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Thielert (Diesel Engines)



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 15th 08, 12:44 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
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Posts: 3,735
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

"Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk At Wow Way D0t C0m wrote in
news:nrSdnQ8KTvrqRCnanZ2dnUVZ_gudnZ2d@wideopenwest .com:

"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
...
...
There's nothing made up about "No sparks, no power" I wouldn't buy one
because of this. My club was looking at one ofr a Cherokee and decided
against it because of the lack of limp home capability.


Right.

MX has informed us of the risks associated with these electronic engine
management systems on several ocassions.


In particular regard to this installation? I have no problem with computer
governed engines, once tey aren't reliant on th ecomputer to run which
isn't the case with any other engine I know of.


Bertie
  #2  
Old February 15th 08, 09:26 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
WingFlaps
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Posts: 621
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

On Feb 15, 1:44*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
"Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk At Wow Way D0t C0m wrote innews:nrSdnQ8KTvrqRCnanZ2dnUVZ_gudnZ2d@wideopenwe st.com:

"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
.. .
...
There's nothing made up about "No sparks, no power" I wouldn't buy one
because of this. My club was looking at one ofr a Cherokee and decided
against it because of the lack of limp home capability.


Right.


MX has informed us of the risks associated with these electronic engine
management systems on several ocassions.


In particular regard to this installation? I have no problem with computer
governed engines, once tey aren't reliant on th ecomputer to run which
isn't the case with any other engine I know of.

I see your point and I think it's a good one. As I said before, I
smell the rat of marketing...

Cheers

  #3  
Old February 15th 08, 10:41 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
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Posts: 790
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
...
"Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk At Wow Way D0t C0m wrote in
news:nrSdnQ8KTvrqRCnanZ2dnUVZ_gudnZ2d@wideopenwest .com:

...


In particular regard to this installation? I have no problem with computer
governed engines, once tey aren't reliant on th ecomputer to run which
isn't the case with any other engine I know of.


Can you actually name any common rail diesel (in any application) that will
run without the computer?

Or, are you in MX mode?

--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate.

  #4  
Old February 15th 08, 07:44 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
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Posts: 3,735
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

Peter wrote in
:


Thomas Borchert wrote

Why is it that each and every innovation in GA is met by people
spouting OWTs and made-up speculation, when a minute or two of simple
research would provide the facts? What picture does that paint of the
pilot population and their "hangar talk"? How about a simple "I don't
know and that's why I keep quiet on this" instead of spouting made-up
negatives? Sorry, but this is really annoying.


You need to calm down Thomas before jumping on people like this.


Dunno, I kinda like him this way. Pounding on his keyboard, teeth gritted,
veins standing out on his neck. Standing on tiptoe, even though seated, his
leg muscles trembling. It's a good look for him.


Bertie
  #5  
Old February 15th 08, 08:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Thomas Borchert
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Posts: 1,749
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

Peter,

When you have calmed down, speak PRIVATELY to a few Diamond/Thielert
owners. I have.


Thanks, I have, too.

There is some way to go before Thielert have a reliable engine. I am
sure they will get there eventually, but they aren't there yet.


I agree completely. And I never said anything to the contrary. That's
not what I'm getting upset about.

--
Thomas Borchert (EDDH)

  #6  
Old February 15th 08, 08:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
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Posts: 3,735
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

Thomas Borchert wrote in
:

Peter,

When you have calmed down, speak PRIVATELY to a few Diamond/Thielert
owners. I have.


Thanks, I have, too.

There is some way to go before Thielert have a reliable engine. I am
sure they will get there eventually, but they aren't there yet.


I agree completely. And I never said anything to the contrary. That's
not what I'm getting upset about.


Calm down then, do something relaxing. Invade the Sudetenland. You'll feel
better.

Bertie
  #7  
Old February 13th 08, 07:21 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning, rec.aviation.piloting
WingFlaps
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Posts: 621
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

On Feb 13, 11:14*pm, Peter wrote:
WingFlaps wrote

Why should that be? Generally, diesels are great at running at high
power for long periods and they are also *the powerplant of choice for
high reliability when fuel consumption is also an issue (ruling out
turbines) -or am I wrong?


