of an oil channel.
However, unless the case has received the HVX mods all of the oil to this side of the crankcase arrives there via the channel behind the bearing shell of the #2 cam bearing.