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Re: Europa-List: Re: Contact detail & Help

Subject: Re: Europa-List: Re: Contact detail & Help
From: David Joyce <davidjoyce@doctors.org.uk>
Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2012 14:59:37

Frans, I for one and I am sure the entire Europa Club 
committee would love to see you write an article for the 
Europa Flyer detailing your design and flying findings.
Regards, David Joyce, G-XSDJ


  Frans Veldman <frans@privatepilots.nl> wrote:
> On 06/10/2012 06:21 AM, Bud Yerly wrote:
> 
>> If I do say so myself, I never have cooling issues in 
>>Florida at 95
>> degree summer days using 50/50 Anitifreeze.  Judging by 
>>the calls and
>> email success stories, these simple techniques work 
>>pretty much world wide.
> 
> Although your solution might indeed work world wide it 
>is less suitable
> for Europeans.
> 
> There are a few reasons for this:
> 1) Your solution is focussed on more cooling air flow. 
>Unfortunately
> more cooling air also means more cooling drag. More 
>cooling drag means
> that higher power settings are required to achieve a 
>desired cruise
> speed. Although that might not be significant for those 
>living in a part
> of the world where fuel prices are only a fraction from 
>what it is here,
> for many of us here the fuel price is by far the largest 
>cost involved
> with flying our Europa's.
> 
> In another posting you wrote:
> "135 with the old pants at 5500/34 inches at 1000 MSL,"
> "His trigear only goes 130 at max cruise."
> 
> I do 130 with 27", about 155 with 34". This is a heavy 
>hi-top tri-gear.
> Although I selected a very efficient prop and have Fred 
>Kleins wing root
> fairings, I believe that a large portion of the 
>reduction in drag is
> achieved by my modified cooling system.
> 
> 2) Climate. I believe that in your area the weather is 
>somewhat more
> constant than it is here. This month I have been flying 
>in cruise mode
> in freezing temperature conditions (high altitude in 
>Norway) and in
> prolonged full power climbs with 35C OAT (Croatia). 
>Unless you use
> thermostats you can't achieve constant temperatures in 
>all conditions.
> 
> After numerous experiments this is what I have learned:
> 0) Cooling drag is the main drag of modern efficient 
>airplanes. Imagine
> the air swirling around in the cowling, colliding in all 
>kind of
> obstacles, and flowing over tubular objects (worst 
>airodynamic shape
> possible) and finally leaving the airplane in the wrong 
>direction and
> with the wrong speed...
> 1) The Rotax engine is for 95% liquid (oil, coolant) 
>cooled. Forget
> about airflow over the engine, apart from the cylinder 
>walls no cooling
> air is needed at all. Sure you can compensate for a poor 
>liquid cooling
> with air flow, but it is extremely inefficient. Once you 
>have the liquid
> cooling working correctly, you can close off all holes. 
>That's right,
> ALL holes. This includes the two "eye's". the gills, the 
>naca inlets,
> the nose wheel opening, everything. There is only one 
>small opening
> needed to connect the Rotax shroud for cylinder wall 
>cooling.
> 2) The main problem in the stock setup is the radiator. 
>The stock
> radiator is too thick (not even to mention the tandem 
>design). The
> pressure difference required to maintain enough air flow 
>is too large,
> and you need very large openings to keep enough air 
>flowing. I have
> tried many carefully designed diffusers but I never got 
>the stock
> radiator working sufficient enough for prolonged full 
>power climbs in
> hot weather.
> 3) Use an oil to water heat exchanger. This means that 
>you have to focus
> on the air flow of only one radiator, and also don't 
>need an oil
> thermostat and still have superfast warm-up times.
> 4) Get away with the entire "dog house". It is ugly and 
>it serves no
> purpose.
> 5) Use an adjustable cowl flap to control engine 
>temperatures.
> 6) Reroute the exhaust so the cowl opening points to the 
>rear. I tried
> to build an exhaust augmentor but I'm not sure if it 
>really works. In
> any case, the cowling air escaping around the exhaust 
>opening flows in
> the correct direction and doesn't upset the air stream.
> 
> So. what I'm using now is a thin radiator, mounted flush 
>with the
> underside of the cowling. (Custom made, 300 Euro's). It 
>is slanted so it
> follows the shape of the cowling. Because of the angle 
>the horizontal
> frontal area is very small, you can say it forms a 
>natural diffuser.
>Flow is controlled by an exit cowl flap. If the air flow 
