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Fuel Consumption

 
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EAFerguson(at)AOL.COM
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 9:59 pm    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

In response to Buz's comments on fuel consumption.

I did work on fuel consumption for the record trip - quite a bit. With Nick's help, we played with the jetting for max economy. Here are some results.

I have a fuel flow device installed. Calibration is somewhat laborious, but it's now fairly accurate.

Like Buz, I set power for fuel burn rather than RPM because there is somewhat less variability. Most legs were close to 4 hours, and with the 20 Gal in the Lightning, I needed to be under 4.5 GPH. Setting 4.8. on the fuel flow gave me about that burn rate, T.O. to chocks. I did one leg at 4.2 GPH.

That power setting gave me about 108K TAS. RPM varied, generally about 2700. The Light Sport version considerably slower than the non-LSA version with the gear clean up. I also had an extreme cruise prop (borrowed from the prototype). Flat out I only pulled about 3100 RPM so these numbers may not be too typical.

I've flown formation with some of the non-LSA Lightning's at SYI and the speed differential is significant. I had difficulty keeping up with Buz on a couple of break in flights, even in climb.

We can talk about these numbers this weekend.
.

Earl Ferguson
N17EF

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N1BZRich(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 4:05 am    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

Earl,
I am looking forward to your presentation this weekend. I am sure you have a lot of good information and data to share that should be very beneficial for our everyday flight operations.  The time an effort that went into your record flight planning and testing was probably "many fold" greater than the flight time it took to actually make the flight. One of the things I would be really interested in is what you learned about fuel consumption at various altitudes and power settings.  Based on some of the fuel flow data that I came up with during the initial 40 hour test program and what I am seeing on long cross countries, I really am beginning to think that the Bing (a great carb) really does not lean as effectively at the higher altitudes (10,000 and above) as it does down lower (say below 6 or 8 thousand).
Blue Skies,
Buz

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flying(at)qdea.com
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:42 am    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

The Bing carburetor tends to run rich at altitudes above 10,00 feet.

It's also used on Rotax 912's, and the Titan list I also subscribe to
has discussed this a lot.

In fact, one person sets the needle in the carb one notch leaner
because she routinely runs at altitudes above 6000 feet.

I guess whoever designed the leaning mechanism decided to err on the
rich side, which will keep the engine running. Too lean and your
engine dies.

I have personal experience at 11,500 feet - I concluded that the
engine was running richer than needed, because I wasn't getting the
same endurance that I would have expected for the fuel flow rate.

Hugh Sontag

Quote:
Earl,
I am looking forward to your presentation this weekend. I am
sure you have a lot of good information and data to share that
should be very beneficial for our everyday flight operations. The
time an effort that went into your record flight planning and
testing was probably "many fold" greater than the flight time it
took to actually make the flight. One of the things I would be
really interested in is what you learned about fuel consumption at
various altitudes and power settings. Based on some of the fuel
flow data that I came up with during the initial 40 hour test
program and what I am seeing on long cross countries, I really am
beginning to think that the Bing (a great carb) really does not lean
as effectively at the higher altitudes (10,000 and above) as it does
down lower (say below 6 or 8 thousand).
Blue Skies,
Buz


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dashvii(at)hotmail.com
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:56 am    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

When I was flying an Esqual during the time that Buz was flying the time off
of his plane I took it up to about 12,000+ feet. The whole airplane began
shaking and I wondered if the prop had hit a bird or something and became
unbalanced. I slowed down, checked all my control surfaces and then started
a descent for a precautionary landing at Shelbyville. As I passed through
about 4-5k feet the plane seemed to react much better. Now keep in mind
that I still didn't know if it was an airframe or engine issue. So I went
ahead and cut in front of Buz who was entereing the pattern the right/safe
way and made my call for landing. By the time that I got on the ground I
couldn't replicate the problem. Nick did a runup and nothing. I believe
that we eventually determined that the pressure compensating mechanism had
broken on that carb and it went to full rich (which it's supposed to do as I
understand) and the engine was running so rich that it was shaking the whole
plane at that altitude! I'm glad that the engine stayed running, but from
that altitude I probably could have flown to Nashville and back. A good way
to see if the engine is running too rich is to clean the belly of the plane,
fly for a while and then look at the area just aft of the exhaust and see if
it's smooty. Just like every different engine wanted to run at a different
idle speed to keep it happy, you gotta set up the needle in the carb right.
Some run a little more lean than other engines. It's no big deal, but
something that you want to do in the first 40 to get the best performance
out of the plane. Brian W.
From: Hugh Sontag <flying(at)qdea.com>
Reply-To: lightning-list(at)matronics.com
To: lightning-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Fuel Consumption
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2007 10:04:09 -0500



