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Antares 18S Maiden Flight



 
 
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  #51  
Old June 7th 06, 06:55 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

At 16:18 06 June 2006, Shawn wrote:

Seems like a preflight run-up of the engine would reveal/mitigate
many

starting problems in flight.


My thought exactly.

There have been some comments here that sustainers
generally are not run up prior to flights (presumably
including flights where use of the engine is a distinct
possibility) AND that periods of inactivity significantly
up the odds of the engine failing to start.

If both of these statements are true it seems that
flying a sustainer-equipped sailplane cross-country
without a preflight engine runup is a bit of a roll
of the dice. It also raises in my mind two somewhat
related questions:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?

2) Do many pilots flying sustainer-equipped sailplanes
presume that the engine is unlikely to start and not
care, do they presume that the engine IS likely to
start (correctly or incorrectly), or do they believe
a preflight runup doesn't help the odds anyway.

Thoughts?

9B



  #52  
Old June 7th 06, 07:33 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

Andy Blackburn wrote:
At 16:18 06 June 2006, Shawn wrote:

Seems like a preflight run-up of the engine would reveal/mitigate
many

starting problems in flight.


My thought exactly.

There have been some comments here that sustainers
generally are not run up prior to flights (presumably
including flights where use of the engine is a distinct
possibility) AND that periods of inactivity significantly
up the odds of the engine failing to start.

If both of these statements are true it seems that
flying a sustainer-equipped sailplane cross-country
without a preflight engine runup is a bit of a roll
of the dice. It also raises in my mind two somewhat
related questions:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?

2) Do many pilots flying sustainer-equipped sailplanes
presume that the engine is unlikely to start and not
care, do they presume that the engine IS likely to
start (correctly or incorrectly), or do they believe
a preflight runup doesn't help the odds anyway.


Besides the issue of the engine readiness, there is the issue of pilot
readiness: if the pilot hasn't started the engine in the air recently,
isn't he more likely to bungle the start when he getting low and under
pressure? Even better than a preflight, on-the-ground start, would be to
do it after releasing from the launch. You could even take lower
aerotow, and save a bunch on the tow fee.

--
Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly

Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA

www.motorglider.org - Download "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane
Operation"
  #53  
Old June 7th 06, 07:33 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

I don't believe that there is anything wrong or suspect
with two stroke engines. You do have to be careful
with them, here are the things that I've learned from
motorbikes and glider turbos

Use the best sparkplugs you can get to avoid two stroke
whiskering, try platinum or exotic equivalent

Take care of your plugs

Do a DI of your engine before flight, are all the bits
there, eg, the HT leads are ON

Take scrupulous care with your fuel/2 stroke mixing

Prime your engine before takeoff

Start your engine before starting task, 2nd starts
are always much quicker for some reason

Remember the sequence fuel on, erect, ignition, TE
change over, push prime, pull decomp speed up and release.

Sounds dificult but it isn't with practice - this on
a Ventus c so its a bit old tech compared to ASW 28
and ASG 29s or DG1000s.

After a couple of months layoff the engine is much
slower to start and needs determined effort to get
it going. I presume that it needs to blow oil out of
the crankcase and cylinders.

John



  #54  
Old June 7th 06, 07:34 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

I don't believe that there is anything wrong or suspect
with two stroke engines. You do have to be careful
with them, here are the things that I've learned from
motorbikes and glider turbos

Use the best sparkplugs you can get to avoid two stroke
whiskering, try platinum or exotic equivalent

Take care of your plugs

Do a DI of your engine before flight, are all the bits
there, eg, the HT leads are ON

Take scrupulous care with your fuel/2 stroke mixing

Prime your engine before takeoff

Start your engine before starting task, 2nd starts
are always much quicker for some reason

Remember the sequence fuel on, erect, ignition, TE
change over, push prime, pull decomp speed up and release.

Sounds dificult but it isn't with practice - this on
a Ventus c so its a bit old tech compared to ASW 28
and ASG 29s or DG1000s.

After a couple of months layoff the engine is much
slower to start and needs determined effort to get
it going. I presume that it needs to blow oil out of
the crankcase and cylinders.