Diesels are indeed great in applications where they can be designed
without weight issues e.g. ships and trucks.

It appears that their problems (Thielert specifically - there is no
other diesel actually flying any meaningful hours at present) are to
do with a lightweight car engine - 1.7 litres - being run at 130HP (or
close to it) for 100% of the time. The original car engine would be
running at 20-30HP, maybe 100HP very briefly in a big Merc on a German
motorway (no speed limits). But an aeroplane is a whole different
situation.


Yes I've heard that argument but I'd like to add/offer a different
POV. What is really stressful for engines is constant power changes
and the temperature fluctuations that involves. Therefore if your
engine can do 150 mph on a german autobahn for an hour or two it
should have no trouble doing it for a 4 hour flight in a plane. I also
agree that marine installations pay no/little attention to weight
(some performance boat installations aim to keep weight low) but tha's
just a design thing. The natural rpm/torque curve for diesels seems to
match a prop better too. The metals exists to make a diesel about the
same weight as a petrol engine so with a bit more hours under their
belt to identify weaknesses I can't see diesels not becoming the (?)
engine of choice (more range, less fuel quality issues). One more
think, no mixture control just rpm and pitch!
Imagine just setting rpm just one and then doing everything else with
pitch ;-) ...

Cheers
  #8  
Old February 14th 08, 02:41 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.piloting
Stefan
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Posts: 578
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

WingFlaps schrieb:

One more think, no mixture control just rpm and pitch!
Imagine just setting rpm just one and then doing everything else with
pitch ;-) ...


There's nothing Diesel specific on this.
  #9  
Old February 13th 08, 10:54 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning, rec.aviation.piloting
nrp
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Posts: 128
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)


The weakness of the certification regime is that the engine only has
to show 2000hrs at 100% power,


I think it is 200 hrs @full throttle.
  #10  
Old February 14th 08, 01:08 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning, rec.aviation.piloting
WingFlaps
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Posts: 621
Default Thielert (Diesel Engines)

On Feb 14, 10:15*am, Peter wrote:
WingFlaps wrote

Yes I've heard that argument but I'd like to add/offer a different
POV. What is really stressful for engines is constant power changes
and the temperature fluctuations that involves. Therefore if your
engine can do 150 mph on a german autobahn for an hour or two it
should have no trouble doing it for a 4 hour flight in a plane.


IMHO it is a matter of degree. No road car will be actually run at say
75% power for more than minutes - you would kill yourself. Rally cars
get through engines at great rates, often breaking one in one race.
Whereas an aero engine just sits there the whole time at that power
setting. This may be just a matter of duty cycle but the end result
will be more stress and more wear.

The weakness of the certification regime is that the engine only has
to show 2000hrs at 100% power, and TBH you could probably get a lawn
mower engine to do that. Any engine that doesn't actually break (and
that is easy to achieve by design) and which meets the criteria (e.g.
starting at the certified ceiling) will be certified.

AFAIK there is no reliability requirement - that certainly applies to
avionics too.

I also
agree that marine installations pay no/little attention to weight
(some performance boat installations aim to keep weight low) but tha's
just a design thing. The natural rpm/torque curve for diesels seems to
match a prop better too. *


It may be but diesels have a lot more high frequency components in
their torque spectrum which plays havoc with props and gearboxes. So
they tend to need rubber shock absorbers.

The metals exists to make a diesel about the
same weight as a petrol engine so with a bit more hours under their
belt to identify weaknesses I can't see diesels not becoming the (?)
engine of choice (more range, less fuel quality issues). One more
think, no mixture control just rpm and pitch!


I agree but that is FADEC, not diesel. With FADEC on a Lyco you would
have similar benefits.


I was under the impression that diesels work by a governor that sets
RPM. The difference between desired rpm and actual rpm determines fuel
injected... In that case you could just set rpm and just adjust pitch
for speed/power. A single power knob (fadec) sets pitch and rpm
together?

Cheers
 




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