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![]() Bret Ludwig wrote: I watched a CFI/CFII/ATP young stud at a FBO I work at lose a O-235-L2C in the pattern and still wind up in a supermarket parking lot. Would have been a beautiful rollout if not for those pesky parking dividers! I also saw an ob/gyn with his wife and four rug rats in a cabin class twin run an engine up and for some stupid reason pull the prop ALL THE WAY BACK at full power. A cylinder on the right side of #2 came off and went through the cowling. If it had been a left hand jug one or more people would have died for certain. Sorry, I'd rather fly a Chevy. So a ham-handed pilot couldn't bust the Chevy. And a good CFI/CFII/ATP couldn't glide back to the airport unless the dead engine under the cowl was a Chevy. Hmm. I flew a Subaru that burned a valve when the mixture was adjusted to lean for cruise. The 16-valve engines have really slender valves, just about the same size as you'd find in your Briggs & Stratton, and they heat up REALLY fast and will burn instantly if they get a tiny bit too hot. It's one reason they had electronic fuel injection in the car: to protect the engine. I had my son's Suzuki 1.6 Litre 16-valve apart last week, same problem: burned valve, and it had the same tiny little valves. The stem was so small (0.215" ) that the valve grinder chuck would barely close enough to hold onto it. Such small stems don't transfer heat well at high power settings (like in an airplane). Therefore, many auto conversions may run well and smooth and deliver decent power and get good mileage, but they have to be run much more carefully than the old Lyc with it's massive sodium-filled valve stems and thick valve heads. The pilot who blew the jug off his engine likely treated it that way all the time for a long time and it finally bit him. He was asking for detonation and got it, and NO engine would stand for detonation for any length of time. The Lyc or Continental will stand for more abuse, except for shock cooling or persistent really rough power handling. Lycoming, for instance, says that you can lean their normally-aspirated direct-drive engines any way you want when at 75% or less; just try THAT with your Soob or Suzuki. Dan A lot of good points, Dan, and I would like to add a little: I think a lot of people run their conversions--or proposed conversions--much too fast! That doesn't mean that I have ever completely withdrawn automotive conversions from my consideration. Once you get away from the LSA criteria, some candidates really stand out and some in GM's Vortec series really stand out. However, before I actually undertake such a project, I would very carefully review the portions of Part 23 that pertain to VNE. There are portions of Part 23 where I would probably cut some corners for my probable mission profiles, such as the propeller to ground clearance for a tail wheel type aircraft, but I would not deviate from the VNE definitions--because unusual an attitude recovery could be needed when I least expect it. Obviously, this does not improve the power to weight ration of the conversion. I still like some of them; but it's not a "done deal" and, if it's supposed to be a club project flown by several pilots to be determined later, fuggeddaboudit! Peter |
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