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Jet turbine reliability



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 4th 15, 02:59 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Simon Waddell[_2_]
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Default Jet turbine reliability

Well, the same applies to ANY type of glider engine.

When Lord Derby was once asked why he always flew in four-engined aircraft
he replied that it was because there were no six-engined aircraft.


At 13:13 04 June 2015, wrote:
Comparisons aside, my point is simply this, never put yourself in a
position where your safety or life is dependent on the operation of one

of
these small turbines. Several other previous posters agree with me on

this.


  #2  
Old June 4th 15, 03:14 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
son_of_flubber
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Default Jet turbine reliability

On Thursday, June 4, 2015 at 10:00:04 AM UTC-4, Simon Waddell wrote:

When Lord Derby was once asked why he always flew in four-engined aircraft
he replied that it was because there were no six-engined aircraft.


And to seque back to glider mounted jet engines... What happens if you mount two of these engines on a glider? Enough thrust for self-launching? Redundancy for sustaining (or to circle back on aborted takeoff)? Twice as many things to break? 2X the cost?
  #3  
Old June 4th 15, 06:52 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Jet turbine reliability

Sure. But it's all about fuel. These thing gulp it down. Fueling system in the case of an SL can't be an afterthought. It must be designed into the ship, and would likely mean multiple tanks etc. Probably fuselage and wing tanks. A poorly designed fueling system can lead to all sorts of issues with turbines.

And to seque back to glider mounted jet engines... What happens if you mount two of these engines on a glider? Enough thrust for self-launching? Redundancy for sustaining (or to circle back on aborted takeoff)? Twice as many things to break? 2X the cost?


  #4  
Old June 4th 15, 06:57 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Jet turbine reliability

I agree with Simon - it is crazy to bet your life or glider on the reliability of any type of engine. Personally I am far more concerned about windmill starting draggy 2 stroke turbos than a turbine which why my glider is at the workshop to get its turbine installed today.

It is clear from several posts that some contributors have absolutely no idea of the depth and intensity of the EASA certification process that the three new turbines have had to go through. A post mentioned broken blades so as an example of one test - the M+D jet is planned to have a 500 start and run cycles TBO but, as it was explained to those of us waiting, they had to demonstrate 3 times that number of starts and power runs with cracked blades with no failure - which tests alone took several months to run.
  #5  
Old June 4th 15, 07:18 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Jet turbine reliability

A post mentioned broken blades so as an example of one test - the M+D jet is planned to have a 500 start and run cycles TBO but, as it was explained to those of us waiting, they had to demonstrate 3 times that number of starts and power runs with cracked blades with no failure - which tests alone took several months to run.

That is why I mentioned later, I expect the QA of these turbines to be much better than that of the typical model turbine. Good for them. I do hope they model FOD accurately though. Nice clean lab is one thing...
  #6  
Old June 4th 15, 08:17 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
J. Nieuwenhuize
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Default Jet turbine reliability

Multiple engines (especially for self-launch) make a lot of sense since price scales neatly with thrust.

2X 230N thrust for a light single-seater, or 2X 800N for an open-class ship would allow a self-launcher with acceptable cruise fuel consumption and self-launch capability.

  #7  
Old June 4th 15, 09:07 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Jet turbine reliability

On Thursday, June 4, 2015 at 12:17:49 PM UTC-7, J. Nieuwenhuize wrote:
Multiple engines (especially for self-launch) make a lot of sense since price scales neatly with thrust.

2X 230N thrust for a light single-seater, or 2X 800N for an open-class ship would allow a self-launcher with acceptable cruise fuel consumption and self-launch capability.


That's close to what I came up with when investigating for a single seater. You would probably want to carry at least 15 gallons of fuel for the single. Interestingly, when you throw in oil and anti-static, the runtime cost are quite high. You end up finding how economical the old fashioned internal combustion self launch really is. It accomplishes quite a lot with 4 or 5 gallons.
  #8  
Old June 5th 15, 12:40 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Jonathan St. Cloud
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Default Jet turbine reliability

Just curious are you putting the jet into a JS-1 or some other aircraft?
  #9  
Old June 5th 15, 04:28 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
howard banks
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Default Jet turbine reliability

Plus a decent dinner for the retriever ...



On Monday, June 1, 2015 at 4:31:42 AM UTC-6, Jim Pengelly wrote:
I'm considering ordering a JS1-C TJ with the jet turbine. A potential syndicate partner is concerned about the reliability of jet turbines from a 'will it start' point of view and a repair cost point of view. I imagine electric turbos are going to be more reliable because of the relative simplicity but you can't buy an electric JS1 or 29. Any comments on jet reliability?


  #10  
Old June 5th 15, 09:30 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Jet turbine reliability

"Gobble as well as gulp...with Jet A at +/- $5 a gallon and AeroShell 560 at $15 a quart that works out to north of $100 to fill up the JS-1"

Well......you could certainly calculate a worst case scenario like that. But as 11USG of Diesel / 2-stroke (4%) oil mix is flight manual approved, this may be a more commonly employed option.

(US prices: 10.6USG @ $2.70 + 0.42USG & $20) is $37.

Glider pilots: Tighter than a fish's a....... :P
 




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