The Bing carburetor tends to run rich at altitudes above 10,00 feet.

It's also used on Rotax 912's, and the Titan list I also subscribe to has
discussed this a lot.

In fact, one person sets the needle in the carb one notch leaner because she
routinely runs at altitudes above 6000 feet.

I guess whoever designed the leaning mechanism decided to err on the rich
side, which will keep the engine running. Too lean and your engine dies.

I have personal experience at 11,500 feet - I concluded that the engine was
running richer than needed, because I wasn't getting the same endurance that
I would have expected for the fuel flow rate.

Hugh Sontag

Quote:
Earl,
I am looking forward to your presentation this weekend. I am sure you
have a lot of good information and data to share that should be very
beneficial for our everyday flight operations. The time an effort that
went into your record flight planning and testing was probably "many fold"
greater than the flight time it took to actually make the flight. One of
the things I would be really interested in is what you learned about fuel
consumption at various altitudes and power settings. Based on some of the
fuel flow data that I came up with during the initial 40 hour test program
and what I am seeing on long cross countries, I really am beginning to
think that the Bing (a great carb) really does not lean as effectively at
the higher altitudes (10,000 and above) as it does down lower (say below 6
or 8 thousand). Blue Skies,
Buz


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N1BZRich(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 5:49 pm    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

Hugh and all,
Good info,and it seems to confirm what my data is showing as to the Bing's leaning at high altitude. I now have 360 hours on my 3300 in the past 20 months, and other than the standard oil and filter changes, head torques, valve adjustments, (new plugs, and new caps and rotors at 250 hours), it has been absolutely trouble tree. I love the engine, but would like to have it lean a little more efficiently when at the higher altitudes. Heck, I have had it to 16,000 during the 40 hour test program and it was still climbing at about 400 feet a minute. (Remember N31BZ has the longer wings - heck it is almost like a motor glider.) My feet were so cold that I decided that was high enough and declared that the service ceiling was 18,000. No problems with the engine running smooth up there, but I had already changed the jetting several times.
I have had the Demo Lightning to 14,500 feet just for grins (it was still climbing almost 400 fpm) and the fact that a current builder (Dick) lives in Boulder, Colorado, and will need to operate at the higher elevation airports.
One other thought, when you are trying to climb to the higher altitudes, remember that the higher you go, Vx and Vy get closer together. They basically meet at the service ceiling. Another thought, if your airplane tells you true airspeed, use that instead of indicated when climbing at the higher altitudes.
Blue Skies,
Buz

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N1BZRich(at)AOL.COM
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 5:51 pm    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

In a message dated 9/19/2007 11:57:20 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, dashvii(at)hotmail.com writes:
Quote:
A good way to see if the engine is running too rich is to clean the belly of the plane,
fly for a while and then look at the area just aft of the exhaust and see if it's smooty.


Good suggestion from Brian if the exhaust pipe is short and does not get the exhaust residue away from the fuselage bottom. For a longer exhaust pipe just run your finger inside the pipe and if you get black soot, then you are running too rich. You really need to check for your particular airplane. Just because someone else's Lightning with a certain carb jet set up is working right, yours might still need a different set up. All factors that have to do with how hard the engine is working will have an effect - which prop you are using and how many drag reduction efforts you have incorporated into your "bird" will make a difference. Bottom line, it's part science and part magic.
Blue Skies,
Buz

Attached is a photo I made today of the Prototype Lightning with the latest drag reduction efforts. Wink

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N1BZRich(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:02 pm    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

In a message dated 9/19/2007 9:51:36 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, N1BZRich(at)aol.com writes:
Quote:
I now have 360 hours on my 3300 in the past 20 months, and other than the standard oil and filter changes, head torques, valve adjustments, (new plugs, and new caps and rotors at 250 hours), it has been absolutely trouble tree.


