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#61
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Mike H writes:
I believe you are referring to a Delta MD-80/88 that was taking off from Pensacola. I think there were two killed and a couple of injuries. http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?e...08X06203&key=1 -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#62
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Mike,
TCM IO-520/550's running LOP are about .39-.40 BPSC according to the GAMI folks, the SEMA engine is about .33-.35 from their specs. At 70K for their engine conversion and the cost of JetA being within 10% of the cost of 100LL at most GA airports I ageree with you and don't think we'll see a lot diesel's in the near future. The Diamond Twin really impresses me, can' t wait for an independent (non-Flying or other slick mag) pilot report to see how it really does. Ernie BE36 E-160 KDVO "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message k.net... The Caravan has a 940hp engine flat rated to 675hp. Turbines are typically flat rated so that the engine can make rated power to reasonable altitudes and temperatures without having to design the gearbox for the full thermodynamic horsepower. To keep the comparison with piston engines apples to apples you need to use thermodynamic ratings. http://www.pwc.ca/en/3_0/3_0http://w.../3_0_2_1_2.asp To put some numbers on things, the engines in my MU-2 have a specific fuel consumption of .55lb/hp/hr and a piston engine is about .45 and diesels can be under .40. Huge (ship) diesels can be under .30. Compare your model aircraft engines with the TFE731-60 used on the Falcon 900EX which uses .405lb/lb thrust/hr Mike MU-2 wrote in message ... In rec.aviation.owning Mike Rapoport wrote: About the size of the Caravan 900hp+ Mike MU-2 According to the Cessna website, the current Caravan is 675hp. -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
#63
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
... "Paul Sengupta" wrote in message ... Turbines do suffer from manufacturing defects (if I recall, there was an uncontained failure in the 90's on some rear-engine jet -- 727, DC-9 or something like that -- where the blade failure was due to some metallurgical problem). Sioux City DC10. Not actually the accident I'm thinking of. But yes, that's another example of blade failure (did they eventually determine it was a manufacturing defect, or a maintenance problem?). They say it was a manufacturing defect about the size of a grain of sand. http://www.ntsb.gov/speeches/former/hall/jh970912.htm "Metallurgical examination of the titanium fan hub revealed that a fatigue crack originated from an inclusion near the surface of the hub's bore. The inclusion had been formed during the titanium vacuum-melting process at the time of manufacture about 2 decades earlier, which developed an internal cavity during final machining and/or shot peening. At the time of manufacture, the fan hub had been ultrasonic and macroetch inspected." The accident to which I was referring only involved one or two fatalities, of a passenger or of passengers sitting right next to the engine. Yes, I know the one you're talking about. It's mentioned on the page referenced above: "We will soon conclude our investigation on that Delta Air Lines MD-88 engine failure I mentioned earlier. Metallurgical examination of the fracture surface of that fan hub revealed that a fatigue crack had originated from a machining defect in a tie rod hole. Further, the fan hub had been fluorescent particle inspected only seven months before the failure, when the crack was estimated to be approximately ½-inch long." Also http://www.ntsb.gov/pressrel/1998/980113d.htm Paul |
#64
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#65
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In rec.aviation.owning Pete Zaitcev wrote:
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 12:13:49 -0700, wrote: A gas turbine scales up easily and but is nearly impossible to scale down. The auto manuacturers found that out in the 1940s - remember the "car of the future" on the covers of Popular Science et al? Turbines for cars are further away now than they were 55 years ago. The turbine suffers from excessive fuel consumption at part throttle (the piston engine is incredibly flexible that way)and in smaller HP installations. [...] This is not my recollection. What killed auto turbines was their spool-up and spool-down time, and gearboxes for 20,000 RPMs. BTW, remember the rail engines. The turbines there tried to compete well into 1960s. They were killed by their short overhaul time, not fuel consumption. -- Pete According to a guy I worked with who worked on the Chrysler turbine car, the problem that was the straw that broke the camel's back was the under the hood temperature being too high for all the other stuff under the hood, i.e. wiper motors, relays, etc. -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
#66
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Roy Smith wrote:
But, I suppose the Jet-A folks have figured out the right additives to solve that problem. Oil-fuel heat exchange? -- Fritz |
#67
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I think that you can look at the market to see where the crossover
occurs. THere are currently no production piston aircraft engines over 450hp and there are no aircraft turbines under 400hp. There's lots of ground turbines under 400hp so we know there's a market there; [...] A ground turbine runs at almost constant speed, near its design point, so even at small dimension can still be fuel efficient. Part load fuel consumption of a gas turbine is a bit too high, particularly for GA aircraft (considering their flight pprofile). -- Fritz |
#68
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"Fritz" wrote in message
... A ground turbine runs at almost constant speed, near its design point, so even at small dimension can still be fuel efficient. Part load fuel consumption of a gas turbine is a bit too high, particularly for GA aircraft (considering their flight pprofile). Hmmm...define "fuel efficient"? Your comment brings to mind the Toyota Prius hybrid engine. It essentially has a "continuously variable transmission" that doesn't involve a complicated, maintenance-hungry belt or chain and pully system. I wonder if the answer to bringing turbine engines to small airplanes might not be using a hybrid system. The weight of the batteries (which is substantial) is offset by the relatively low weight of the rest of the power train. The engine would only run during climbs, and when the batteries need to be recharged. Biggest problem I see right off the bat is the problem of starting and stopping the turbine frequently...my understanding is that there are "issues" there, but I don't know what they are, or whether they can be addressed by design. Using such a system, a turbine could be run "at almost constant speed, near its design point", while accomodating a variety of power settings. All that said, someone else mentioned turbine-engined locomotives; that's a much bigger power demand and yet somehow diesel-electric engines wound up the standard. I suppose looking at the history of train locomotives might offer some insight into how feasible hybrid technology might be for airplanes. It might be that there are some unsolveable problems, or it might be that we're at a stage in engine development now where things that used to be problems aren't anymore. Pete |
#69
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Small turbines are inherently inefficient so you are unlikely to see them in
this power range. The fuel consumption might be double that of a diesel. It's not true, first off. Although bigger engines have advantages of Reynolds numbers and such, small and large are relative terms. The relationship of BSFC of heavy diesels and industrial gas turbines in steady state peak operation is pretty constant across engines from the size of an 855 cid Cummins to the really big guys with four foot bores. The turbocharged diesels are somewhat more efficient but nowhere near 2:1. The "secret" of linearizing gas turbine performance across a wide range of output power is thermal feedback, or regeneration. Look carefully at the real progenitor of the Cruise Missile turbojet... |
#70
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