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Old November 14th 08, 01:18 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Stealth Pilot[_2_]
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Default effect of changed thrust line.

On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 22:20:25 -0500, wrote:



How does a person determine what the proper height of an engine should
be when building an airplane? If a particular engine design mandates
the prop is 4 inches, say, lower than where it would be with the
engine originally installed, what effect will it have on handling, and
what changes in downthrust might be advised?

We are building a Pegazair, and my Corvair engine would need to have
the cowl higher than ideal to keep the crank centerline at the same
hight as say, an O200. Weight wize, the engines are just about
identical as equipped Have not determined the center of gravity of the
engine yet, to determine the overall length of the mount.

For those unfamiliar with the plane it is a highwing STOL 2 placer
roughly the same size as a Cessna 150 (150 sq ft wing,33 ft wingspan,
)


suck it and see.
your elevator should have enough authority to control the resulting
couple.
you should experience some upthrust but tweaking back the throttle
should control it.

your question in the first line....
take the centre of mass as the pivot point.
you have 4 force couples.

lift vs moment arm.
elevator down thrust vs moment arm
wing drag vs moment arm
thrust vs moment arm.

they will summate to zero in equilibrium but
you probably wont know any of the values o those forces.
alan baker will probably give a guestimate.
suck it and see.

I think you'll need the same side thrust but a little more down thrust
as the cessna 150..

Stealth Pilot