>is restricted
> by the cowl flap, the air in front of the radiator even 
>doesn't "see"
> the radiator, the air flows over the surface and follows 
>the shape of
> the cowling as if the radiator doesn't exist at all.
> The air leaving the radiator is recycled because it 
>flows under the
> engine, taking the heat of exhaust and turbo with it on 
>its way out. No
> separate openings for these items are necessary.
> The coolant is also used to cool (or heat!) the oil via 
>a heat
> exchanger. Apart from the heat-up time, the oil 
>temperature is always 5C
> higher than the coolant temperature, which I consider to 
>be perfect. I
> keep the water at 105C and the oil at 110C in all 
>conditions. This is
> the best for the engine and the efficiency.
>For cylinder cooling you can use the standard Rotax 
>shroud with the
> opening under the propeller. I made my own shroud 
>because of the vaccuum
> pad alternator which prevents the use of the standard 
>shroud, but the
> idea is similar.
> 
> After one year of using this, I can state the following 
>results:
> 1) Adequate cooling in ALL conditions. I have excecuted 
>a full power
> climb from 0ft to FL095 at 80 knots in an inversion 
>layer with a OAT of
> 35C for most of the trajectory, with the water temp not 
>exceeding 110C
> and the oil not exceeding 120C. This was with the cowl 
>flap not yet
> fully open. Although not yet tested, I'm convinced that 
>the cooling
> would work ok in OAT's of 45C as well.
> 2) In cruise the cowl flap is typically only half an 
>inch open; i.e. it
> protrudes only a half inch below the belly of the 
>airplane. Compare that
> with the huge tunnelexit of the stock XS design!
> 3) Unlimited ground operations, even in very hot 
>weather.
> 4) Superfast heat-up times. 5 minutes is even in the 
>winter sufficient
> to get the oil temp far enough up into the yellow arc to 
>perform a take off.
> 5) Low cowling temperatures, despite the lack of 
>ventilation.
> Temperatures don't exceed 60C, except briefly after 
>engine shut off. In
> hot weather I open the oil tank access door after 
>landing for a few
> minutes to let the hot air out.
> 6) Weight savings. I have not weighed the difference, 
>but I'm sure the
> flat radiator and heat exchanger is lighter than the two 
>stock radiators
> and tunnel hard ware.
> 
> About the picture:
> This was the unfinished design. The final version is 
>even smoother.
> The only exit opening here is the proptrusion of the 
>"tunnel" against
> the belly of the fuselage. The nose wheel opening is 
>sealed off and
> flush with the belly. The cowl flap can be extended 
>further but this is
> the typical cruise setting. Quite a difference compared 
>to the stock
> tunnel, eh?
> 
> In addition of the rectangular radiator opening I have 
>two round inlets.
> The one on the starboard side serves the intercooler for 
>the turbo (via
> a wedge diffuser and butterfly valve). You don't need 
>this inlet if you
> don't have an intercooler. The opening  on the port side 
>connects to the
> cylinder wall shrouds. You could use the standard Rotax 
>shroud with the
> opening below the prop instead, but I made a round inlet 
>on the port
> side to maintain the symmetry. In most setups you can 
>ommit these round
> inlets. That would be an even cleaner nose!
> The starboard inlet also facilitates the engine air 
>intake. The port
> inlet also connects to a very small auxilliary oil 
>radiator. Without
> this radiator the water-oil delta T was 10C, and with 
>the extra radiator
> I got my desired delta T of 5C. It is not really needed 
>if you are
> satisfied with the standard delta T.
> On the top of the firewall you see a small servo, a 
>similar model as the
> vertical trim servo. This servo connects via a rod to 
>the cowl flap. The
> cowl flap hinges close to the radiator so even when it 
>is fully open the
> angle is very low. A simple but very efficent mechanism!
> 
> The front exhaust elbows are wrapped to save the cowling 
>which is very
> close.
> 
> If there is enough interest in this subject, I'm willing 
>to write an
> article about it. There is a lot of testing, reading, 
>thinking, and
> learning from failures behind this design.
> Although I have been flying a year with it now, I have 
>only recently
> been able to test it in very hot and demanding 
>conditions during our
> just finished round trip in Corsica, Italy and Croatia 
>and overflying
> the Alps twice.
> 
> More about that trip later.
> 
>Frans
> 



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