John



  #55  
Old June 7th 06, 07:47 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

Andy Blackburn schrieb:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?


Yes. It has no starter. (And, btw: Even if it had one, the simple fact
that it starts *now* doesn't mean that it will start *then*.)

2) Do many pilots flying sustainer-equipped sailplanes
presume that the engine is unlikely to start and not
care,


Yes and no. Yes, flying a sustainer we *always* presume that the engine
is unlikely to start. And no, we actually care. Thats why we never rely
on a ststainer but only start the engine over a landable field.

Stefan
  #56  
Old June 7th 06, 08:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

Stefan wrote:
Andy Blackburn schrieb:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?



Yes. It has no starter. (And, btw: Even if it had one, the simple fact
that it starts *now* doesn't mean that it will start *then*.)


I know some or all start in the air by windmilling. Is there a pull
string starter or the ability to hand-prop on the ground?

Your statement about "the simple fact that it starts *now* doesn't mean
that it will start *then*" is unassailable, however the odds may
improve. If it *doesn't* start now would be a good reason to not expect
it to start in the air ;-)

Shawn
  #57  
Old June 7th 06, 09:56 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

Never had a problem with my Discus Turbo (apart from
finger trouble).

Always prime it. Always start and run it for at least
20 secs before leaving site/starting task.

Has anyone mentioned that it confirms that the logger
engine noise sensor has worked properly?



  #58  
Old June 8th 06, 11:01 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

At 18:54 07 June 2006, Stefan wrote:
Andy Blackburn schrieb:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?


Yes. It has no starter. (And, btw: Even if it had one,
the simple fact
that it starts *now* doesn't mean that it will start
*then*.)


My bad - never looked closely enough at a Turbo.


2) Do many pilots flying sustainer-equipped sailplanes
presume that the engine is unlikely to start and not
care,


Yes and no. Yes, flying a sustainer we *always* presume
that the engine
is unlikely to start. And no, we actually care. Thats
why we never rely
on a ststainer but only start the engine over a landable
field.


That part I know. I was trying to ask a slightly different
question, which is: if sustainers are less reliable
on a first start than a second start and pilots don't
do some sort of runup prior to heading out on course
is it that they just don't care that much if the engine
fails to start when called upon - forcing them to land
out? Or is it that they don't believe the second start
story? Or do most pilots actually do a runup (from
an air start of course!), prior to going out on course?

9B



  #59  
Old June 8th 06, 12:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble Was:Antares 18S Maiden Flight

Well, if you want to score your flight anywhere, you need to have the engine
in operation somewhere during the log so that the engine noise/vibration
sensor is verified.
You can do that after returning home, of course, but it would be more
sensible to do that before leaving.

"Andy Blackburn" wrote in message
...
At 18:54 07 June 2006, Stefan wrote:
Andy Blackburn schrieb:

1) Is there a good reason why one shouldn't do a runup
prior to every (cross-country) flight?


Yes. It has no starter. (And, btw: Even if it had one,
the simple fact
that it starts *now* doesn't mean that it will start
*then*.)


My bad - never looked closely enough at a Turbo.


2) Do many pilots flying sustainer-equipped sailplanes
presume that the engine is unlikely to start and not
care,


Yes and no. Yes, flying a sustainer we *always* presume
that the engine
is unlikely to start. And no, we actually care. Thats
why we never rely
on a ststainer but only start the engine over a landable
field.


That part I know. I was trying to ask a slightly different
question, which is: if sustainers are less reliable
on a first start than a second start and pilots don't
do some sort of runup prior to heading out on course
is it that they just don't care that much if the engine
fails to start when called upon - forcing them to land
out? Or is it that they don't believe the second start
story? Or do most pilots actually do a runup (from
an air start of course!), prior to going out on course?

9B





  #60  
Old June 8th 06, 12:33 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Posts: n/a
Default 2 Stroke Engine Trouble


Gary Evans schrieb:

...
With the exception of one loss of electrical power
mine has never failed to start or in flight after 325
frame and 25 engine hours. In that same period I have
experienced 4 rope breaks on tow ...



Good heavens!!!
I strongly suggest you start using different ropes!

Marcel

 




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