Just noticed I put the "(" in the wrong place in the above sentence.  Actually I change spark plugs at every 100 hours, and I changed the caps and rotors at 250 hours. As to spark plugs, at their price, why clean them.
Buz

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pequeajim



Joined: 03 Sep 2006
Posts: 708
Location: New Holland, PA

PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:04 pm    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

Buz:

You’re such a tease….


From: owner-lightning-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-lightning-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of N1BZRich(at)aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2007 9:51 PM
To: lightning-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Fuel Consumption


In a message dated 9/19/2007 11:57:20 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, dashvii(at)hotmail.com writes:
Quote:

A good way to see if the engine is running too rich is to clean the belly of the plane,
fly for a while and then look at the area just aft of the exhaust and see if it's smooty.


Good suggestion from Brian if the exhaust pipe is short and does not get the exhaust residue away from the fuselage bottom. For a longer exhaust pipe just run your finger inside the pipe and if you get black soot, then you are running too rich. You really need to check for your particular airplane. Just because someone else's Lightning with a certain carb jet set up is working right, yours might still need a different set up. All factors that have to do with how hard the engine is working will have an effect - which prop you are using and how many drag reduction efforts you have incorporated into your "bird" will make a difference. Bottom line, it's part science and part magic.

Blue Skies,

Buz



Attached is a photo I made today of the Prototype Lightning with the latest drag reduction efforts. Wink





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malannx(at)bigpond.com
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 20, 2007 5:54 am    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

Brian,

If the whole plane was shaking,especially the wings, you may have had rudder flutter.

A trick some Rotax drivers use at altitude is to introduce an air bleed into the induction system. It goes without saying that you must have EGT on all cyls. The rotax engine has a balance pipe between the 2 manifolds. Bleed air is introduced there via a needle valve. No reason why you could not do it to a Jab.
Requires the same management the Lycoming drivers do on every flight.

Malcolm Ferguson
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dashvii(at)hotmail.com
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 20, 2007 7:26 am    Post subject: Fuel Consumption Reply with quote

"If the whole plane was shaking,especially the wings, you may have had
rudder flutter."

This turned out not to be the case, but just a rough running engine.
Waaaayyyyyy too rich at the carb for that altitude. Flutter was my initial
concern, so I changed everything, speed, power, attittude, etc. You can see
every control surface except for the rudder in the Lightning. Even then,
you would feel some feedback from the pedals. I never experienced flutter
in any of the planes that I flew there, Jabiru, Esqual, or Lightning. The
last two I took out to around 200mph on each airframe. I did lots of
different speed/power combinations at different altitudes. I would be much
more worried about flutter if you added something to the control surfaces
themselves, such as your own trim tab.

As far as the engine, that was a rare occassion. If you read the manual and
treat the Jabiru as it is supposed to be treated it is a very smooth running
and reliable engine. I've never flown a Rotax yet, but this engine is
smoother than a small Lycoming or Continental, such as the O-200. As Buz
said, set the autopilot, try not to fall asleep! Brian W.
From: "Malcolm Ferguson" <malannx(at)bigpond.com>
Reply-To: lightning-list(at)matronics.com
To: <lightning-list(at)matronics.com>
Subject: Re: Fuel Consumption
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2007 23:53:05 +1000

Brian,

If the whole plane was shaking,especially the wings, you may have had rudder
flutter.

A trick some Rotax drivers use at altitude is to introduce an air bleed
into the induction system. It goes without saying that you must have EGT on
all cyls. The rotax engine has a balance pipe between the 2 manifolds. Bleed
air is introduced there via a needle valve. No reason why you could not do
it to a Jab.
Requires the same management the Lycoming drivers do on every flight.

Malcolm Ferguson

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